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Saving the Planet, the Easy Way

Saving the Planet, the Easy Way

Gadgets, new investors and a political shift to make being environmentally friendly easier.

Environmentalists have been urging consumers for decades to wake up to impending disaster and change their buying, driving and living habits to reduce pollution, cut energy consumption and help reverse global warming.

Traditionally, taking personal action to protect the environment involved inconvenience: recycling trash, riding a bike to work, carpooling.

Researchers working on environmentally friendly innovations have been more than inconvenienced. Innovative start-ups with environmentally friendly products used to beg unsuccessfully for venture capital crumbs and government investment.

Pro-environment has often meant "antibusiness" in some political circles, so politicians pushing environmentally friendly policies have had difficulty getting elected.

Helping the environment has been hard for everyone. But thanks to three quiet "revolutions," it's about to get a lot easier.

The gadget revolution

A new generation of green products appeals to the selfish, the lazy, the materialistic and the status-obsessed. New green gadgets don't require inconvenience on the part of the user. And that's why they could really make a difference.

A solar-powered wireless keyboard called the Genius SlimStar 820 gets its power from light. The SlimStar 820 comes with a wireless mouse that isn't solar-powered but still uses very little power. The mouse's batteries need to be changed less often than once per year, compared to every few months, as is the case with most wireless mice. The Genius SlimStar 820 is easier to own than conventional wireless keyboard/mice combinations.

Rechargeable batteries have been around for ages but have been widely rejected by consumers in favour of disposable batteries in part because of inconvenience. Who needs yet another charger? London-based Moixa Energy Holdings recently unveiled a line of batteries with built-in USB connectors. By turning every PC into a battery charger, the company makes rechargeable batteries even more convenient than disposable ones because you don't have to keep going to the store to buy new ones. They're cheaper too, paying for themselves over time.

ScottEVest makes a range of solar-powered jackets, including the Tactical 4.0, a waterproof jacket with lots of pockets and detachable solar panels for charging mobile phones and iPods. Instead of having to remember to charge your devices once you're at home, you can charge them all the time as you're walking around.

A company called DigitalXtractions makes and sells an outdoor webcam called the SCIRC t1. The camera gets its power from the sun and connects to the Internet using built-in mobile phone electronics. It eliminates the chore of getting electricity and Internet connectivity to outdoor cams.

A new, self-contained headphone radio has solar panels on top that charge the batteries. If you prefer earbuds, you can buy an inexpensive ($US17) solar-powered radio with the panel on the radio. No more swapping batteries or charging. These radios have power all the time without action required of the user.

These products are just a small sampling of the green convenience gadgets available today. But several organizations, including Germany's Fraunhofer Institute and Japan's NTT DoCoMo have already demonstrated prototypes of the Holy Grail of green gadgets: The solar-powered mobile phone. Google co-founder Sergey Brin already uses a solar-powered mobile phone, according to a report in The Times of London, although details on it are not publicly available.

The all-in-one gadget of the future will be a media-playing camera phone that charges itself using whatever light is available. The addition of solar power technology will extend "talk" and "standby" times in the worst case, and eliminate charging altogether in the best case. Solar phones will be popular mainly because they'll be far more convenient.

Current generation hybrid cars, such as the Toyota Prius and Honda hybrids, are extremely popular in the US in part because they're cheaper and easier to own than comparable nonhybrid cars (fewer trips to the pump).

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