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One Indian gamer was lucky enough to salvage a fully functional 25-year-old PC and a CRT monitor, and they had big plans for ...
Human waste, mostly plastic, was found in abundance at the deepest part of the Mediterranean called the Calypso Deep, 3.1 ...
Producers of electronic waste may soon be required to dispose of it only in designated areas – or face a fine of Sh20,000 or six months in jail – if a new Bill is enacted into law.The Electronic ...
Lighting is playing an ever-increasingly important role in the circular economy. Luminaires are no longer seen as part of the ...
Upgrading your space can be a great idea when it comes to creating your dream home. However, when we're talking renovations, ...
Researchers warn that a looming crisis in IoT battery waste is set to see up to 78 million batteries discarded daily by 2025.
Disposal of electronic waste (e-waste) in landfills, incinerators, or at rudimentary recycling sites can lead to the release of toxic chemicals into the environment and increased health risks.
Varying approaches to waste definition and management have made it a challenge to track what happens to the waste we recycle.
Old phones aren’t useless — researchers are repurposing them into tiny data centers for edge computing. Here’s how it works!
A pool cleaner and a spongy polymer can turn used and discarded electronic items into a treasure trove of gold.
Risk has changed. E-waste is not just waste, it is a compliance failure waiting to happen, a data breach in transit, a national resource lost to rivals.