Skip to main content

Futuristic new appliance uses A.I. to sort and prep your recycling

Lasso: The power to change recycling for good
Promotional image for Tech For Change. Person standing on solar panel looking at sunset.
This story is part of Tech for Change: an ongoing series in which we shine a spotlight on positive uses of technology, and showcase how they're helping to make the world a better place.

Given the potential planet-ruining stakes involved, you’d expect that everyone on Earth would be brilliant at recycling. But folks are lazy and, no matter how much we might see footage of plastic-clogged oceans on TV, the idea of sorting out the plastic, glass, and paper for the weekly recycling day clearly strikes many as just a little bit too much effort.

Recommended Videos

Step forward U.K. startup Lasso Loop Recycling with a solution everyone can get on board with. The company is developing a household machine called Lasso, which promises to do this sorting process on your behalf.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

To use it, customers will simply have to load items into a vertical slot or tray, where artificial intelligence baked into cameras then analyzes them, steam-cleans the items to remove everything from labels to leftover food, and sorts it all into a special recycling compartment. If it turns out that an item is not recyclable, it is ejected so that you can dispose of it by another means.

You’ll also be able to book a curbside recycling pickup with an associated app. The same app can reportedly let users track items in real-time, and even check products for recyclability before buying them using an in-app barcode scanner.

Lasso
Lasso

It’s certainly a neat idea, made even better by the fact that this isn’t some industrial recycling plant like the sort you’d find at a refuse center. Instead, it looks like an appliance, meaning it would sit comfortably next to a washing machine, tumble dryer, fridge, or dishwasher. Lasso is reportedly initially targeting aluminum, steel, two types of plastic, and three types of glass as its products for recycling. No paper, cardboard, or food waste just yet.

While it is definitely an intriguing concept, though, don’t expect it any time soon. According to Engadget, a final version could be more than a decade away and cost around $3,500. To get to the point at which this could be manufactured, the company will need to turn its theoretical business into a finished product, which will require raising funds, additional R&D, and more.

If you’re interested, you can visit Lasso’s website where you can register your interest. You’re able to reserve a model, including picking a delivery address and even (possibly prematurely) a color. There’s no exchange of money or financial details at this point in time.

Luke Dormehl
Former Digital Trends Contributor
I'm a UK-based tech writer covering Cool Tech at Digital Trends. I've also written for Fast Company, Wired, the Guardian…
Razer’s high-tech face mask filters air and amplifies your voice, Bane-style
Razer Project Hazel smart mask

Razer is no stranger no making offbeat products, whether it's the Project Breadmaker toaster or the Respawn energy drink.

But the company envisions Project Hazel entirely differently -- this smart mask is a serious attempt to do something positive in the world. Razer announced the project at CES 2021, alongside a number of more conventional product updates and releases.

Read more
Tech for Change: At CES 2021, new devices and tech aim to help beat COVID-19
coronavirus covid tech prevention ces 2021 misty robot

Thanks to several vaccines developed at mind-bending speed from our nation’s brightest scientists, there is at least a road map to the fight against COVID-19, which has already claimed hundreds of thousands of lives. But let’s be clear: It’s going to be a battle, and while the vaccine is rolled out and doctors and caregivers continue fighting, we must do everything we can to reduce the spread and limit the number of infections.

Fortunately, technology is there to help us. A variety of innovative companies and products coming to the CES 2021 show can help beat the novel coronavirus. Here’s a look at a few to keep your eyes on.

Read more
Tech for Change: New gadgets at CES 2021 finally bridge the language barrier
language barrier real time translation ces 2021 ambassador interpreter lifestyle 3

Tech has turned us all into travelers these days: Google Maps takes us anywhere in the world, while virtual meetings via Zoom and Teams let us interact with anyone, anywhere. But language remains a challenging topic, one tech is actively tackling.

The ability to speak any language, anywhere, at any time -- on a hike through the mountains, on a vacation in a foreign country, on a cruise ship in the middle of the ocean -- would be transformative, something we call Tech for Change. And real-time translation is here in several ways today, thanks to machine learning, artificial intelligence, and cloud processing. That capability is on display in several devices at CES 2021.

Read more