Students devise new, creative ways to reuse electronics

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Shawn Adderly  Contact me
Posted: April 16, 2009 - 11:49 PM
Updated: April 20, 2009 - 6:27 PM
Tagged with: Campus, E Waste, electronics, Federal Aviation Administration, News
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Reza Shiftehfar, right, graduate student in Engineering, speaks with judges of the Sustainable E-Waste Design competition on the Quad on Thursday.

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As technology progresses and times change, some students are finding ways to turn electronic trash into treasure.

Students exhibited novel ways of re-using old computers in front of Lincoln Hall on Thursday.

The students were from ART 326D, a class that focuses on sustainability and electronic waste, or e-waste.

The exhibition showed a variety of ways computers can be reused, including using them to make an e-garden and furniture.

Lubo Gruev, senior in FAA, and his team worked on a project which can be used in areas that do not have access to internet.

“We’ve devised a method to give people low-cost access to the internet,” Gruev said. “We will allow people to be able to access the internet without having a physical computer in their home, they would access it through a terminal.”

The class is interdisciplinary, so students from all academic sectors can enroll, said Marissa Dolin, teaching assistant for the course. Students at the event were from urban planning, architecture, industrial design and engineering backgrounds, among others.

“We are trying to keep the cycle going for as long as we can trying to delay these objects from ending up in a landfill,” said Eric Heyen, senior in Media.

He said he hopes that he can market sustainable-friendly ideas and products as a profession.

The teams at the event competed for prizes totaling $15,000, sponsored by companies such as Microsoft and Motorola. Dolin said each team had the opportunity to be judged in both the social and technical categories.

The course is co-taught by William Bullock, a professor in industrial design, and Willie Cade, the chief executive officer of PC Rebuilders and Recyclers.

Bullock said this was the first time they taught the class.

“I got really interested in the topic of electronic waste,” he added. One of the primary motivators for this class, Bullock said, was to “learn about how we handle e-waste and understand the domestic and international aspects of this problem.”

The first semester of the class focused on researching the problems of e-waste, while the second semester focused on design and innovation, Dolin said.

“We were focused to find uses for things we were throwing in the trash,” Bullock said.

Five tons of old computer parts were donated for the project.

“These are some magnificent ideas to commercialize,” Cade said.

He added he wants students to try and take their ideas as far as they can.

The University plans to run a contest nationwide next year and the course will be taught again next spring, Cade said.

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You can repurpose an old desk top as a backup server for instance or as media center or you can make something else out of it. If you are computer savvy you can make a digital picture frame out of laptop monitors for instance. People have been known to make beautiful jewelry out of mother board parts

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Reusing components of old electronic devices can help lessen the waste in our environment. I admire these intellectual minds for thinking of ways to make use of these old components that some might already consider as trash.

Andrew Surwilo

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If you haven't thrown out or recycled your old analog TV yet Please don't send it to the landfills. The CRT in television contains several ponds of lead and we don't want that leaching into the soil and ground water. You can re-purpose your TV by making it your DVD station, or put in your garage where you can watch it as you do some work there. If you just want to get rid of it then donate it to a school or charitable organization that can use i

kgray0277

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Students devise new, creative ways to reuse electronics- this is a great idea. students being innovative in a way. helping in a way to be more practical and create ways to reuse old electronics. business plan writing

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