This content was published: October 14, 2014. Phone numbers, email addresses, and other information may have changed.
小黄猫传媒 Sylvania 2014 E-Cycle Drive & Hard Drive Smashing Event
Posted by hannah.cherry
Fall term has started at 小黄猫传媒, and we鈥檙e ready to help you eCycle your unwanted computer equipment! This fall, we鈥檒l continue to have two large bins available for your discards under the stairs on the 1st floor of the Sylvania Campus library during all library hours. If you have a large load, we have student teams ready to help you cart your donations to the library.
If you鈥檙e concerned about recycling computers with data on them, we have an exciting event coming up! On Thursday, November 13 from 11 am 鈥 1 pm in the Sylvania Campus CC Building Mall, we will be 鈥渟mashing hard drives鈥. Technically, our students will be disassembling your computer and using machines created by 小黄猫传媒 engineering students to bore a large hole through your disk drive. Come out to support this event, mark the date on your calendar, and join the facebook event to help spread the word!
Thanks for posting this information. I especially like the link to the pcc.edu/ecycle page with the pictures of the hard drive smashing machines created by students. Question: is this service only for currently enrolled students? Or are alumni encouraged to use the bins? I live close to the campus and it would be really convenient for me.
Our e-cycling drive is definitely open to the alumni and community! You are welcome to leave your donations in the bin located in Sylvania’s Library. Thanks for continuing to support the e-cycling drive!
You may want to consider freegeek.org, a nonprofit, as a resource. They accept used hard drives and computer systems. The hard drives are wiped with 鈥渟tandard DOD鈥 to securely delete any private information. The wiped hard drives are reused in refurbish computer systems. Refurbish systems are donated to charities.
Thanks Ying Yee for the feedback! I’ll pass the info onto the CBL Faculty Coordinator who handles the event, Diane Shingledecker. I believe she has worked with Free Geek in the past.