I sincerely appreciate LEGO's recognition that any brick material must stand up over decades -- they do get handed from generation to generation. Good for them for investing in everyone's future.
via Sarah Lee
http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/lego-to-spend-185-4m-finding-alternative-to-wasteful-plastic-for-its-bricks-1.3125664
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OK, even I'm concerned now that Google+ may actually be dying. Look at this plot. It's my follower count. I usually don't care ...
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If you had to choose to have only one kind of official LEGO brick separator tool, which would you prefer:
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Oh my. :-( http://mashable.com/2016/06/01/lego-sculpture-destroyed-china/#QkPeGfNl4659
Good for them! And the earth!
ReplyDeleteI wonder, if they can do it. And will original plastic bricks rise in price?
ReplyDeleteLego is on the right track(:
ReplyDeleteShell Oil drilling in the Arctic? glad that severed that tie.
Hopefully we can still use our current parts and these new ones will work with them
ReplyDeleteAlso i wish lego was cheaper like it was a few years ago
ReplyDeleteFound a green 2x10 plate brick on the sidewalk this morning in a vacant stretch of road. Added it to my collection that one day will end up in the hands of a great grand child. The grandchildren are already get some of the sets here and there.
ReplyDeletejdozer25 I have brinks dating back to the 1950s and they work perfectly with the new ones.
ReplyDeleteCool
ReplyDelete