Bill Gates: Build a better toilet
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SEATTLE (AP) — These aren't your typical loos.
One uses microwave energy to transform human waste into electricity.
Another captures urine and uses it for flushing.
And still another turns excrement into charcoal.
They are part of a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation competition to reinvent the toilet for the 2.5 billion people around the world who don't have access to modern sanitation.
Scientists from around the world have taken up the challenge, and the foundation announced some projects Tuesday that will be getting more money to take their ideas from the lab to cities.
There, local entrepreneurs will use the new technology to turn pollution into cash.
"We couldn't be happier with the response that we've gotten," Bill Gates said.
To pass the foundation's threshold for the world's next toilet, it must operate without running water, electricity or a septic system, not discharge pollutants, preferably capture energy or other resources, and operate at a cost of 5 cents a day.
The United Nations estimates disease caused by unsafe sanitation results in about half the hospitalizations in the developing world. About 1.5 million children die each year from diarrheal disease.
Scientists believe most of these deaths could be prevented with proper sanitation, along with safe drinking water and improved hygiene.
The foundation expects to field test its first prototypes within the next three years.
Most of the prototypes on display this week in the open courtyard of the foundation's Seattle headquarters turn solid waste into energy. This is both a practical and pragmatic solution to the solid waste puzzle, said Carl Hensman, program officer for the foundation's water, sanitation and hygiene team.
Many recycle waste into other usable substances such as animal feed, water for irrigation, or even just energy and water to run their own systems.
Some, like the winning project from Caltech, use chemistry and engineering to completely transform the waste.
Clement Cid, a Caltech grad student from Trouillas, France, said it has been intellectually rewarding to work with scientists from a variety of specialties.
"You can come up with great ideas," he said, adding that the toilet fair offered more opportunities for idea sharing.
Other projects on display were not so high-tech, including one from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine that sends black soldier fly larvae inside latrines and even home toilets to process waste, resulting in high quality, environmentally friendly animal feed at a cost of a penny a day.
The fly larvae project is already being field tested in Cape Town, South Africa, and the inventors are working on a kit to sell to entrepreneurs. They have had inquiries from Haiti, Sudan, Kenya and Ghana about adopting the approach.
"At the end of the day it will look very low-tech, but there's a lot of science behind it," said Walter Gibson, a medical biochemist who is part of the development team.
The Gates toilet focus started just about a year ago, and including grants announced Tuesday, $370 million in foundation dollars have been committed to reinventing the toilet. Hensman said the foundation decided to hold a toilet fair this week to show how far the scientists have gotten in that time, and to give them an opportunity to learn from each other and potentially collaborate.
Among those scheduled to attend the toilet fair were government ministers from African nations, utility workers and potential financial partners like UNICEF and Oxfam.
Reinventing the toilet has the potential to improve lives as well as the environment.
Flush toilets waste tons of potable drinking water each year, fail to recapture reusable resources like the potential energy in solid waste and are simply impractical in so many places.
Gates predicted the result of this project would reach beyond the developing world.
"If we do it right, there's every possibility that some of these designs would also be solutions for rich and middle-income countries," Gates said.
One uses microwave energy to transform human waste into electricity.
Another captures urine and uses it for flushing.
And still another turns excrement into charcoal.
They are part of a Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation competition to reinvent the toilet for the 2.5 billion people around the world who don't have access to modern sanitation.
Scientists from around the world have taken up the challenge, and the foundation announced some projects Tuesday that will be getting more money to take their ideas from the lab to cities.
There, local entrepreneurs will use the new technology to turn pollution into cash.
"We couldn't be happier with the response that we've gotten," Bill Gates said.
To pass the foundation's threshold for the world's next toilet, it must operate without running water, electricity or a septic system, not discharge pollutants, preferably capture energy or other resources, and operate at a cost of 5 cents a day.
The United Nations estimates disease caused by unsafe sanitation results in about half the hospitalizations in the developing world. About 1.5 million children die each year from diarrheal disease.
Scientists believe most of these deaths could be prevented with proper sanitation, along with safe drinking water and improved hygiene.
The foundation expects to field test its first prototypes within the next three years.
Most of the prototypes on display this week in the open courtyard of the foundation's Seattle headquarters turn solid waste into energy. This is both a practical and pragmatic solution to the solid waste puzzle, said Carl Hensman, program officer for the foundation's water, sanitation and hygiene team.
Many recycle waste into other usable substances such as animal feed, water for irrigation, or even just energy and water to run their own systems.
Some, like the winning project from Caltech, use chemistry and engineering to completely transform the waste.
Clement Cid, a Caltech grad student from Trouillas, France, said it has been intellectually rewarding to work with scientists from a variety of specialties.
"You can come up with great ideas," he said, adding that the toilet fair offered more opportunities for idea sharing.
Other projects on display were not so high-tech, including one from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine that sends black soldier fly larvae inside latrines and even home toilets to process waste, resulting in high quality, environmentally friendly animal feed at a cost of a penny a day.
The fly larvae project is already being field tested in Cape Town, South Africa, and the inventors are working on a kit to sell to entrepreneurs. They have had inquiries from Haiti, Sudan, Kenya and Ghana about adopting the approach.
"At the end of the day it will look very low-tech, but there's a lot of science behind it," said Walter Gibson, a medical biochemist who is part of the development team.
The Gates toilet focus started just about a year ago, and including grants announced Tuesday, $370 million in foundation dollars have been committed to reinventing the toilet. Hensman said the foundation decided to hold a toilet fair this week to show how far the scientists have gotten in that time, and to give them an opportunity to learn from each other and potentially collaborate.
Among those scheduled to attend the toilet fair were government ministers from African nations, utility workers and potential financial partners like UNICEF and Oxfam.
Reinventing the toilet has the potential to improve lives as well as the environment.
Flush toilets waste tons of potable drinking water each year, fail to recapture reusable resources like the potential energy in solid waste and are simply impractical in so many places.
Gates predicted the result of this project would reach beyond the developing world.
"If we do it right, there's every possibility that some of these designs would also be solutions for rich and middle-income countries," Gates said.
Will it run Windows X-Pee?
Everyone thought the blue screen of death was bad.. Now imagine the frustration when your Windows toilet crashes and you're greeted with the brown bowl of death!
Look, this does seem a bit silly and kinda funny, but this is actually an issue.
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We waste SO much fresh water, using it for our...um more privet moments.Â
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Hate to break it to you all, but some point in our fufute: (could be a few years, could be longer) we ARE goign to have a fresh water issue. - Maybe not right here in Oregon, since we have so much rain all year long, a mountain and a few fresh-water rivers.
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However, there are MANY, many very populated places, world wide, that do not: they pump water from deep, deep fresh-water channels and currents, deep in the ground. A new study just came out saying demand on these deep water currents has reached a point that EXCEEDS what it can replenish... Meaning those places are drinking more water than the deep water channels can handle. They WILL be out of water eventually. What are those people going to do?? Die, or move. Where? To where there is fresh water, which means MUCH higher populations and higher demands on those water reserves, rivers, mountains and lakes...
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Time to solve our fresh water issue and one of those things is..well, how we use the rest room.
I realize all of these innovations are great and wonderful -- however . . . . . . . how will extremely poor, bare subsistance folks in the vast areas of third-world countries going to buy a toilet which will likely cost somewhere in the vicinity of $5,000 apiece for the first decade or so?
 @Gravity Works! What? You mean we don't have magic money tree's in our back yards?
Dang.. that spoiled all my plans to get the Star Trek model Khre'Riov's chair! It even comes with natural micro swiss cheese and bacteria for those pesty virus's.. Â
Oh please NO. I don't want my toilet to overflow just because I put the seat up. No doubt there will be ten thousand extra screws and bolts that will arrive one by one each month, or maybe 60 at a time.
Welcome to Microsoft technical support. Please press 1 if your PC is not funcitoning. Please press 2 if your windows phone is frozen. Please press 3 if your Microsoft toilet is malfunctioning.
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*3*
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Thank you. Your call is important to us here at Microsoft. For training purposes, this call may be recorded. Please hold for the next availible consultant.
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Hello, my name is Stewart (in the thickest middle eastern accent imaginable), I see here that you are currently running the 'flush 2.0'Â on your toilet. I'm sorry, we no longer offer support prior to 'flush 5.2'. Would you like to upgrade now?
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LOL...
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Since Microsoft is involved with energy (NOS & functional software), communications (Win phone & NOS/OS for telecommunications database management), and automobile/transportation (Win based software for nav and auto onboard systems), and Bill Gates is first and foremost a businessman (don't bite the hand that feeds you), he champions one of the only household systems in which Microsoft doesn't have a stake... Toilets...
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god bless capitalism, huh?
 @MarkKpic Thanks for the laugh! And don't forget to update for virus control..
Giving people a place to put their Windows phones eh?
 @subarulz That would be the super Star Trek Model with built in communications! The Capt's chair..
Seems like a logical career progression. Soon you will have to patch and reboot your toilet.
 @Obongo Geddon Over and over until they tell you need a new toilet because your house won't support your 2 year old toilet.
 @molotovmouse Yep one will need to upgrade to the new toilet featuring the hexagon-pentagram processor. Then agree to the new licensing agreement that only allows you to flush at certain times of the day. Also limits the number of flushes in a day. These settings change randomly by the last update with no warning stated to the user. A carbon tax bill will be issued pending the amount of excrement processed by each toilet on a monthly basis. The excrement will be analyzed further for drugs and DNA samples will be taken for scientific purposes. Those with suspicious excrement readings will be arrested. Toilet utopia will be here at last.