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your old computers

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
comsysadminsalesquestion
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  • J Jeremy Falcon

    You could mix and match parts to make working computers. My point is, don't look a gift horse in the mouth. You have no right to complain if people are GIVING it to you.

    Jeremy Falcon

    M Offline
    M Offline
    Michael A Barnhart
    wrote on last edited by
    #41

    Sorry for my first heated response. Let me try to explain a little better. I did edit my original post to Chris.

    Jeremy Falcon wrote:

    My point is, don't look a gift horse in the mouth.

    Well, do you realize that electronic trash is classified as toxic waste. It is not just to be put in the dumpster and taken to the local landfill. Which even if you did, since the charity is a business, has to pay for this service. So it costs the charity to get rid of parts that are trash. When you wind up costing more to handle the donations than buying used gaurantted equipement from a local dealer something is wrong.

    "Yes I know the voices are not real. But they have some pretty good ideas."

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    • C Chris Losinger

      when you upgrade to a new computer, what do you do with your old one? i have an old Dell 1.7GHz desktop that I recently replaced. i could sell it to a friend who needs one, but i'm a little worried that i'll become the tech support guy. i could put it up for sale on eBay, but it's probably not worth the shipping cost (since you can get a new PC for just a few hundred $, if you shop around). i don't need it for a file server or anything like that. donate it? junk it?

      Let's execute on the customer-facing market-driven swim-lane paradigm!

      M Offline
      M Offline
      Michael Dunn
      wrote on last edited by
      #42

      Scavenge any useful hardware, then stuff 'em in a closet and curse them every time you move. I have the following in my closet right now: C=64 w/power brick C=128D w/power brick Two C= printers (tractor feed!!) Several old game consoles My P133 system from 1995 Two old VCR/DVD players Along with various non-hardware stuff like game controllers, mouse pads, software boxes, etc.

      --Mike-- Visual C++ MVP :cool: LINKS~! Ericahist | PimpFish | CP SearchBar v3.0 | C++ Forum FAQ

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      • M Michael A Barnhart

        Then go offer your services and see what I am talking about.

        Jeremy Falcon wrote:

        You could mix and match parts to make working computers.

        Which given 90% is broken trash (not used with a faulty part to diagnose, TRASH) you wind up taking 4-8 hours finding working parts that can make ONE working box out of. And then having to all off a small pickup load to a center that can take the unusable remains (which by the way is an hour drive each way from where I live.)

        "Yes I know the voices are not real. But they have some pretty good ideas."

        J Offline
        J Offline
        Jeremy Falcon
        wrote on last edited by
        #43

        Michael A. Barnhart wrote:

        And then having to all off a small pickup load to a center that can take the unusable remains (which by the way is an hour drive each way from where I live.)

        Yeah, everyone should be computer gurus before they donate them, so they know what's good and what's not. Really, if you didn't like it that much, then just stop doing it.

        Jeremy Falcon

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        • M Michael A Barnhart

          Sorry for my first heated response. Let me try to explain a little better. I did edit my original post to Chris.

          Jeremy Falcon wrote:

          My point is, don't look a gift horse in the mouth.

          Well, do you realize that electronic trash is classified as toxic waste. It is not just to be put in the dumpster and taken to the local landfill. Which even if you did, since the charity is a business, has to pay for this service. So it costs the charity to get rid of parts that are trash. When you wind up costing more to handle the donations than buying used gaurantted equipement from a local dealer something is wrong.

          "Yes I know the voices are not real. But they have some pretty good ideas."

          J Offline
          J Offline
          Jeremy Falcon
          wrote on last edited by
          #44

          Michael A. Barnhart wrote:

          heated response.

          I didn't think it was that heated. :laugh: No worries.

          Michael A. Barnhart wrote:

          Which even if you did, since the charity is a business, has to pay for this service.

          Then they shouldn't accept the bad computers.

          Jeremy Falcon

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