OK, it's a
totally cool phone, but still, it's a phone. We wanted an industrial revolution. One that would address the problem of all the
e-waste piling up in China and India.Thousands
of participants in the Green my Apple campaign have been dropping some
pretty big hints to Apple about what they wanted announced at Macworld.
They've been
writing to Steve,
blogging,
creating graphics and ads,
t-shirts and buttons,
photographing themselves hugging their macs.
For our part, we
bathed the Apple store in San Francisco in green light and put our cardboard Mac Guy (star of our
alternative Mac Ad) on tour at the conference, and helped a small squad of
Green Apple volunteers with the task of handing out leaflets about the Green my Apple campaign. It was popular stuff. They
ran out of leaflets.
They were spreading the word about how much more Apple could do than the little that US law requires, which has earned them a
pat on the head from the Bush Administration's Environmental Protection Agency.
We
even presented Steve with a suggested speech, which was among the
top YouTube videos viewed on the day of Steve's keynote.

But
when it came time for the real speech, we didn't even get a measly
Keynote slide about Apple's continued use of brominated fire
retardants, PVC, and stuff that
other computer manufactures have already agreed to phase out.Like Dell.
While
Steve Jobs was studiously ignoring everyone's pleas to make Apple
eco-friendly, Michael Dell of Dell computers was doing what Steve
should be doing: leading. At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las
Vegas, (a poor cousin to the grandeur which is Macworld) Dell said:
"I
challenge every PC maker to join us in providing free recycling for
every customer in every country... all the time -- no exceptions."
Now that's the kind of different thinking we're asking for with the Green my Apple campaign. Steve, he's stealing your moves!
So
if you love Apple and you want to buy iPods and iPhones and Macs that
aren't going to poison kids in Asia and Africa when they reach the end
of their lives,
join the campaign to get Steve to do the right thing.