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In the video it said 75% of plastic can be identified. What's with the remaining 25%? What's the next process to identify the remaining 25%?

Also: Total cost Breakout board €176.97.

Sounds a little extreme for it. Is it supposed to be this expensive?




We're not even recycling ten percent (per [1]) of post-consumer plastic waste, and most of the "recycled" you see in advertising is hogwash - what is counted are scraps from along the manufacturing process that get recycled for that metric.

We should be focusing on actually enabling any recycling, not nitpicking about efficiency gains.

[1]: https://www.epa.gov/facts-and-figures-about-materials-waste-...


Agree.

The biggest issue with plastic recycling is probably that products like packaging are optimized according to marketing criteria (colourful/shiny/coated) and adding a little bit of convenience for consumers (glue to reseal after opening). This way things end up being made from multiple components which aren't easily separable, thus difficult to (if at all) recycle.

Making simple packaging where the whole thing is made from a single (widely used, standardized) variant of plastic and instead of being coated or multi layered, things like labels ought to be fixed in a way that allows easy separation (easily soluble glue).

But it's not gonna happen soon, since it'd basically come down to throwing away all those neat "innovations" the packaging industry has developed. Also, if there's one thing retailers care about it's products that look shiny and colourful and entice people to buy them. They're hardly going to give that up.


> Also, if there's one thing retailers care about it's products that look shiny and colourful and entice people to buy them. They're hardly going to give that up.

Wrap the plastic in paper. More and more products here in Germany do this.


that how much I would expect to pay for one unit of a custom assembled circuit board, with parts and shipping

my manufacturer makes me buy two though :)

seems to be some more info on the theory behind the operation and limitations here https://github.com/arminstr/reremeter




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