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Recycling Phones, Laptops, and Ipods in New York City: Figuring it Out
I can’t imagine that I’m unique in having a hard time just throwing away an old phone, computer, or iPod.
However, the “old technology” pile has grown to take up way too large a percentage of the square footage of a New York apartment.
Although this random assortment of obsolete devices may have their greatest value as paperweights, all that metal and all those microchips should be worth something to someone. The thought of all that non-biodegradable them sitting in the bottom of a landfill (times several million residents) is enough to make me sick.
Until recently, though, the only place in NYC to recycle old technology has been the LES Ecology Centers’ eWaste initiative.
So I was pleasantly surprised to find that the legislature has been busy outlawing throwing these sorts of things out, starting in 2015 while the recycling section of the NYC.gov website offers some great option for buyback programs.
Yep – that’s right, you may be able to get some cash for your old stuff.
However, a reverse caveat emptor is in order in this case (seller beware). The sites differ wildly in their offer amounts and there’s no consistent rule that one is better than another. (Check out two of my price comparisons below).
Also, shipping / pickup policies are different at different shops, so you’re not always comparing apples to apples.
Regardless of the takeback price achieved, it’s good to see that there are now a large number of options to sell (or recycle) your old stuff.
For my Android Incredible II
$20 at Gazelle
$20 at Buymytronics
$35 at Best Buy’s trade-in center$70 Verizon Trade In
$75 at YouRenew
$120 at J&R Music World
$156.50 at Amazon Trade In
For a MacBook 13″ Late 2007 model
J&R: $144
Yourenew: $147
Bymytronics: :$187
Best Buy: $270
Sonos Desktop Controller Wireless Connection Problem
So this isn’t supposed to be a blog about technology — it just seems that these are the easiest topics to fire off quickly.
I received a Sonos ZonePlayer for Christmas (great product — now i can play music from any computer in the apartment), but it took about an hour for me to setup on my (PC) laptop. When my laptop tried to connect with the ZonePlayer, nothing would happen.
Luckily I had already set it up on a Mac so I knew the hardware configuration was working. After about half an hour of digging in the Sonos Forums and confirming that it wasn’t my Windows 7 Firewall settings I discovered that the root cause was that I was running VMWare on the laptop and that the sheer presence of the virtual network adapters were interfering with discovery. I can’t imagine that I’m the only one that’s running a virtualized operating system. It is (nearly) 2011, right? A good addition to the Sonos ZonePlayer Connection Problems FAQ for sure, rather than buried in a forum.
Postscript: I also had no idea about ITunesPlus and the “upgrade path” for .m4p (protected) files. Long story short: If you bought music on ITunes it may have digital rights management. If you want to upgrade, it’s $.30/song.
Editing Your HTC Incredible Android Dictionary
After an hour or so of searching, it was right in front of my nose.
Settings…Language And Keyboard…Touch Input…User Dictionary.
Wow, there are a lot of words that I’ve added.
