Magical But Unsustainable
I ordered my iPad (or as some call it, my "giant iPod") a few weeks ago and I'm told it's currently waiting for me in California. So while I'll be taking a journey overseas for business reasons, I'll be able to pick up this "magical" device (as Steve Jobs and company describe it) weeks before its international release. Not dissimilar to my experience with the iPhone, as an Apple fanatic, I'm salivating at the prospects of playing with this device. Nothing new there. End of story right? The difference is this time, I tracked my iPad's progress. As indicated in the screen cap below, my iPad's journey begins in Shenzen, China!
While I currently live in Shanghai China, I just happened to be in Shenzen last week on transit from Hong Kong back to Shanghai. So wouldn't it have been cool if I could just pick this device up at the factory where most Apple products are assembled in China? Yeah, I know commerce doesn't work that way. But it should.
Who am I to be getting on my high horse after ordering this device and going (indirectly) overseas to pick this up? I admit it. I'm guilty as are most of us for committing unsustainable practices. What the heck does "unsustainable practices" even mean? That's one of the things I'm trying to define. How? Why?
One, I've been reading "Confessions of a Radical Industrialist" by Ray C. Anderson on my Kindle. Mr. Anderson is at the forefront of creating truly sustainable companies. Two, I'm starting a new project which proposes to build a green and sustainable university campus in China. This is one of those "journey not destination" moments. But I believe it is an extremely important and worthy journey. I hope someday I will look back upon this blog entry about picking up my "magical" device in an unsustainable manner and laugh at how we used to practice unsustainable commerce back in the early 2000's.
If that future were to become real, then that would truly be magical!
While I currently live in Shanghai China, I just happened to be in Shenzen last week on transit from Hong Kong back to Shanghai. So wouldn't it have been cool if I could just pick this device up at the factory where most Apple products are assembled in China? Yeah, I know commerce doesn't work that way. But it should.
Who am I to be getting on my high horse after ordering this device and going (indirectly) overseas to pick this up? I admit it. I'm guilty as are most of us for committing unsustainable practices. What the heck does "unsustainable practices" even mean? That's one of the things I'm trying to define. How? Why?
One, I've been reading "Confessions of a Radical Industrialist" by Ray C. Anderson on my Kindle. Mr. Anderson is at the forefront of creating truly sustainable companies. Two, I'm starting a new project which proposes to build a green and sustainable university campus in China. This is one of those "journey not destination" moments. But I believe it is an extremely important and worthy journey. I hope someday I will look back upon this blog entry about picking up my "magical" device in an unsustainable manner and laugh at how we used to practice unsustainable commerce back in the early 2000's.
If that future were to become real, then that would truly be magical!
2 Comments:
Even If we solve the greenhouse gas problem and replace fossils fuels with sustainable baseload power (ie. Breeder fission or aneutronic fusion) the most challenging problem of over population remains.
bummer. Carpe diem! Let's just consume 'til we drop! Either that or sacrifice all of our first (and only born)
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