Thanks in a million. Great content. Awesome. Grade: A++💥
@guakn7365
2 жыл бұрын
aww video edit is so good, and cute.
@the_browneyed_wordslinger1625
4 жыл бұрын
Really liked the idea.
@gerriecastelyn5132
5 жыл бұрын
Thx the video material and info very good and useful, but the music of the video much to loud, should be back ground music, really irritating and high peak sound, over thunder the purpose of the training material / message.
@ngocvan3127
3 жыл бұрын
I'm excited about this idea. But, there is one thing that I want to say is the music is quite loud, so I can't hear your voice clearly.
@2292fa
5 жыл бұрын
Conceptually, I like "Reuse." The challenge I find is the material's or component's life cycle and serviceability. Can Reused Materials and Building Components be applied and installed as-is, or will they need to be refurbished in some way? And thus, this refurbishment process would still add waste to the production pipeline. Thoughts?
@colinrose8232
5 жыл бұрын
Hi, thanks for your comment. Sometimes it will be possible to reuse directly, i.e. with minimal refurbishment, but that tends to limit the types of projects that can use such materials. Other times more significant refurbishment or upgrading will be necessary, and can potentially make it possible for reused components to be adopted on a wider range of new projects, increasing demand. More on this in our later published research, available open access here: www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/1/229. Regarding waste still being created - yes, we are quite a way off any system being perfectly circular and without wastage. Goal is to close circle as much as possible by maximising what is reused - then when stuff gets away, becomes waste, send it into high quality recycling processes. Colin
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