Most people don't throw away old electronics --they relocate them. The laptop goes from the desk to the closet, the closet to ...
Between new smartphones and other highly anticipated devices rapidly being released on the market, many consumers find themselves with a stack of old devices. Maybe they're shoved away in a closer or ...
MINNEAPOLIS — If you have a drawer packed with old cellphones, cameras and laptops, you're not alone. Global electronic waste has hit record highs and it's growing five times faster than recycling ...
Approximately 2.25 million tons of obsolete TVs, cell phones and computers -- commonly referred to as e-waste -- were ready to be disposed of in a single year, according to a 2007 U.S. Environmental ...
Funded by the National Science Foundation, our multidisciplinary team blended our expertise in causal inference, sustainability and cybersecurity, to work on the tangled question of what people do ...
Some computers are ready for a new lease on life. Computer companies come out with new machines every year: faster, better, more powerful, more efficient, and sometimes even cheaper. But what do you ...
Electronic waste, or e-waste, can’t just be thrown into the landfill like regular garbage. State law does not allow consumers ...
Matt Hickman is an associate editor at The Architect’s Newspaper. His writing has been featured in Curbed, Apartment Therapy, URBAN-X, and more. Thanks to improved technology recycling programs across ...
With schools retiring thousands of devices every year and e-waste piling up faster than it's recycled, Magnakom's turnkey ITAD solutions offer a smarter and safer path forward. Schools across the ...
People feel good about recycling, maybe even more so when it comes to electronics. Remembering to take your computer or smartphone and dropping it off to be recycled feels like an accomplishment in ...