Bloom Laptop Designed For Easy Disassembly
Zothecula writes "It's a given that we will one day be discarding our present laptop computers. It's also a given that e-waste is currently a huge problem, that looks like it's only going to get worse. While most of the materials in a laptop can be recycled, all of those pieces of glass, metal, plastic and circuitry are stuck together pretty tight, and require a lot of time and effort to separate. What is needed are laptops that are designed to be taken apart, for easy recycling – that's why a group of graduate students from Stanford University made one."
If the price is right, this may have double use. I know that one issue with me personally not owning laptops is that when they break, it sucks really bad to do some of the repairs/replace parts. If a laptop is brought to mass market with easy to disassemble parts, maybe we can get lucky and get more 3rd party support for swapping out pieces
The world is how you make it
How about easy repairing so we don't toss them out so quickly in the first place?
Back in the 1990s a Taiwanese manufacturer, Clevo, made "kit" laptops so that OEMs can pick and choose which parts they want for their laptops.
These laptops were incredibly easy to assemble and disassemble. As an OEM, you can choose what kind of screen and what resolution/size, what motherboard, what cpu, what kind of battery, choose between trackpad, mini trackball or trackpoint... It also made it somewhat easy for people to upgrade their laptop. Even a choice of docking station all the way up to sophisticated docking stations which can have PCI/ISA cards installed.
Computers just aren't as customizable nowadays.
No sig. Move along - nothing to see here.
Bonus: The technology would be worth millions, because there's many years of old electronic (and other) waste sitting around to be had for the taking, including in landfills and other locations. The problem with trash is that no one likes to separate out the organics from the recyclables from the re-usables. We humans don't even like to throw trash away in multiple places (like keeping a separate recycle bin and compost) so letting us be lazy and having the machines do the sorting is a big win.
Ultimately manufacturers must make sure their products and packaging are environmentally friendly as possible, of course. It would also be nice if they designed the products to be disassembled and reassembled, making repairs easier (repair instead of replace generates less waste).
It's probably unrealistic to expect products to be 100% landfill free through... new products take advantage of new materials and technologies, and the ability to dispose of something new cleanly always lags behind the ability to produce and use it...
Erik
I don't think there has been a better or more flexible design that the Pismo G3. Swappable drive/battery bays, easy access to nearly all the parts under the keyboard. I could have mine completely apart in 5 min. It even had a separate sound card and a replaceable processor board. Ahh the days when Apple designed pro hardware instead of gadget interfaces...
The server is starting to collapse, but at least here's the Youtube link in the article
Sounds like they basically got free reign to buy some cool laptops, take all their best parts out from inside, and build them into a custom case. To me, it seems like nothing more than a redesigned mac, but I would definitely take that class.
The advertisement is a buzzword masterpiece. You only mentioned one of many flaws.
The goal in this team's Ivy League education is to learn how to string buzzwords together to generate interest in fundamentally flawed ideas.
Good to know the ruling class is staying busy.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
As responsible consumers, we should be looking at devices designed to last significantly past the next design cycle, that are designed to have (at least) the parts replaced that are most likely to fail (screens, drives, batteries), and that meet our current needs, not just elevate our "cool". And then keep them for a long time.
Manufacturers will resist this because they've built their business model on regular forklift upgrades. They'd have to be different companies to evolve beyond this. Probably smaller companies.
eWaste eRecycling is not the answer. It mitigates the problem but does not solve it. Tossing your old device in a recycle bin is not an excuse to replace it at every incremental improvement.
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
At least /. has diversified a bit, it's not from MIT.
If they got rid of most of the screws from these things, it would solve so many problems.
Except most of the screws are a *critical* structural features.
http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
Its the expensive indium they're trying to recycle, unless they are complete idiots. By expensive, I mean a couple bucks per gram. At a rate of a couple grams per screen. So, a dumpster full of dead LCDs has maybe "thousands of dollars" worth of Indium in it, more or less. The hard part is separating it from thousands of pounds of polymerized dinosaur and plate glass without spending more than thousands of dollars of labor, energy, and capital expense..
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
If modular laptop parts became more common, why shouldn't they also become cheaper?
I really don't see a reason - other than cooling - why we couldn't have drop-in GPUs and various other peripherals. Heck, if they're "slot-in" (card goes in the side of the laptop and locks, similar to the battery or CD-ROM). Then you can have a cheaper GPU if you want, or a more expensive one. It might even save the producers on hardware costs... easier to produce a generic board and sell it with a given slot-in GPU than to have different lines being soldered in (and a LOT easier if there's a defect such as the issue with the NVidia's that were overheating and deballing back in the 8000/9000 series a few years back).
Obviously B'Elanna Torres was not a part of the design team, if she were
...the instruction manual would be written in Klingon.
All computer manufacturers would need to make their own wish-list, then sit down with the others and come up with some sorts of standards for the parts.
Given that there's a lot of different laptops available, I would assume a list of form-factors based on current LCD sizes (8.9", 11.6", 13.3", 15", 17", 21"), with options depending on the case size for compact or full-size keyboards, 1.8" and 2.5" bays for SATA hard drives, swapable GPU, standard batteries sizes, etc.
Then add bonuses like having hard drive and optical bays required to have all connectors for either SATA or batteries, meaning you could ditch the optical drive and put a 2nd or 3rd battery in your laptop, or go for a RAID setup.
Grades could be given on the laptops depending on the number of standards they follow.
Not sure why parent was modded a troll. The statement,"It's also a given that e-waste is currently a huge problem
does require citation. Nothing trollish about pointing that fact out.
I laughed at the weak who considered themselves good because they lacked claws.
It's about time there was the laptop equivalent of a PC case, where you can use standard components inside the case, and repair or upgrade what is in the case.
Depends on volume, and how often they can actually sell a second laptop (and whether you're buying from the same vendor).
If I want a laptop that's awesome on battery and mobile, I might buy a cheap little Acer (I have one for work that's surprisingly good, especially when running 'nix), but if I wanted a powerful machine with lots of RAM and a good GPU, perhaps a Dell/HP/Toshiba/etc
So in the case of an add-on GPU, that's two sales for one vendor.
NO. NO DISASSEMBLE JONNY 5!
BeauHD. Worst editor since kdawson.
So they copied a very early Mac Powerbook design. I serviced them in the early 90's, and it was 15 seconds to disassemble - and it looked an awful lot like the breakout in the article.
Go, Stanford!