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Taking a Crack At Recycling E-Waste

An anonymous reader wrote to mention a New York Times article being hosted at News.com. It touches on a new initiative in upstate New York to deal with the problem of e-waste. The Town of North Hempstead has positioned helpers at the dump the last four weekends, assisting people with a flood of old monitors, keyboards, laptops, word processors, and even a Pong game or two. Besides the obvious benefit of getting this junk out of our homes, the article highlights why this should be a growing concern around the country. From the article: "While federal law regulates the disposal of electronics by businesses and government agencies, it does not affect individual consumers, who account for more than half the e-waste produced annually, according to the federal agency. Every old computer monitor contains about four pounds of lead, and other parts are filled with heavy metals like mercury, arsenic, cadmium and chromium. They have toxins that hover in the air after incineration or leach into the water supply when buried in landfills. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh say that dumps around the nation's major cities, including New York, hold more than 60 million computers."

8 of 183 comments (clear)

  1. Obligatory by jpaz · · Score: 4, Funny

    This post made with 100% recycled electrons.

    1. Re:Obligatory by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I can tell. It looks like you just took /dev/null and shook it out over the keyboard. PLEASE take your bit bucket to the recycling center in the future instead of just dumping it.

  2. What about dumping in rural China? by IntelliAdmin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think one of the solutions is to get companies to donate old equipment, or give it to organizations that will fix it up and give to the needy. I have seen companies trash perfectly good computers, but refuse to give them to anyone. These computers were far from useless, and could be used by grandma to get email and surf the net. I think if these type of programs were setup at companies it would reduce the level of waste considerably.

    Still we need a solution to the problem of lead and other toxic chemicals leached into the soil. That makes me wonder...what happened to all the stories of businesses dumping this type of waste in rural China?

    Steve Wiseman
    http://www.windows-admin-tools.com

    1. Re:What about dumping in rural China? by gbjbaanb · · Score: 3, Informative

      Most of the problem isn't about corporate data - any charity that recycles computers guarantees that the data is wiped and uses specialist equipment to clean the drives, but that they only accept relatively good computers.

      Look at ComputerAid International that uses MoD-specified data wiping tools, but won't accept anything less than a 450Mhz P3.

  3. Re:"word processors"???? by N3Roaster · · Score: 3, Informative

    I think you may just be too young. Before home computers were commonplace, there were these machines that were sort of like a computer, printer, monitor, and keyboard stuffed into the same box, but the computer part only ran primitive word processing software. It was a step up from the typewriter (saving, editing, printing multiple copies, keys generally didn't jam up), but not as expensive as a computer+monitor+printer+software. These were called word processors.

    --
    Remember RFC 873!
  4. How dare you!? by dangitman · · Score: 3, Funny
    Pong is junk? Blasphemy!! Burn the witch!

    Next thing you'll be saying is Pacman is gay. Hello? Ms. Pacman? Pacman is a red-blooded heterosexual disc with a triangle cut out.

    --
    ... and then they built the supercollider.
  5. Re:Redirecting recycling efforts? by couchslug · · Score: 3, Informative

    Steel is quite efficient too. I'll take all I can get, because the nice folks at the scrapyard pay me for it.
    I find the whole e-waste thing questionable for one reason.

    I buy cars to part out and then send to the crusher.
    A car has hundreds of pounds of plastic, glass, and miscellaneous metals including lead in the battery.
    I watch those cars go straight into the crusher.

    When I have old comps and monitors and televisions, they go into those cars along with a wide variety of scrap from my shop.
    The folks crushing the cars don't care, and the materials are sorted at the shredder.

    There is nothing in the computers that isn't in the cars, so why not scrap them together? The computer waste stream is dwarfed by the auto recycling stream, and the auto recycling process is highly refined.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  6. Re:"word processors"???? by cayenne8 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    "A beep? You spring chicken! I always heard a "ding"..."

    Heheh...I hear ya.

    Was funny, the other day I was with a friend who is collecting and restoring old pinball machines. The 'digital' ones are quite fun, but, I'd forgotten about what a real pinball machine was supposed to sound like until I got onto his selection of EM machines, that had actual bells, and chimes on them for sounds.

    The clicking and clacking of the score reals, especially when resetting for a new game.....ahhh...was like reliving some old childhood dreams.

    There are just some things where analog will always be superior IMHO to digital....

    --
    Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........