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Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recycle. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Can You Recycle Your Cell Phone?

Did you know that the pollution rate increases at five percent every year? Did you know that is partially due to the 500 million cell phones every year that are not recycled with a growing 130 million per year?

Recycling your phone for one thing is tax deductible. Whether it still works and can be donated to someone who needs it, or it can be sent in to be recycled, your one cell phone can help drastically. All of the metals that are combined to make up the cell phone pollute the air, soil and water and are killing off plants and animals at a rapid rate.

Think about it, the battery, the charger, the accessories and all the pieces of the phone whether it is metal glass or plastic can be recycled. Each different piece can be separated into their own special pile and melted down with a bunch of other pieces of its kind. The phones sometimes can be refurbished and reused by those in need but if they can't then they can go through the recycling process of melting down and reusing in new products. All useable material is disposed of in a non harmful way to the environment.

The environment suffers from all of the e-waste that we put in it. So many people are storing up old electronics that just sit in their closets and drawers that will one day throw them out. When that happens the entire earth is going to suffer from it. If everyone threw away their electronics all at once as it all exists right now then we would completely destroy the earth.
Cell phones can even be taken apart and certain parts can be used to make new cell phones. Other materials will still be recycled even if some of the parts of a cell phone are used while others are not useable. The hazardous waste will not be sent to solid waste landfills or incinerators.

The workers are protected too. They are given equipment and mandatory protective gear to shield them from any harmful waste that might come in contact with their body and lungs. These companies are careful of their workers as well.

Your cell phone can be picked up from your house, delivered by you or you can even send it in the mail. Find a recycling plant in your area that can help you pitch in and do your part to save the earth.


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Monday, December 26, 2011

Why It's Good To Recycle Mobile Phones

Over the last decade, the use of mobile phones has surged with the introduction of various technologies that make everyday life more convenient. Today, cellular phones are not longer just for making calls. While they still retain their function as a traditional communication device, cellular phones these days have improved so much that they've actually become extensions of people's lives. This is essentially a good thing but in keeping with the demand for cellular phones, manufacturers have been steadily releasing model after model, sometimes not even letting a year pass before introducing an improved version of an iteration of their last model.

Of course, people will always want to have the newest gadgets so it's not surprising that people will still go out and get a new cellular phone even though they have a perfectly working one. This then causes a surplus of mobile devices that are no longer used, posing a major threat to the environment when not properly disposed. This is where learning to recycle mobile devices come in handy. By learning to recycle mobile devices, electronic waste, also known as mobile devices thrown out, is disposed off according to environmental protection standards. This means that less chemicals from electrical components will seep in the groundwater, keeping the water safe for consumption and use.

But what if you have a perfectly working phone (you just don't want it anymore)? And you don't have anyone else who would want it? It would seem that learning to recycle handheld phones is the last option available to you. Don't worry though because it's not. The process will more or less be the same as learning to recycle handheld phones but the difference is that you can sell your handheld phone for cash. Learning to recycle handheld phones just entails proper disposal of your electronics so you won't be compensated for cash.

You can go about selling your handheld device for cash mainly by going online because there are a lot of handheld device recycling sites like Envirophone on the internet. To get the best price for your handheld device though, make sure you compare. Since more and more people are turning to selling their handheld devices for cash, comparison sites have also sprung up to help you in comparing recycling sites faster. The sooner you compare, the sooner you can find the best rate, the sooner you can sell your cell phone for cash, and the sooner you can enjoy your cash for whatever purposes you have in mind.

Some people are looking to sell their mobile phones to get cash to upgrade to a better handset. Some people are just looking to sell their cell phones to get extra cash. Whatever you reasons may be, you are free to take advantage of this service. Not only will you be getting cash for your mobile phone, but you also have a certain degree of participation in caring for the environment. Should you have an old mobile phone model, you can still just simply send your handset for disposal even though you won't receive cash for it. Doing so is free of charge anyway.

Have a look on how to recycle mobile phones or check out one of the leading brands envirophone.


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Monday, December 5, 2011

Great Ways To Recycle Your Old Samsung Phone

While I was looking around for a place where they sell Samsung Galaxy Spica i5700 phones for my teenage son, who at the time just had to have one, I realized the situation with old cell phones and all the related cases, wires and chargers was getting out of hand in my household. I kept finding old cell phones stuffed in closets and drawers, and there was a big box full of obsolete phones, chargers and cases out in the garage gathering dust.

I try to recycle as much as I possibly can, so now I was presented with the problem of where to get rid of all this stuff and it turned out I had a number of choices.

I could pile everything into a box and pay a lot of postage to send them to one of the many companies online who recycle phones. I didn't like that idea though, how did I know they weren't selling the phones to a third world country or taking the best ones and dumping the rest?

I could get credit for the newer phones at Best Buy, but when I used their online calculator that didn't really amount to much, and besides they won't pay anything for some of the really ancient cell phones our family had accumulated. I also read that Best Buy have in store recycling kiosks that not only take old cell phones, but the wires, chargers and old ink and toner cartridges too - and I had a pile of those.

Browsing around online I did find a local charity that was delighted when I offered them some of the newer cell phones and chargers, and they were very willing to take the old cases too. They explained that these old phones were refurbished and set up to be used by the recipients in case they had an emergency. Perfect, they took most of them and the rest I dropped off at the Best Buy kiosk for recycling.

When I found one of the carriers that sell Samsung Galaxy Spica i5700 cell phones, I had my son sign a contract with them himself; he's old enough to be responsible for his own bills now as he's going off to university. When his Samsung arrived in the mail there was a card at the bottom of the box that could be used to send his old phone away for recycling, I wish they'd thought of that years ago.


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Saturday, August 13, 2011

UCLA polarizing filter lets LCDs harvest and recycle energy


Last updated: Friday, August 12, 2011

LCD is the predominant technology used in most of the displays we include in devices today. And while the display technology is constantly being updated to allow for better efficiency and image output, LCDs still account for the majority of energy used in portable devices. Engineers at UCLA have been working to rectify that problem,


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UCLA polarizing filter lets LCDs harvest and recycle energy


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