Gesamtlänge aller Episoden: 5 days 23 hours 1 minute
Only one company sits on a mountain of off-shore cash and makes such compelling but expensive products. At their latest event, Apple boasted how green it was, and we examine their claims.
We talk to Professor Jonathan Chapman (University of Brighton), a designer who has helped many other designers change the way they conceive of quality and good design. His notion "emotionally durable design" goes beyond actual physical durability.
We interview Faraz, long time Restarter, maker and now music maker with a group called Opto Noise. Through the London Hackspace, Faraz connected with a handful of people who wanted to make music with lasers, spinning discs and photovoltaic cells
Our work has been affected by Europe from day one, so we're concerned about potential effects of a Brexit. We discuss how Europe impacts our electronics and electricals, from design to end-of-life.
We interviewed photographer Greg Jones about his charming photography project called "Still Works" to document the abandoned electronics and electricals.
In this episode, we talk tools - how do we actually get into electrical appliances or miniaturised electronic gadgets, many of which are designed to keep us out? We interview Kyle Wiens, founder of iFixit.
We talked with Hackney repair activist and ShareAction campaigner Fidi about how we can influence companies as shareholders or pension members. Our influence in the private sector is not just at the point of purchase.
We talked with Andrew, researcher, maker and pillar of the maker community here in the UK - then we discussed anger with Apple over problems with iPhone 6
We invited our friend Max, from Demand Energy Equality, to talk about their inspiring solar workshops, where beginners learn to make a functional personal solar charger out of PV off-cuts. It's a way of bringing renewable energy closer to people,
We discussed our incipient collaboration with Amnesty, Global Witness and Wikirate, which are rating companies on their sourcing of minerals. Then about the IKEA executive who caught headlines saying we may have reached "peak stuff" in households.