I just saw this presentation at the Chaos Computer Club conference, for an “Ethical Hardware Kit with a PCB microcontroller made of wild clay retrieved from the forest in Austria and fired on a bonfire. Our conductive tracks use urban-mined silver and all components are re-used from old electronic devices”. It was part of the feminist hardware strand!

  • Gabrial
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    98 days ago

    Thank you for pointing that out! I missed the context of the survival backpack and now it makes more sense. When you view this as more of a ‘what if’ for a somewhat (hopefully) fictional situation this becomes a fun challenge of creating PCBs from limited resources. I’m wondering how I might try to build a PCB under such circumstances now. I’m still not a fan of their ‘urban mining’ though. If anything I believe there would be better sources for silver in a disaster/post-apocalypse.

    • @grue
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      68 days ago

      I’m wondering how I might try to build a PCB under such circumstances now.

      I imagine a realistic post apocalyptic scenario would involve going back to wire-wrapping, or possibly even point-to-point construction.

    • @[email protected]
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      58 days ago

      AFAIK, urban mining is less about some post apocalyptic contingency, but rather, as the name implies: Sourcing material from any urban environment. This can include recycling, but also stuff like using material of demolished buildings, etc.