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Help the recycling effort of batteries by getting a standard
color printed on the battery.
This colour will indicate the chemistry of the battery and
therefore make it easier to sort by humans or optical
equipment. Even the wider public might get behind the
standard. Large collections of
the same chemistry
batteries should (In theory. Form factor might still be a
problem ) make it a lot easier to reprocess.
The world of consumer electronics is only going to get
bigger and so too battery consumption, in all their forms.
Trying to retain the active chemicals in some sort of
repetitive cycle of manufacture and reprocessing makes
environmental and use sense.
Annotation delayer
Mentioned in my anno; the idea where I discuss my "untouched in 10 years" view [notexactly, Jul 22 2019]
[link]
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I like the idea but most batteries do state what they're made of on the label. |
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Yes it does, right there on the bottom of the box after monosodium glutamate. This would make it easier. |
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the solution, then, is to develop a cheese-and-onion based
battery. Cheese is a good insulator, and onions are full of
electrolytes, so I can't imagine this being much of a
challenge. |
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I like it, but i also want to reserve the right to make my own batteries and dispose of them responsibly. |
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//the solution, then, is to develop a cheese-and-onion based battery// would this be called Cheese-'n'-ions? |
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(the cations would be in a little blue paper wrap) |
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Anions: -ive charge
Cations: +ive charge
Onions: 0 charge. |
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"...I can't imagine this being much of a challenge."
As long as you're not using Swiss cheese. |
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Won't the battery companies get upset about not having their own identifying colours on their batteries? I think that you have to clarify that the colour would be in a band around the negative end of the battery, or some place where the battery companies wouldn't be upset about. |
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As for those cheese-and-onion batteries, I don't know how we're going to label them. Maybe food dye? |
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I thought advocacy (in the MFD sense) had to refer to some pre-existing cause. |
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If this is unacceptable advocacy, then isn't every idea that could benefit society
overall? |
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The help file does indeed define "advocacy" as "promotes or protests an existing,
often widely discussed, issue X that is very important to the author, without inventing
new means to bring about or stop the discussed issue". In my opinion, this idea isn't
*asking* more people to be aware of the issue of battery chemistry separation for
recycling, while it *does* propose a new means to deal with the issue. |
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I had had a mistaken understanding of the related m-f-d reason "let's all", though. To
wit, my mistaken beliefs:
- "everyone please use this so that there can be any benefit at all": no benefit
unless/until widely usedwhat I thought was "let's all"
- "the more people use this, the more benefit there will be": acceptable and common;
neither "advocacy" nor "let's all" because the benefit doesn't depend on everyone using
it
Turns out what I thought was "let's all" is okay (?), "let's all" is actually just a
variation on "advocacy" where the thing being advocated for is a practice rather than an
issue, and it's irrelevant to an idea's acceptability whether it needs to be taken up by
everyone to provide anyone any benefit. |
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notexactly, were you waiting until exactly a decade had
elapsed since the previous comment, or was that a fluke? |
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(edit) OK, so given that you've just posted on another idea
("Squirming intubation tubes") with a decade interval- not a
fluke.
But why? weird sorting bug? Testing observational skills of
other bakers? |
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... operating in a zone of consciousness decoupled from the normal space-time continuum ... ? |
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I have a view set up to show me ideas that were last
annotated ten years ago to the day. I've discussed it on here
somewhere, somewhen in the past few months. (It's not
intended, but an amusing side effect of being ten years later is
that only one character in the date stamp differs from the
previous anno's, making it look like the previous one was added
only earlier today if you don't look closely.) |
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I have one for twenty years, too, but it won't show me
anything until around November or December, IIRC. |
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Edit: Found where I discussed it. Was easier than I expected.
[link] |
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