[Metalab] Samsung Galxy S7 for free for maker

Andreas Kopp mail at andreaskopp.de
Mon Oct 17 11:32:46 CEST 2016


Hi Leopold,

great idea but I do not think samsung would agree to give them away before
signing some contract that you know what risk you are taking and you have
all the necessary equipment. A good business would be building a robot in a
bomb save room that could remove these batteries ...

Imagine the further bad media for samsung if  somebody gets hurt while
opening ...

https://www.wired.com/2016/10/samsung-exploding-note-7/

In this wired article they write

Our engineers at iFixit tore down the Note7
<https://www.ifixit.com/Teardown/Samsung+Galaxy+Note7+Teardown/66389> shortly
after its release in August. Digging a battery out of the Note7 is like
brain surgery—except the patient can burst into flames. The phone is glued
shut, with no external screws. Opening it required blasting the back of the
phone with hot air, prying away the glass and pulling out a layer of
components before going after the battery with a tiny plastic crowbar. We
pray for protection from a cross-section of deities when doing this, and
keep a bucket of sand and fire extinguisher hand


Good Luck!


*Andreas Kopp*
Max-Weber-Platz 9
81675 München

Tel: +49 1512 4122746

mail at andreaskopp.de <andreaskopp.de>


On Mon, Oct 17, 2016 at 11:17 AM, Stephan Petzl <stephan.petzl at gmail.com>
wrote:

> This is an awesome idea! I don’t have any idea how to target media, but I
> would definitely send this to Samsung Austria.
>
> Let me know if you need support for this project.
>
> Stephan
>
> On 16 Oct 2016, at 23:03, leopold zyka <leopold.zyka at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Wer hat Ideen ?, Kontakte ? Wie können wir das geeignet in den Medien
> unterbringen ?
>
> Dear Mr. Hruska,
>
> Thank you for your fast reply.
> It is clear that it is not possible to transport the phones including the
> batteries with an airplane.
> The batteries have to be removed and disposed ! I did no research on the
> depollution problem of the batteries until now,
> but the removal from the smartphone is an easy task.
> This has to bee done by repaircenters, by ifixit or similar institutions.
>
> Leopold
>
> 2016-10-16 22:22 GMT+02:00 Joel Hruska <joel.hruska at gmail.com>:
> Interesting idea. Unfortunately, it is now illegal to fly Samsung Galaxy
> Note 7's on an airplane in the United States, in any particular. I think
> that's going to prevent them from being redistributed. Samsung will just
> destroy the entire line.
>
> On Sun, Oct 16, 2016 at 2:37 PM, leopold zyka <leopold.zyka at gmail.com>
> wrote:
> Dear Mr. Sungham Kim,
>
> 2015 BBC gave away *1 million "Micro Bit computers" for free*.
>
> I dont know, if it is true but the media tells us that there are plans to
> destroy all the Galaxy Note 7 devices.
> An alternative would be to give the *Galaxy Note 7 to the maker-community* *for
> free* after removing the batteries.
>
> *Samsung Austria is positioned as innovation hub*.
> My proposal would be a great opportunity for *open innovation* in the
> crowd.
> I have several ideas for alternative use reaching from mesh 3D scanning to
> IoT and low scale artificial intelligence.
> I am sure that there would come up a lot of use cases in *hackathons*
> which could go beyond the popular *raspberry* designs
> due to the power of the Galaxy S7.
> *Challenges* would be a possibility to find new ideas which could be
> feedback for future device development at Samsung.
> I am not a marketing or pr guy but I think spending the otherwise useless
> devices to makers, fablabs, developers would give sympathy
> back to Samsung from the international community which is comparable to
> the size of produced Galaxy S7 devices.
>
> Disassembling and removing the batteries for devices which are already
> shipped could be done by local
> repair centers like https://www.techbold.at/ or by
> https://eustore.ifixit.com/
> This might be cheaper than the recall of over two million phones.
>
> As a technician I understand the problems using batteries at leading edge
> technology.
> I think so does a community of millions of DIY activists and maker around
> the world.
> But we dont have comprehension for *obscolescence* and design which is
> not sustainable.
> Making devices where you can not easily replace the batteries for me is a
> anti-pattern and design flaw.
> That is the reason I stay with Samsung S5 neo !
> If it is true that all Galaxy Note 7 should be destroyed as I can read in
> the media this would be the worst case scenario
> of this disaster.
> We have to imagine how many million (octa)cores, sensors, cams Samsung
> produced which are embedded in the Galaxy S7
> dormant for creative usage.
>
> To my person:
> I am the founder of a registered fablab which is part of the
> http://fabfoundation.org/
> I am very active as open source evangelist in the international makerscene
> and at IoT Austria.
> If you want farther information please let me know.
>
> At the first step this proposal went to you and in cc: to
> https://futurezone.at/
> https://www.wired.com
> http://www.extremetech.com
> https://www.techbold.at/
> https://www.iot-austria.at
> http://fabfoundation.org/
> https://www.fablabs.io/ShanghaiFablab
>
> Leopold Zyka vka qubit1729
> --
> *2expn+1 research*
> + implementation
>
> Leopold Zyka
> Pfarrwiesengasse 11/1/11
> A-1190 Vienna
> Tel.: 0699 1024 1032
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