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World Computer Exchange (WCE) is a United States and Canada based charity organization whose mission is "to reduce the digital divide for youth in developing countries, to use our global network of partnerships to enhance communities in these countries, and to promote the reuse of electronic equipment and its ultimate disposal in an environmentally responsible manner."
This includes all computer companies (except spin-offs of defunct companies which are still active and defunct software companies) that can also be found in the subcategories. This category is for defunct computer companies of the United States , including companies that designed or manufactured computer hardware and peripherals .
Computer monitors are typically packed into low stacks on wooden pallets for recycling and then shrink-wrapped. [1]Electronic waste recycling, electronics recycling, or e-waste recycling is the disassembly and separation of components and raw materials of waste electronics; when referring to specific types of e-waste, the terms like computer recycling or mobile phone recycling may be used.
Spring cleaning may be over, but if you have any bulky old computers, TVs, printers and DVD machines to get rid of, you’re in luck. Frost Bank has partnered with Junkluggers to host a recycling ...
Remaining collection event dates and locations in 2024: May 2, 1001 Atkins St. June 15, 36 Bessemer St, Albion Aug. 17, 9333 Tate Road Oct. 19, 1230 Townhall Road Nov. 16, 9333 Tate Road Pre ...
A registered charity, Computer Aid was founded in 1997 to bridge the digital divide by providing refurbished PCs from the UK to educational and non-profit organisations in developing countries. Computer Aid has provided over 267,000 refurbished computers to educational institutions and not-for-profit organisations in more than 110 countries.
Goodwill Industries of Greater New York holds an annual charity gala with many fashionable attendees and participants. The 2023 Evening of Treasures gala included the likes of Jenna Lyons (who hosted the event), Tommy Hilfiger, Todd Snyder, and Willy Chavarria, as participants. Designers executed upcycled looks using Goodwill thrift finds. [32]
The World Computer Exchange accepts computer donations of electronics that they give to low-income communities worldwide. [113] Free Geek is a collectively run, non-profit organization based in Portland, Oregon. It aims to reuse or recycle used computer equipment that might otherwise become hazardous waste, and to make computer technology more ...