
4 minute read
What to Do With Your Old Tech
What to do with your old tech devices
My wife helped me buy our first computer in 1996. I was terrified of them, but she assured me they were totally safe.
We were newlyweds and I was starting school and working two jobs. Although we couldn’t afford a computer, we knew that we’d only be able to see each other if I was able to write papers and do research at home.
The Internet had only been open to the public for about five years, but the commercial Internet that we know today was barely a year old.
In early 1997, I had been exposed to the internet enough to figure out how to connect to the university’s connection from home at nearly 28 kilobits per second. By comparison, today’s cable internet connection clocks around 100,000 kilobits per second.
The internet wasn’t the only digital technology I was adding to my life. My first digital camera was 1.3 megapixels and an image card could only hold fewer than 100 pictures at high resolution. My outdated iPhone has a 12-megapixel camera that also shoots video and can hold thousands of pictures and dozens of hours of video. The iPhone that was just announced has a 48-megapixel camera.
Obviously, technology has become faster and cheaper, but it has also led to a major problem. We have drawers and closets full of old equipment and obsolete cables.
I believe in keeping technology useful for as long as possible. I don’t recommend always buying the best and fastest equipment. Typically, mid-tier equipment will do 95 percent of what 100 percent of people do. But eventually, you will need to upgrade to something nicer or faster.
Whenever I help set up a new computer, the person I’m helping always seems to ask: What do I do with the old stuff? What do I keep? Will I ever need this cable or gadget again? What can I throw away?
This can be difficult to answer because nobody wants to clutter the landfill with harmful elements or recyclable materials. The Great Depression created generations of people who fear throwing something away that they might need within the next 25 years.
This column will help guide you on what to throw away, how long to keep certain technologies, and how to safely dispose of items that aren’t supposed to go into the landfill.
BROKEN TECH
If your technology is broken and you don’t want to pay for the repair, nobody else will either. You will need to throw it away or recycle it, depending on what local laws require. Technology recycling is usually a separate service from other recycling services. Call your local landfills and waste management services for where to take technology waste.
Recycling almost always costs money based on weight. So, if you are extremely frugal, that may determine how much obsolete technology you keep piled in your garage or stored under your bed.
TALKING DIGITAL
BY ADAM COCHRAN
Send your technology questions to Adam in care of Life After 50, or email him directly at AdamC@TalkingDigital.org
Recycling almost always costs money based on weight. So, if you
OLD BUT WORKING
Most working technology still has value to someone. If you enjoy having a little extra cash in your pocket and you have some free time, you can probably sell that old digital camera, laptop, or box of cables for a small fraction of the original retail value.
Old technology has value to people for several reasons.
There are prospecting hobbyists who dissolve circuit boards in acid and other chemicals to harvest the $6-$12 in gold found in the average old computer.
People who still have old videos, floppy drives, cassette tapes and other media with records and memories on them like to have obsolete technology that will allow them to access those files and transfer them to a more modern format.
The least expensive way to sell your old equipment is to list it on your old equipment is to list it on online classifieds sites like Craigslist online classifieds sites like Craigslist or Facebook Marketplace, but you will make more money by selling it on eBay.
One of my favorite uses for old technology is to turn it into art. Just as steampunk art represents the beauty of the steam era, and industrial artwork reflects the beauty of motors, machines and urban industrial life, there is a growing demand for the aesthetic of vintage technology.
Unlike a steam engine or old car, obsolete technology will never be useful again. So turning it into arts and crafts is a great way to give it new life. Turn that old TV into a goldfish aquarium, turn the old payphone into a lamp, or dismantle that old digital camera or media projector for the great lenses inside. What better way to rid the world of eyesores of obsolete technology than to turn it into something beautiful that represents the impact that computers, cellphones, digital cameras, the internet and even gaming systems have had on society and culture? T

