Tuesday, May 31, 2011

If you do the echo, I'll give a candy

Recycling is a winning strategy to protect the planet, and must be incorporated early. But how do children understand the long journey of recovery and disposal of waste if it still - and for many "grown-up" - remains an impenetrable mystery? No problem: innovative minds have thought to solve the problem by inventing a bin interactive (RCV), which rewards young environmentalists: it works a bit 'like dog training, the special trash gives candy to children who use the "eco- mamiera "correct.

In fact, the mini cassette (created to cast glass, aluminum and plastic) has a special button: when pressed in the right way, it lights up, speaks and delivers the sweet. The logic of the project, designed by South Korean Yunjin Chang, is simple and intuitive: the tempting youngsters, trying to create a (Pavlovian) culture of recycling.

Of course, the element of corruption without any doubt, but surely the design of the project is smart and could hit the target. With some adjustments, perhaps, may even work for "grown-up." In the world are still many, in fact, adults who are "refusing" to acknowledge the easy lesson-label, regardless of the fact that their poor choices can weigh the fate of the entire planet.

They maybe a few more eco-candy would be good.

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