Creative Synthesis Blog

Talking about Creativity as Combination, The thoughts and works of the Creative Synthesis Collaborative.

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This thing was constructed on October 3, 2008, and it was categorized as hyperexperience.
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Hiroshi pointed me to this BusinessWeek investigation on microchip counterfeiting, which explains how electronic waste recycling is profitable: used circuit boards are baked over coal fires to loosen precious microchips. These are rinsed in the local river and sorted according to manufacturer. The chips can be re-sold as is, or their markings can be sanded off to apply newer - and in some cases, completely different - logos and product names. This story focuses on how all of this is worth the trouble, because some of the chips can be re-marked as military-grade and sold for substantially higher prices. While this may be troubling for the technologically advanced superpowers, it also points to an encouraging side story about the fact that some of the precious materials encased in microchips are able to receive extended use through painstaking labor (some might call it ‘up-cycling‘).

Watch the video here.

This thing was constructed by .
Leo is a artist, inventor and all around practical person in the Tangible Media Group at the Media Lab. He has a background in sculpture, architecture and industrial design as well as an MS from the Media Lab spent working on the kitchen of the future. He is on a search for truth.

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