Most of us have discarded at least one computer or some other electronic device in our lives without giving a second thought to what we could do with the parts. We either throw them away, or they end ...
Ohio inmates taking part in a computer disposal program used the computers to commit identity theft and tax fraud, as well as change their security levels at the prison. I'm PCMag's managing editor ...
Word is getting out that it’s possible to recycle TVs, computers and monitors for free at locations across the state, including 14 in Snohomish County, as part of the state’s E-Cycle Washington ...
Buying PC components at a store like Best Buy or Micro Center is easy. You pick what you want and take it to the register.
Getting a first-hand look at the guts of your computer usually means something’s gone horribly wrong, but when Recchia cracks open an old computer, all he sees is potential beauty. A lifelong learner, ...
For some, it’ll be the first time their fingertips brush over computer keys. For others, it’ll be a vital opportunity to move forward. Six computers, constructed entirely from recycled parts, were ...
Alex Andromeda calls himself a science fiction artist who wants to connect the far future with the mystical past. He uses recycled computer parts to make lamps, sculptures, eyeglasses, and ancient ...
Like something straight out of the show Prison Break, inmates at an Ohio prison built their own computers and hid them in the ceiling. According to an investigation report from Ohio Inspector General ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results