Apple Recycling Old Macs for Free
charleste writes "CNN is reporting that Apple is going to recycle Macs for free. I wonder if this means they will actually recycle them in Cupertino, or sent overseas to be dumped as many 'recycled' computers do, or if they will actually mine them. And does this make the MacQuarium obsolete?"
In other news, I will now recycle ANY piece of computer equipment for free. Simply get the device to me (in working order) and I will disassemble, dismember, shoot, melt, sell or attack it with a cowbell.
Funnypics
That was one of the best things to do with an SI. I used to make them somewhat regularly, they were fun and great conversation pieces. Plus they were the perfect size for a college desk.
This isn't about being green, it is about removing older macs from the 2nd hand market. The exact same reason that HP offers a similar program.
what all is involved in recycling a computer? I know there is quite a bit of lead on the circuit boards that needs to be handled properly, but what exactly do they do with it?
I remember a quote from him once, pretty excellent example of Steve Jobs' mentality actually. It was both very poetic and utterly ridiculous. This was from back in the early Apple days before he was fired by Scully. He said (paraphrasing), 'I want a computer factory that takes raw beach sand in one end and outputs fully assembled Macs from just that raw material.' What a crazy, wonderful idea.
If Jesus wants me it knows where to find me.
Literally. There is more gold per-ton in old computer parts than gold ore, and its cheaper to extract. so it makes sense given the recent rise of precious metals for apple to salvage as much of these resources as possible. This Free program is probably going to turn a profit.
Apple has been doing this with batteries for years. If you have old batteries from apple products, just take them to the apple store and they will take them off your hands for you. This is a much better option than sending it to a landfill.
The war with islam is a war on the beast
The war on terror is a war for peace
No, no... cost more...
When there are less items available on the market, the value increases if there's still a demand for it. (if there's no demand, then the value's effectively 0)
The conspiracy theorist would assume that Apple's trying to corner the market on MacQuariums, and they need more spare parts, so they're tricking people into giving them the parts under the assumption of 'recycling' (which it is). They might even have a company that's willing to buy lots of thousands of these for the very purpose. (pbfixit comes to mind)
They might also find that it's more cost effective to strip and refurb some machines than to have new parts manufactured for those with extended warranties. (this assumes that the product is on the market long enough for people to recycle out of warranty machines while other people still have them under warranties)
Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
donate them to poor urban schools, or third world countries?
[like that'll happen, but it's an idea anyway]
A little research is a wonderful thing /. All the news that's fit to print several days ago.
. Ahh,
bah.
Wow, why not a rebate of say 100.00 to make a user switch from win-ux and just fill a warehouse with the junk.
When it's full they can have a new ad campaign with bulldozers loading barges with all the junk and crow about how many people switched. They could probably write it all off as marketing costs and sell more hardware to boot!. Apple wins!
God: When you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all.
If the machines are still working, then reusing them is going to be better than ripping them apart for the gold.
At the announcement, Jobs specifically said that the recycling would all be done in the U.S. and not just shipped off to China.
Not just Macs. Steve Jobs' quote at the shareholders meeting was something like: "We like switchers too."
How has Apple handled recycling?
According to the "The 2005 Computer Report Card" by the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, "Apple, Dell, Gateway, and HP are the companies that use recyclers that have signed the Electronic Recyclers Pledge of Stewardship. To learn more about the Recycler Pledge go to: http://www.svtc.org///cleancc/recycle/recycler_ple dge.htm".
In that report, note that Apple received the second highest score in the category of "DISPOSAL CHAIN". That category indicates the degree to which a company will audit the entire disposal chain (including work sub-contracted to suspicious companies in China, Taiwan Province, and Korea) to ensure that recycling of old computer equipment is done in accordance with the most ethical, most responsible practices.
Note that Apple management actually signed the Electronics Recycler's Pledge of True Stewardship, committing to the gold standard of ethical, responsible recycling.
Finally, the recent decision by Apple management to take back old equipment for free is probably due to the tireless efforts of the Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition (SVTC) and other groups in the Computer TAKE-BACK Campaign (CTBC). When Steve Jobs gave the keynote speech at the 2005 graduation ceremony at Stanford University, CTBC flew a banner over the ceremony. The banner exclaimed, "STEVE - DON'T BE A MINI PLAYER - RECYCLE ALL E-WASTE".
Apple will recycle ANY computer you decide to unload on them when you purchase a new computer. Even your old 486 Win 3.1 box. That way, switchers get in on the recycling action too.
Here's a snippet from the Shareholder meeting stating so.
Zing!
I for one, unlike parent, who obviously is trying to build Beowulf cluster here, gladly help to recycle your iPods. Thank you.
I'd honestly rather see these computers given schools than destroyed. Anything that originally shipped with OS 7 and above is still useful today. Simply install a not-so-demanding verson of Linux on in, and you can teach classes in navigating unix-like environments or a simple programming 101 courses.
Thats the kind of stuff schools should teaching anyway. Not "this is how you use a mouse and PowerPoint" type classes.
A few points:
1)This isn't only Apple computers, they will recycle computers made by anyone.
2)I'm sure if the computer has value people will sell it. I put an old 486 up on EBay before (working Pentium system). No one even bid a dollar on it, something like that has no value on the market I could find, if this program was around then I would have recycled it, but it ended up going into the trash.
Computers allow humans to make mistakes at the fastest speeds known, with the possible exception of tequila and handguns
- Steve Jobs wants to take over the world
- Apple all of a sudden recycles computers for free
- Steve Jobs owns Apple
This can mean only one thing: Steve Jobs has a new trapper keeper.
Of course no one bid on it, if you listed it as a 486 that was a working Pentium. Since that description makes no sense (a 486 and a Pentium are two different processors) nobody wanted to guess what you were really selling and take the risk. Most failed eBay auctions are the result of poor descriptions and a lack of photos.
In California, and many other places, it's now illegal to just throw old electronics in the trash. So Apple is actually supplying a valuable service.
It doesn't matter if it's an light bulb or a missile defense system - the consumer can and is encouraged to return it to the producer. If it is not (if you dump it somewhere else), a bill for the recycling cost is sent to the producer anyway.
am i missing something?
not free (you need to buy a mac). not macs (any computer as long as you buy a mac)
Hey, I know Apple is definitely NOT Microsoft, but it's still a big corporation. What are they doing about privacy concerns related to old data stored on the computer hard drives? I'd expect it to be a problem because the majority of the people who would use this service may not know how to properly get rid of any data on their hard drives, and taking apart the computer to get at the hard drive may be too much to expect.
There are a lot of theorists posting, "Why not donate the old machines to [insert education or third-world country here]?"
Well, the answer to that is very simple: Because you are passing the ecological disaster on and not dealing with it. Off the cuff, it sounds like a good idea, however, a developing nation is not going to have the resources to deal with recycling the hand-me-down computers that we passed off to them so we didn't have to properly recycle them.
Let's just properly recycle the old crap and sell them new machines with fewer parts and less of a recycling burden. No one says we have to use the latest and greatest things performance-wise in what is made for them, but dumping our junk on a less fortunate country is just wrong people!
If this is done properly (Which is much more likely if the actual recycling is done in the U.S. as Apple claims) this is a lot better than just dumping your old gear in the trash. A fair amount of the heavy metals can be expected to be stripped out for reuse, those parts which are not economically recyclable will be divided into two parts: general waste which is disposed of at any old landfill, and toxic materials which are disposed of at designated facilities that monitor groundwater perfusion, etc. But if the old parts are shipped off to a third world nation, chances are the end result will be less environmentally friendly than just dumping the old gear in the trash for the garbage man to deal with.
I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
Just plug it in and wait for it to explode!
sulli
RTFJ.
The Computer Take-Back Campaign was canvassing this neighborhood for signatures and all just about a week or so ago.
They've been really aggressive about getting letters, etc. to Jobs and BOD members about doing take-backs on the computers (They already do them on iPods for free...) and to handle the returns in a responsible manner.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
Neither Slashdot nor CNN posted Apple's official computer recycling webpage, so here it is. For the U.S. (excluding the Cupertino area) they are partnered with a company called Metech to do the recycling. In Cupertino, Apple has had their own recycling facility for quite some time now that has freely accepted used Macs, PCs and some home electronics.
Slashdot's first reaction to VMware
Hot on the heels of the bitchin' MacBook Pro is this little gem:
In response, Jobs noted that the Sierra Club recently voted Apple one of its top 10 environmentally friendly companies. "So there is some kind of disconnect with your numbers," he said. Jobs also noted that Apple's new recycling program takes any computer, not just Macs, "because we like switchers, too."
"I think there are a lot of PCs that should be recycled" Schiller added.
teehee
There is an 8 dollar fee when you purchase Macs now... It's a Recycling Fee. So yeah... Not free. http://homepage.mac.com/xidius/17mbp.jpg
- what is the definition of simultanagnosia?! I've been meaning to look it up!
Crack Babies. (ok, oversimplification: should also include FAS & LD kids)
DC has an astronomical rate of $$/student as a whole. The problem is that the cash is largely being spent on "Special Needs" kids, with everyone else left to suck. But if you want, Linda Crapp (former chairperson of the schoolboard & current city council chair) is running for mayor. I beleive her slogan is "I couldn't fix it on the school-board, I couldn't fix it on city council, I can't fix it as chair of the city council, but I'll fix it as mayor."
I used to refurb older computers, clean them up, give them away to kids (rural poor kids in my community). They were all decent, worked well enough for school reports, surfing the web, email, etc. They all had legit licensed copies of the OS too, stuff I paid for, 95 and 98 primarily, then I would install like zone alarm and similar on them, get them all set up (no linux I found-and I tried a BUNCH- would run on pitiful amounts of RAM in GUI, so I used older windows) Not a one of them ever really bothered to learn computing, or programming or anything intelligent, ALL of them used the machines primarily for videogames. Closest they came to making them practical was to slap stickers on the outside of them...it's was nuts and a big waste of my time and money.
I don't do that anymore, not worth it, I'm relatively poor, not going to pay to subsidise that so called industry. It's stupidity, this generation's waste of time and effort. Might as well watch pro wrestling or NASCAR or something for all the good it does.
As to the schools, hell ya, if I had school age kids now they WOULD be home schooled, I have seen up close the results of the social engineering and alleged educational system as it is run today. It has gone downhill BAD since they created the federal department of education. There are a few fed agencies that should just be totally shut down as complete failed experiments, that one is near the top of the list, IMO.
Yes, that is the proper way to go about it. For the long term anyway, although I am sure initially they all resisted it, but perhaps not given a different social climate in Norway from the US. Here, manufacturers have been very slow to take back stuff, even something as useful as aluminum beverage cans has created controversy when they put a nickel deposit on them to make sure they got recycled insted of dumped.
I'll give you a prime example of how screwed up this is. In my area, rural, the local city government were I live doesn't have free trash pickup, nor recycling. Instead what they do is charge you so much a lb to go to the dump. The result is the ditches on the sides of the road are knee deep in trash and garbage. It's stupid and disgusting, and obvious why it happens. If all the manufacturers had to take back their used stuff and the packaging, etc,(or they subbed it out to companies dedicated to that) so that when you went to the store you could take the selected chunks of trash and dispose of them properly, it would work, after a short readjustment period. Especially if you got paid a small token to bring the stuff in, I would bet most stuff would get recycled then.
The old program costs you eight bucks, while the new one is free. The old program was still very reasonable.
There's a mandatory recycling fee for monitors in California. Screens between 15" and 35" have an $8 fee (CRT and LCD). This only started last year, so it's misleading to say that just because you were charged a state-imposed tax on a newly purchased system, that it wasn't "free" to recycle your POS Pentium-III system. Heck, everyone has to charge the tax, but you don't see Fry's begging to take back your old systems*.
.gov site: http://www.erecycle.org/fee.htm
From the
Or clearer details: http://www.mpccorp.com/about/california_fee.html
* Actually, they might. I didn't check.
Everyone is entitled to his own opinions, but not his own facts.
hey you might even provide an opertunity for learning and education in an area that is highly disconnected from the resorces that we enjoy.
Well have to see.
Procrastinating life a way at a rapid rate of speed.
I wonder if this means they will actually recycle them in Cupertino, or sent overseas to be dumped
Do a little research before you submit a story next time.. especially if the story is several days old. From Apples homepage:
Hazardous materials
No hazardous waste from Apple's U.S. recycling program is shipped outside North America. All recovered materials are processed domestically, with the exception of some commodity materials that can be recycled for future use. Apple's recycling policies prohibit the use of recovered plastics as fuel in smelting.
Georg
Recycling the computers themselves is easy. It is the monitors which cost money to recycle. The monitor is also the bit with the most noxious chemicals in it & thus is in the greatest need to be properly disposed of.
I can recycle computers for nothing all day long. But deconstructing monitors takes special equipment & its not cheap.
I used to work for these guys http://www.surplusexchange.org/ here in Kansas City, They are VERY particular about how their equipment gets recycled and you can rest assured NONE of it winds up being disposed in the manner you described.
In fact when i worked there we got 3 or 4 calls per month from people wanting to pay US for our dead monitors (usually to be shipped to the orient & dismantled as you say) and we always turned them down & sent them instead to the site where we PAY to have it done correctly...
This is why they charge $12 per for dead monitors.
Anyway, my point is, there are eco-friendly electronics recyclers out there, they arent all crooked, just do your homework & check them out. and PLEASE dont put your old computer in the landfill!
I'm NOT giving up my old Mac for free.
Apple should pay me good cash, or a decent discount on a new Mac (say over 30%) if they want to keep my old Mac.
"For free" in this case isn't necessarily a good thing.
You set the old computer out at the curb. By the morning its gone. its been 'recycled'.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
Now one might explain why IBM suddenly is selling these systems with very similar specs to these. Yes, the 185 is a bit neutered (memory, undocumented AIX only 3d graphics, PCI-X versus PCI-E), but they'd make for a nice system to use recycled 970's.
Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
Some "recycling" companies ship the old parts out to third world countries, where the boards are essentially burned over an open fire to melt off the more valuable metals. This releases PCBs and other really nasty chemicals which are just allowed to burn right out into the atmosphere. The ash is then just dumped, often into an open landfill where more other toxic chemicals are leached out into the water supply. I have no idea WHICH companies do this or anything but this practice, while not necesarilly common, is not unheard of.
Environmental monitoring is much more strict in the US (and presumably just about any developed country/region) so these things really don't happen. But at least shipping the old computer parts off satisfies the local NIMBYs, giving the "recycling" companies a green image and a decent profit.
I'll never make that mistake again, reading the experts' opinions. - Feynman
In general, no one cares if something with very little use value is numerically scarce. Very few people will want it, and the price will reflect that. Unless these things are fetish objects (aka "collectibles"), they are junk.
The big push behind this is because of the phaseout of CRTs. Until recently, the leaded glass in CRTs could be recycled into new CRTs, and there was some value in used monitors. Now nobody wants the things, and CRTs are being discarded at a huge rate. So keeping all that lead out of landfills is a real problem.
Then they'll recycle the old one for you. In fact, they'll gladly take the PC you converted from.
Interesting to place the words 'free' and 'financed by taxes' in the same sentence. The entity being taxed is a business. What do you think the companies do to pay the recycling tax? They recover it by raising their prices. Companies and corporations DO NOT PAY TAXES, their customers do. Your 'free' recycling was paid by you and every other customer in advance. You don't have a choice but to pay the fee. Doesn't sound very free to me.
Women are like electronics: you don't know how damaged they are until you try to turn them on.
At this point Schiller added that "I think there are a lot of PCs that should be recycled"
I actually caught the end of an educational piece about how in every ton of "computer parts", read: circuit board, there is 3oz of gold. Thus making it cheaper to mine gold out of "computer parts" than from the earth.
So, dumping (those parts) into a land fill would just be a waist... of 3oz of gold. :)
I would imagine that it's harder to recycle a car than it is to recycle a computer. Though you probably get a lot more materials out of a car than out of a computer. Precious metals seem to be the only attraction in electronics, whereas cars have rubber, aluminum, steel, glass, and some plastics that can all be reused, and the pieces are in bigger chunks, making separation easier. Ever tried to take apart a capacitor to recycle it? ;)
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
Even if we assume a large portion of the recycled product is disposed of, there are still some advantages to it. First off of course, is that a certain percentage IS recycled and reused. That alone should be incentive, Where recyclingg is concerned, "some" is better than "none". Second, in the process of recycling, they are breaking down the unit into smaller pieces. A good example would be cars... they take out the interiors, the engine block, tires, etc, sure there's a lot letf over. But then they crush it into a cube. It's still the same amount of waste, but it's in a smaller package now so it doesn't fill up the landfills as quickly.
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
Too bad you weren't doing this about 4 years ago, when my family decided to finally get rid of the 3 Apple IIe's that were laying around my house.
Beyond a certain point, older computers use more power, simply because they don't have power savings modes and the electronics are somewhat less efficient (e.g. no "cpu-idle" powersaving instruction.) When considered on a power/performance basis you can always get more efficient with newer technology.
Laptops, however, are an area where power is of tantamount importance and as such, newer laptop parts will often be more efficient than older ones. The CPUs themselves are sometimes the exception to that -- everything else has been getting more efficient.
Right now I have an old salvaged decade-old DEC server-class tower downstairs running my webserver and some other stuff. It has no power savings modes, and draws a steady 150W (measured with a kill-a-watt) even if I spin down the drives (which I can't in production because Linux hasn't got that smoothed over for SCSI yet.) Electricity costs me $0.14/kWh. In a year it costs me $184 to power this server. For that amount of money I can replace it with a 5-year-old used laptop of roughly equivalent performance, which, even with the backlight on and the drive spinning uses one tenth of that amount of power (also measured.) Not to mention it would then not need a UPS as it has one built in.
All it takes the ability to not obsess over hyper-performance, and properly size a system for your always-active needs. Obsess all you want over the performance of a gaming machine that is only in active mode for a few hours while your using it, but move the rest of the services to a power-efficient system and you can save a good amount of pizza-money.
Someone had to do it.