Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Bioplastics!

With petroleum prices accelerating at unimaginable rates and plastics the topic of green protests everywhere, bioplastics may be the answer! And the business world is listening.

This interesting BusinessWeek article showcases a manufacturer of the new material called Metabolix and includes a video interview with founder Oliver Peoples.

"His [Peoples'] Cambridge (Mass.) company, Metabolix (MBLX), has harnessed the complex genetics of plant-cell metabolism and collected hundreds of patents on a process for manufacturing "bioplastics" in large vats of microbes. A $200million factory is under construction and could start producing Metabolix's bioplastic, called Mirel, early next year."

Saturday, June 21, 2008

12 Big Ideas from Biology

Watch Janine Benyus, founder of the Biomimicry Institute and Biomimicry Guild, discuss her design revolution at TED.



  1. Self Assembly
  2. CO2 as a Feedstock
  3. Solar Transformation
  4. The Power of Shape
  5. Quenching Thirst
  6. Metals without Mining
  7. Green Chemistry
  8. Timed Degradation
  9. Resilience and Healing
  10. Sensing and Responding
  11. Growing Fertility
  12. Life Creates Conditions Conducive to Life

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Is small beautiful yet?



“I have no doubt that it is possible to give a new direction to technological development, a direction that shall lead it back to the real needs of man, and that also means: to the actual size of man. Man is small, and, therefore, small is beautiful.”
-E.F. Schumacher

Schumacher wrote his manifesto in 1973. Have we since found beauty in the labor-intensive, locally-produced, and sustainable? Is it possible to scale back while moving forward? Is it essential?

Sunday, June 1, 2008

User Centric vs. Buyer Centric

OLPC's and fuseproject's XO is a unique product in that it was praised and awarded for it's concept and design, but somewhere something was lost in the implementation. Niti Bhan of the Emerging Futures Lab argues that good design must extend all the way through the value chain. The OLPC XO has not been widely accepted or used by its target audience. So much for user-centric design, right?

Well, let's look at the alternative, buyer-centric design. What if OLPC had designed its product with governments in mind. Or let's just pretend that OLPC were Microsoft since we all know how that would have went down. Microsoft has the business acumen to make things happen and get its product past governments by crippling it with security and closed technology and then marketing it as the most advanced operating system ever. Sure, if this product were forced on the consumer, they would have something, but is something always better than the alternative?

What they would have is a crippled and complicated product that is of no use to those who need simple educational software (forget those who are illiterate).

Indeed, OLPC has switched from its innovative interface on an open-source platform to Microsoft XP. And better yet, Microsoft has already placed restrictions on how good such low-cost computers running its software can be. For Microsoft, is this smart BoP penetration through "restricted give-aways" or simply forced corporate colonialism?