

The Restart Project Podcast
The Restart Project Podcast
Let's fix our relationship with electronics
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Mar 20, 2018 • 37min
Restart Podcast Ep 30: Afrotech Fest and Afrofuturism
Janet and Dave interview Florence Okoye and Debs Durojaiye, two of the organisers of the Afrotech Fest, an exciting event which took place in London at the end of January. We talk about representation of black people of Caribbean and African heritage in tech and we discuss the meanings of Afrofuturism.
First, we discuss their motivation to put on Afrotech Fest: the realisation that black people in Britain tend to be underrepresented in tech conferences here, but more fundamentally to challenge the very institution of the tech conference itself. They felt there was a need to involve black voices – everyone, not just self-defined technical people – in debates about technology.
The Youth Programme was a great example of this, and of the importance of engaging kids with technology. Children were protagonists at the event, developing hard skills like coding but also enhancing their creativity, for example thinking of design and storyboarding in videogames. Debs tells us about their STEAM approach (A for art) instead of thinking of science and technology in the traditional way of STEM.
Beyond having fun with the hands-on workshop, the aim was also to gave kids agency, to make them think critically about how technology works, what we should demand of our products and how innovation can be representative and responsible to benefit all citizens.
Afrotech’s main goal has been to empower participants to rethink their relationship with technology and the tech sector. We talk about the difference between “collaboration and not charity”, as Debs puts it. We discuss how the lack of real consideration of the black community results in low number of black people accessing and staying in science and technology jobs. And we arrive at the consequences: how this produces “shoddy” tech, as best illustrated by Google’s facial recognition tool which fails a large part of the population.
Lastly, we discuss Afrotech and Afrofuturism, referring to the recent and much-debated film Black Panther. Along with Afrotech Fest, we see that projects such as Black Panther have allowed for a deeper debate about representation, culture and history. We then talk about the different meanings of Afrofuturism, from the combination of sci-fi and black aesthetics, to its environmental perspectives, and the shift to considering innovation as an opportunity to use local resources and respond to local problems, creating, as Florence says “an intersectional and liberatory future”.
Links:
Afrotech Fest 2018
Afrotech Fest: Youth Programme
Afro Futures UK
The Verge: Google’s racist algorithm
How we get to next: Afrofuturism and Outsider Tech
Renegade futurism: Afrofuturism 3.0: Shuri, Technology & Maker Culture
Goodreads: Octavia Butler – Parable of the Sower
Ron Eglash, TED: “The Fractals at the heart of African designs“
[Feature Image “Afrotech Fest 2018″ by Ian Forrester is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 2.0]
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Mar 14, 2018 • 30min
Restart Radio: Repairing in school and Apple’s “zero waste”
Janet and Ugo talk with Estefania Suquilanda, who is introducing repair into a school in New York City. We then discuss Apple’s recent claims on being zero waste and the Right to Repair movement in California.
We are very interested in spreading the culture of repair from an early age, so it was great to hear about Estef’s work. She is the current Tech Support Specialist at The Hewitt School, a girls’ school in New York City, where she is inspiring secondary school students to gain hard skills fixing devices. Meeting once a week after school hours, her Restart students seem to be learning very rapidly.
Just the other day, they impressively fixed an iPhone 7+ screen in about 45 minutes!
Estef also tells us about her background, which is actually in professional electronics repair. She shares some thoughts on her experience as a female technician and about the small shop where she used to fix Apple products.
Estef and her primary school students made bracelets reusing keys from broken keyboards for last St. Valentine’s Day. Estef implies that reuse can be a “gateway” to repair.
We then stick to Apple to discuss their recent advert, where they state that their iPhone is assembled in facilities that send “zero waste to landfills”. Going through their 2018 report on Supplier Responsibility, we find that this claim is based on their “Zero Waste to Landfill” certification by global company UL, but it is strictly limited to waste produced in its assembly facilities – that is, where all the product components get fitted together. Now, how much waste is being produced before assembly?
Apple may be leading the way into a more sustainable manufacturing compared to the other big companies, however if they want to claim absolute zero waste products, they should be transparent about their whole supply chain, for instance about the manufacturing process of components, processing of raw materials and mining.
Lastly, we comment on Apple’s attack on DIY repairs, and whether this is incompatible with a claim of “zero waste”. The US ‘Right to Repair’ campaign, which after successfully getting legislation introduced in other states now arrives in California, is pretty much at the doorstep of the big companies like Apple or Google. The Right to Repair bill is lobbying for making repair information and tools accessible to consumers. Companies may well be interested in providing repair services, however this initiative is speaking for people to have their right to repair their devices themselves.
Links:
Youtube: Apple ad Zero Waste iPhone
Apple: Supplier Responsibility 2018 Report
iFixit: California Confronts Tech Giants in Their Own Backyard
UL: Zero Waste. The first program to validate zero waste claims
Restart: Restart at School
[Feature image by Hewitt School – Twitter]
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Mar 8, 2018 • 30min
Restart Radio: Elinor Ostrom and the commons
Janet and Neil interview Goldsmiths Political Economy Lecturer Derek Wall about his new book “Elinor Ostrom’s Rules for Radicals”, based on the fascinating and lesser known story of Elinor Ostrom: the only woman to have won a Nobel Prize for Economics. We discuss Ostrom’s view of the “commons” and how people can organise themselves to manage community resources.
Our interest in the commons comes from two places: first, a better stewarding of material resources like electronics, but secondly realising that we can only do this effectively when we have a strong “knowledge” commons in parallel, which allows for reuse and repair.
Breaking with the idea of the expert in the ivory tower, Ostrom always worked in a hands-on way with communities to build a body of research. Seeking alternatives to Hardin’s famous “tragedy of the commons” (the idea that sharing community resources inevitably leads to disaster) – and to privatising these commons, Ostrom fought for empowering locals.
Derek tells us about the time when he got to meet Ostrom in person. “The global doesn’t tell you much about the local”, she explained to him. Global initiatives alone, for instance when tackling climate change, are not enough to target local issues, there is a need to understand how to manage problems and resources from the community level. Ostrom called this multi-level approach “polycentrism”.
Most of Ostrom’s work focused on the commons in a material sense – fisheries or land – but she did write about knowledge commons like the Internet. How are we managing this rather intangible commons? Interestingly, scarcity is a recurring issue with material commons, having to organise too many people sharing resources. However, immaterial or knowledge commons seem to actually grow as the number of contributors increases (think Wikipedia!), as long as there as the rules have been collaboratively designed and incorporate key principles.
In our economy here in the UK and Europe, where everything seems to have an owner, can discards or waste form a commons? Janet mentions the case of the Woelab in Togo, where makers built a 3D printer from discarded materials and shared the designs. Thinking of Ostrom’s ideas on the commons, we can be inspired to rethink our relationships with community resources, and the power and potential of acting locally.
Links:
Pluto Press: Elinor Ostrom’s Rules for Radicals
Kevin Carson
Nobel Prize: Elinor Ostrom’s Facts
Motherboard: Togo’s Woelab
[Feature image “Nobel Laureate Elinor Ostrom (Economics) 2” by Flickr user US Embassy Sweden is licensed under CC-BY 2.0.]
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Mar 2, 2018 • 25min
Restart Radio: Rare-earth minerals in Greenland with Lise Autogena and Josh Portway
In this week’s episode, we talk to artists Joshua Portway and Lise Autogena about their documentary ‘Kuannersuit / Kvanefjeld’, about a small town in Greenland that is divided over plans for a large, open-pit uranium and rare earth mineral mine. The proposed mine would be the world’s fifth largest uranium mine and the second largest rare earths operation.
Josh and Lise, who have been working together as artists since the early 1990s, in their first experiment in film portray a town divided. Some are passionately opposed to the proposal, which would involve mining off the top of the nearby mountain and filling the adjacent lake with tailings. There are fears for how the dust from the mine may effect farming or the health of the town’s inhabitants. But others see it as the only way to save the town from depopulation, as the population has dwindled since the hey-day of fishing.
Greenland is a country with a very small population and great territory rich in mineral wealth, including rare earth minerals, which are widely used in the manufacture of electronics. Most rare earth minerals are hardly recyclable, and processes for recouping them from end-of-life electronics lag behind developments in their usage. In our increasingly globalised world, we are all connected to each other through resource use. The rate of our consumption of electronic products has ramifications far beyond what we immediately see.
This is not an issue with a simple solution: mining in Greenland is widely seen as a way for the country to gain financial and political independence from Denmark. But in the words of Mariane Paviasen, a resident of the town, “we can’t become independent by giving a piece of our land to a company from another country”. Even among those who might in theory agree with mining, the pace of the growth of mining is a major issue.
Kuannersuit / Kvanefjeld may be about one small town in Greenland, but its story is being played out in countless variations all over the world. Hearing these stories pushes us to think carefully about our role as global citizens and consumers.
Links:
Kuannersuit / Kvanefjeld – full documentary (Vimeo)
Autogena Projects
Narsaq on Wikipedia
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Feb 22, 2018 • 28min
Restart Radio Takeover: Why we repair in the community
We’re trying something new. Our volunteers are a crucial part of our work at Restart, and frequently appear as guests on our show. This week, and once a month from this week onwards, we hand them the reins. This is a volunteer “takeover”.
Dave Lukes and Ben Skidmore are two passionate tinkerers and repairers who are equally fascinated by the wider ecological and community benefits of repair. They kick off the show by taking us through two noteworthy items of tech news.
First, the reports that electronics retailer Maplin has faced financial troubles and is in talks with buyers, which raises questions about whether any other brick-and-mortar high street business selling electronic components would step in to take its place. Second, the news that Windows 7 and 8 are losing support for two important features: push notifications, and find my phone. Is this a definitive admission from Microsoft that they have lost the smartphone race?
Next, Dave and Ben turn to wider considerations about the upgrade cycle, and the role of community repair. They muse on the pace with which technology has exploded into every corner of our lives: as Dave points out, there is now more computing power in his pocket than there was in the entire world when he was born.
Dave Lukes fixing a radio at the Museum of London Restart Party
With a whole range of devices now becoming ‘smart’, the demand for things like memory chips is skyrocketing, and manufacturers simply can’t keep up. This naturally leads to a healthy second-hand market: but is this growth due to the desire not to purchase new, or the desire – quite simply – to purchase?
The role of repair in all this is that of a movement towards longer product lifecycles. But it also has benefits for community cohesion that are far more localised and personal than that.
Finally, Dave and Ben discuss tinkering for tinkering’s sake, and the value of creative hacking of hardware. Sometimes, taking apart a gadget doesn’t need to have any evident benefit at all – it’s enough simply to remind ourselves, occasionally, that we can choose what to do with the devices we own.
Links:
BBC News: Maplin in talks with buyers
The Verge: Windows 7 and 8 phones to lose support for push notifications and Find My IphonePl
Polygon: Nvidia “working really hard” to increase supply of graphics cards
The Verge: Hackers have turned the Nintendo Switch into a functional Linux Tablet
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Feb 14, 2018 • 30min
Restart Radio: World Radio Day and electronics in the wake of Brexit
On International World Radio Day, Ugo is joined by Restart volunteer Ben Skidmore to discuss the future of FM radio, and the future of electronics manufacturing more broadly in a post-Brexit world.
The landscape of electronics design and manufacture is always changing, but today we discuss several developments and shifts that are particularly significant.
Firstly, our friends at iFixit published a teardown of an Apple ‘Homepod’, the latest (and most expensive) in a wave of ‘smart speakers’ now flooding the market (for more on this, our Voice Controlled Assistants episode link is below). iFixit’s team concluded that the Homepod quite possibly takes the prize for the least repairable device that Apple has ever made, giving it a repairability rating of 1/10. Is the fact that it is highly durable enough to offset this shortcoming? And how might we see the trade-off between durability and repairability being navigated by manufacturers in the future?
Next, we confront some of the unspoken concerns surrounding current Brexit negotiations, particularly with regards to ecodesign. The European Commission Ecodesign Directive spells out a move towards products that are designed to last longer. But if the UK is left to design its own regulations, the risk is that we will not manage to keep up. We discuss a potential future in which the UK becomes a ‘dumping ground’ for lower quality products that are not acceptable in the EU. Luckily, there is hope to be found in the progress being made by single states to protect consumer rights and promote repair, such as the Swedish legislation that gives tax breaks for repair.
Finally, on World Radio Day, we celebrate our love of radio and the station that makes our show possible: Resonance FM (support their fundraiser here). FM radio seems to be one of the most resilient of broadcast media, but as the number of people switching to DAB (digital radio) grows, the possibility of a digital switchover becomes more imminent. There are undoubtedly some benefits to DAB radio, even though we’ve often found them harder to repair. And we should always remember to ask who, and what, is being left behind in case a technology is rendered obsolete.
Links:
iFixit: Teardown of the Apple Homepod
Restart Radio: Voice Controlled Assistants
The Verge: Cost of repairing the Apple Homepod
Coolproducts: A coalition of European NGOs pushing Ecodesign
Restart Wiki: How radios work
Which: Towards the digital radio switchover
[Feature Image “Yet another CXA1191 FM radio receiver” by Flickr user Dilshan Jayakody is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0]
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Feb 7, 2018 • 30min
Restart Podcast Ep 29: Tracing global flows of electronic ‘discards’ with Josh Lepawsky
This week we talk to Josh Lepawksy – Associate Professor in Geography at the Memorial University of Newfoundland – about his work in the field of ‘Discard Studies’, which examines the way in which discards (waste) move through the world at local and global scales.
Josh’s research is specifically focused on electronic waste — his new book ‘Reassembling Rubbish’ (MIT Press) contains the insights gained from a five-year investigation into the global trade and traffic of discarded electronics.
He explains to us why the word ‘discards’ is useful in his field of study: the word ‘waste’ has become too familiar, conjuring up images of garbage bags and wheelie bins. These things to belong to a system that is much bigger, more expansive and more complex than what we generally imagine. Just like our sleek, sealed devices, the system is often a “black box” to us. The large-scale industrial processes by which global discards are taken apart, destroyed, redistributed or hidden are a far-cry from our experiences of household disposal.
Image source: https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/reassembling-rubbish
Of course, aspects of this bigger picture do occasionally make it into the news, especially those that centre around the ‘dumping’ of e-waste in ‘poorer countries’. But while there is certainly truth in shocking, photographic depictions of dumping and unsafe processing of electronic waste, they prevent us from understanding a more nuanced, global political economy of discards. There is so much more going on, even just out of the frame of these images.
Josh unpacks some of the complex rules and conventions governing global trading of e-waste, and emphasises that recycling must be re-framed as a single part of the story, rather than the whole story.
With a more holistic picture that incorporates the repair economy and other means of repurposing end-of-life products, we can begin discuss what a much more just and resource sufficient world would look like.
Links:
Josh Lepawsky: Reassembling Rubbish (Research project blog)
MIT press: Reassembling Rubbish
Basel Convention: e-waste overview
Countering WEEE Illegal Trade (report)
Discardstudies.com
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Jan 31, 2018 • 30min
Restart Radio: Medical technology in/on the body
Medicine has been revolutionised by technology that goes on – and in – our body. In these cases, questions of durability and reliability can become matters of life and death. From the artificial pancreas to the edible robot, we think about the role that repair and ongoing product support have in the medical technology (med-tech) industry.
Today, we hear from Jon about his own ‘artificial pancreas’ (continuous glucose monitoring device) – a set of devices that help diabetics to more easily monitor their blood sugar levels. Jon talks to Lauren about his experiences of this relatively new technology – both positive and negative – and what it means to be truly dependent on a device.
Image by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (source: Flickr)
We take a brief look at some of the other new medical devices that are emerging, including a range of ‘edible’ pills. Experiments in building open-source platforms for these kinds of devices have got us thinking about the trust and transparency elements of medical technologies. Would you be more willing to swallow an electronic pill that you had designed yourself than one that you had bought from a manufacturer?
Links:
Diabetes.co.uk: Continuous Glucose Monitoring
Wired: Artificial organs developed by biohackers will soon deliver insulin to diabetics
NPR: Are implanted medical devices creating ‘A danger within us?’
IEEE Spectrum: How to design a robot you can swallow
IEEE Spectrum: This swallowable gas sensor could improve your diet.
Dr. Ashley Shew: Tech and Disability
[Photo “Continuous Glucose Monitor” by FDA is licensed as a United States government work]
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Jan 24, 2018 • 30min
Restart Radio: How repair informs design with Beeline
Today on Restart Radio, Ugo and Neil talk to Charlie Bruce and Tom Putnam from Beeline: a smart compass for cycling. A simple piece of hardware that displays simply an arrow and distance, Beeline removes the hassle of interpreting an entire map while you’re on the go. And it costs about the same as an average smartphone screen repair: which is often the price of badly designed smartphone brackets for cyclists.
Tom and Charlie hope that their product will encourage more people to cycle. They talk about what it’s like to be a small start-up within a competitive hardware ecosystem. One of the things that makes Beeline stand out is their willingness to learn from their customers. All too often, when a product fails, companies simply send out a replacement and ask that the owner recycles the previous unit. While the failure rates on their product are low, the Beeline team takes back all their broken devices, and examine each one to figure out what has gone wrong and why. They repair all faulty devices and reuse them as demo units for promotional purposes. They have learned from these failures over time, for example by redesigning the PCB (printed circuit board) in their second batch of units, to reduce chances that the soldering would get damaged during shipping. Another area of future work they’re considering is improving the design to reduce cases of water damage.
Image source: https://beeline.co/products/beeline
Another thing that makes Beeline more future-proof than many hardware start-ups is that all firmware (the base-level software that is embedded in the hardware) and the companion app are designed in-house. This means that after you buy a Beeline compass, it can actually continue to improve over time, rather than getting worse or quickly unsupported. This means happier customers and less waste – two things that tend to go hand in hand.
Software obsolescence is a growing problem in the world of hardware, but it’s not likely to affect Beeline in the near future. The device connects to your smartphone via Bluetooth, a relatively simple functionality, which wouldn’t be affected by lack of frequent updates to a phone’s operating system. As a result, Beeline is compatible with smartphones running old versions of Android and iOS.
We’d like to see more companies, small and large, take a more proactive stance in repairing their devices in-house and learn from their efforts. And we encourage those that are going the extra mile – such as Beeline – to take time to document and be more vocal and open about their approach to repairability and durability. As Tom said, it’s good for the environment, for their customers and for business too.
Links:
Beeline
[Photos courtest of Beeline]
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Jan 16, 2018 • 30min
Restart Podcast Ep. 28: Disruptive design and unlocking wonderment with Leyla Acaroglu
In our first monthly Restart Podcast of the year, Dave talks to Leyla Acaroglu: self-described designer, systems thinker and sustainability provocateur. Leyla’s energy is contagious as she talks us through her methods for designing not just useful and effective products, but also new systems and social conventions.
Having grown frustrated with the ways in which traditional education prioritises linear thinking, Leyla founded the Unschool of Disruptive Design. Within this framework, she teaches systems thinking: a way of looking at the world that acknowledges its interconnectedness. This idea has its roots in The Gaia Theory, which sees earth as a synergistic, self-regulating, complex system made up of both living beings and inorganic substances.
For Leyla, systems thinking enables a fierce optimism in the face of some of the world’s most challenging issues: celebrating the complexity of the societies we have build, she argues that every problem holds its own solution. This means that designers have an important role as change-makers: but only if they learn to think creatively and holistically. She explains how optimism and outrage are not mutually exclusive, reflecting on some of her experiences as a young woman in Australia that drove her to do what she currently does.
Leyla is concerned by the normalisation of unethical practises in design, but she sees huge potential for its revival as a force for good, or ‘silent social scripter’: “We need people pushing at the boundaries of what it means to create things in the world, and what it means to deliver functionality to humans, and what it means to influence desire”.
Leyla was one of our Keynote speakers at last year’s Fixfest: a global gathering for community repair. She talks about the connections between design and repair, and how repairers are often natural system thinkers. We share her confidence that more dialogue between these two closely related industries would lead to a world where people think more deeply about what they are creating, why, and who for.
Links:
Personal Website: Leyla Acaroglu
The Unschool – 2018 calendar
The Gaia Theory: An Overview
Fixfest Keynote: Leyla Acaroglu
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