Sent to you by JDP/Frogman via Google Reader: Donate Your Old Hardware to Those Who Can Use It [Blog Action Day 2008] via Lifehacker by Kevin Purdy on 10/15/08 There are lots of cool things you can do with leftover hardware, from building a home-baked server box to reviving an old laptop and beyond. But one of the best hacks you can pull off is making your gear available for the people and communities that can't afford the latest and greatest. I recently met and signed up with a local non-profit that refurbishes and installs computers for those in need, and learned a bit about how anyone can help do the same. As part of Blog Action Day 2008, I'm listing below a few links and resources for those looking to help, and a few quick tips on donating your hardware (or your time). Photo by Strutta.com.
Having been blessed with a somewhat flexible schedule and a surfeit of geeky know-how, I wanted to see if I put the skills I normally use in my free time to use for a greater cause—having read that such is the best way to find a cause you can stick with. A few weeks back, I happened to drive by the storefront for Buffalo, NY's Computers for Children, which does exactly what it sounds like. I emailed the directors asking how I could help, and was invited in to take a tour and submit an application and my resume (a formality many non-profits must require, for various legal and insurance reasons).
Some of the systems that end up at Computers for Children (CFC) come from bulk upgrades at corporate or governmental entities, but personal donations can be crucial in filling in the gaps. An IT department might, for example, yank the hard drives from an entire fleet of beige desktop boxes for security or salvage purposes, leaving them mostly useless for renovation purposes. Personal donations also bring in the more unique consumer-oriented hardware that can be put to use in creating group servers, teaching children how to use digital cameras, and filling out otherwise perfectly good systems missing one crucial part.
From my brief interviews and tour at CFC, I learned a few things about what similar charities are looking for: - Working hard drives: They're often the first thing to go on otherwise functional systems, and while you may think your 40 GB Maxtor is too tiny for your MP3 vaults, it's perfect for a shared community center or school system. - Non-white monitors—LCD, if possible: This may not be true at all firms, but CFC has a surfeit of white or beige CRT units (a.k.a. big old-school monitors) that don't match with the increasingly dark-colored systems they're working on selling and renovating. If you've got a dark-framed monitor you're thinking about pitching, consider helping a charity out. - Read the requirements: Most non-profits and community donation centers will list on their web sites the minimum requirements for the systems they're looking for. Take a glance before you hop in the car—dropping off your far-outdated gear just leaves them with heavy, space-taking stuff to get rid of. - No computer geniuses required: You may not be a pro at setting up KVM systems or firmware upgrades, but many technology-focused charities often need volunteers to help set up and explain the systems, and newer technology like blogging and digital cameras, to schools, community classes, and other causes. In other words, if you're reading this blog, there's a good chance your skills can be put to good use.
I'm looking forward to putting in time with CFC, and you can likely find a similar group you can donate to, volunteer for, or otherwise help out with. Here's a short list of some potentials: - The National Christina Foundation, which also works with Dell's recycling program to accept hardware. - TechSoup's resources page, which points to a variety of resources in the left-hand "Donate Computer Equipment" box. - Computers for Schools is a Chicago-based group with affiliates in 34 states. Here's a list of drop-off points. - Microsoft has a list of ten tips for computer donation, including advice to keep the OS intact, if possible, and guides to wiping your personal data off your hard drive before donating. - UsedComputer.com has a extensive list of computer donation groups, along with recycling resources for the stuff that just isn't needed. - Open-source firm Untangle teams up with the yearly LinuxWorld conference in San Francisco to organize Installfest for Schools. Hit the link to learn more about donating or setting up a Linux-flavored Installfest in your own town.
Got a local or national non-profit that helps put hardware and other technology to use in the communities that need them? Share the link in the comments.
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--- On Wed, 10/15/08, JDP/Frogman jdpruente@gmail.com wrote:
Donate Your Old Hardware to Those Who Can Use It [Blog Action Day 2008] via Lifehacker by Kevin Purdy on 10/15/08
There are lots of cool things you can do with leftover hardware, from building a home-baked server box to reviving an old laptop and beyond. But one of the best hacks you can pull off is making your gear available for the people and communities that can't afford the latest and greatest.
What? Perpetuate the idea that "Linux is what you put on old computers"??? Perish the thought!
;-)
Some of the systems that end up at Computers for Children (CFC) come from bulk upgrades at corporate or governmental entities, but personal donations can be crucial in filling in the gaps. An IT department might, for example, yank the hard drives from an entire fleet of beige desktop boxes for security or salvage purposes, leaving them mostly useless for renovation purposes.
From my brief interviews and tour at CFC, I learned a few things about what similar charities are looking for: Working hard drives: They're often the first thing to go on otherwise functional systems, and while you may think your 40 GB Maxtor is too tiny for your MP3 vaults, it's perfect for a shared community center or school system.
It should also be pointed out that any size hard drive can be put to good use when Linux is the OS. 1GB to 4GB hard drives are still "young" enough to work well, and they help use donated hard drives which are too big for motherboard BIOS limitations. Say you have six older computers, each with a motherboard with a 137GB hard drive limit, and a company donates six 160GB hard drives. Normally those hard drives would be useless in your six older machines, or would have to be jumpered to less than 137GB, wasting some of the space.
However, a boot hard drive which is less than 137GB in size, such as an old 1GB-4GB hard drive, allows Linux to boot, and once Linux is booted it ignores the motherboard BIOS and uses any size hard drive, allowing full use of all 160GB of hard drive space in those drives.
Since older computers generally have two IDE channels, this means that three 4GB hard drives (plus one CD/DVD drive) could be put to use in an older computer to give it a total size of 12GB. As Linux allows for putting different system directories on different hard drives (and much easier than with other OSes), a three 4GB hard drive computer could be easily set up with /boot and / on one drive, /usr on the second drive, and /home on the third, with <swap> on either the /boot or / drive, or the /home drive. While larger hard drive sizes are preferable, 4GB hard drives are still very useful to a "have-not" computer lab.
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I'm a little surprised that there was no mention of Kansas City's own homegrown effort to put used computers and computer knowledge into the hands of those who may not otherwise be able to acquire either:
The Surplus Exchange http://www.SurplusExchange.org/ 518 Santa Fe, Kansas City MO 64105 Open 9-5 Tuesday through Saturday Phone: 816-472-0444 Fax: 816-472-8105
The Surplus Exchange takes in donations, refurbishes them, and then sends them back out at cheap prices to the general public and deep discounts to non-profit organizations.
They also do a "Learn & Earn" program where students from poverty-stricken families, who would not otherwise have a home computer, can take a class where they learn how to build and maintain a PC, and then take home the PC they build in class (along with the monitor, keyboard, mouse, and a printer). As the class is for students who have no money to buy a computer on their own, the classes are funded by outside sponsors so that the students pay no fees to take the classes and do not have to buy the computer they build.