![]() ![]() ![]() On one side, a sign said "landfill." The other side said "recycling."Ī man in a black hoodie approached and dropped a square cardboard to-go container on a conveyor belt on the top of the machine, which moved it underneath a camera. Off to one side sat a large gray cabinet a bit bigger than a kitchen stove. On a recent afternoon, the UMass Campus Center was buzzing with students. The first phase of the project is already operating on the Amherst campus. Two recent UMass Amherst engineering graduates want to take decisions about what to recycle out of the hands of humans and turn them over to a machine. Facebook Email Ethan Walko, left, and Ian Goodine, right, with the machine they designed to photograph trash at UMass Amherst as part of a larger project to build a machine that can sort garbage from recycling. ![]()
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