Archive for the Computers Category

Tech Talk | NYTimes.com: Green Gadgets For Dummies author Joe Hutsko | JOEyGADGET

04/21/2010 16:01

PODCAST

Tech Talk

April 21, 2010

Joe Hutsko, author of “Green Gadgets for Dummies” chats about how to save money and energy with your tech gear, and the Times reporter Matt Richtel talks about the rise of technology devices on the road.

Read the full story: Tech Talk | NYTimes.com: Green Gadgets For Dummies author Joe Hutsko | JOEyGADGET


Categories:Apple, Books, Computers, Disposal, How-to, Industry, Interview, Peripherals, Recycling, green gadgets for dummies

Greener Gadgets 2010 Video: Joe Hutsko interviews HP and Panasonic execs | JOEyGADGET

03/11/2010 13:07

2k10_CEA_GG_46smHere are links to videos of my interviews with HP and Panasonic execs at the Greener Gadgets 2010 conference:

Maria Tate, Senior Industrial Designer, HP

Peter Fannon, VP Corporate and Government Affairs, Panasonic

Source: Greener Gadgets 2010 Video: Joe Hutsko interviews HP and Panasonic execs | JOEyGADGET.


Categories:Computers, Disposal, HDTV, Industry, Interview, Peripherals, Recycling, green gadgets for dummies

Apple announces PVC- and mercury-free milestones

10/20/2009 13:53

index_environment_20091020Apple today announced two eco-friendlier-products milestones:

Apple ships PVC-free power cords with the new iMac and MacBook


Apple’s most popular computer systems — iMac and MacBook — now ship with PVC-free power cords in the U.S., Canada, Mexico, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala, Panama, Peru, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and Venezuela. PVC has been used in computer power cords for decades, and while it poses few risks under normal use, toxic compounds can be generated and released if PVC is manufactured or incinerated without proper controls. That’s why Apple is continuing to eliminate it from all our computer systems.All currently shipping Mac systems have PVC-free internal cables, and now MacBook and iMac systems are completely PVC-free. Apple engineers worked closely with our partners and tested dozens of materials in order to find a safe, reliable alternative to power cords that contain PVC. We are currently working with agencies in regions outside those mentioned above to achieve the necessary certifications to ship PVC-free power cords worldwide.


Apple completes transition to mercury-free LED-backlit displays across Mac product line


With the introduction of the new 21.5-inch and 27-inch iMac and the new MacBook, Apple offers energy-efficient, mercury-free LED backlight technology on every Mac with a display. So while other companies make promises to move away from power-hungry displays containing toxins such as mercury, Apple is taking action.iPod and iPhone have featured LED technology since their inception. In 2007, MacBook Pro became the first Mac to feature a mercury-free LED-backlit display. During the past year, we’ve added LED backlight technology to all MacBook Pro models. And we introduced the 24-inch LED Cinema Display: the first large-screen display to use LED backlight technology. This transition to LED backlight technology is yet another way Apple is working to lessen environmental impact through smarter product design.


via Apple – Environment – News.


Categories:Apple, Computers, Industry, Recycling, Uncategorized

Apple Expands Environmental Disclosures – Green Inc. Blog – NYTimes.com

09/30/2009 9:30

September 30, 2009, 9:30 AM

NYTimes.com | Green Inc.: Apple Expands Environmental Disclosures

By JOE HUTSKO

appleeco.jpg

Apple last week updated its Apple and the Environment Web site to include a life cycle impact section that, the company says, accounts for its total carbon footprint of 10.2 million metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions.

The emissions, organized by category, include those arising from manufacturing (38 percent); transportation (5 percent); product use (53 percent); facilities (3 percent); and recycling (1 percent).

“Because 53 percent of Apple’s greenhouse gas emissions are a result of the power our products consume, we design those products to be as energy-efficient as possible,” the company stated on its new Web site, adding that “Mac OS X even regulates processor activity between keystrokes, saving milliwatts of energy.”

A recent BusinessWeek article reported that carbon emissions for Hewlett-Packard and Dell were 8.4 million tons and 471,000 tons respectively. However, both companies “exclude product use and at least some manufacturing,” the article noted, and those companies “have said that including those factors would boost their carbon totals several-fold.”

Downloadable reports for all of Apple’s existing and recently retired products provide detailed breakdowns of each product’s environmental virtues (or shortcomings) — including whether it uses mercury-free LED displays or arsenic-free display glass. Also covered are the use of toxic substances like brominated flame retardants and polyvinyl chlorides, which are noxious when burned.

Apple says that all of its handheld products — iPhones and iPods — are now “PVC-free,” and that the majority of circuit boards and internal cables in its plastic-housed MacBooks are free of BFRs and PVCs. It also describes its remaining desktop, notebook, display and server products as being “BFR-free” and having “PVC-free internal cables.”

Asked whether any other electronics manufacturers are reporting the CO2 life-cycle impact for entire product lines, Casey Harrell, Greenpeace International’s toxics campaigner, said, “Not the way Apple is.”

“Others are doing some interesting reporting of their supply-chain emissions,” he added, “and HP is doing a lot of work there.”

via Apple Expands Environmental Disclosures – Green Inc. Blog – NYTimes.com.


Categories:Apple, Computers, Disposal, Industry, Recycling

A Green Way to Dump Low-Tech Electronics – NYTimes.com | JOEyGADGET

07/1/2009 9:14

Excellent story in the New York Times about advances in making it easier to properly dispose of unwanted or hopelessly useless consumer electronics products.

Read the full story at: A Green Way to Dump Low-Tech Electronics – NYTimes.com.

via A Green Way to Dump Low-Tech Electronics – NYTimes.com | JOEyGADGET.


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Categories:Computers, Disposal, Industry, NY Times Green Gadgets, Recycling, Standout Stories, green gadgets for dummies

The New MacBook’s Green Credentials – Green Inc. Blog – NYTimes.com

11/17/2008 16:31

The New MacBook’s Green Credentials
By JOE HUTSKO

 

It’s certainly a step above other notebooks on the green front, but there are still some shortcomings.

 

 

Link to full story: The New MacBook’s Green Credentials – Green Inc. Blog – NYTimes.com.


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Categories:Computers, Industry, NY Times Green Gadgets, Uncategorized

Standout Green-Gadget Story Alert: The Advent Eco PC vs. The Lightbulb

10/7/2008 12:49

Cnet UK’s Rory Reid reviews the Advent Eco PC, which its maker claims draws less power than a lightbulb.

 

In his informative (and at times hysterical) video review Rory notes the computer idles at around 25 watts and doubles to 50 watts when running an intensive process such as a benchmarking program – which is on par with a 50 watt bulb on a dimmer switch.

 

By comparison, the MSI Wind ultra-portable netbook is powerful enough to do most day to day things yet sips only 11 watts when idling and 17 watts when running full steam ahead.

 

Rory’s conclusion? It would take you 75 years before you’d earn back your £600 investment in the Eco PC. 

 

Crave TV: Is the Advent Eco PC more efficient than a light bulb? – Technology Videos from Crave at CNET.co.uk.


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Categories:Computers, Standout Stories, Uncategorized

WD ships cooler, quieter 2nd-generation Caviar Green hard drives

10/3/2008 12:47

WD announced it has begun shipping the second-generation of its environmentally friendlier line of Caviar Green desktop hard drives with ]technology that reduces reduce power consumption. Capacities range from 500 GB ($99.99) to 1 TB ($219.99). WD said the Green drives consume up to 20-percent less power and provide a performance boost of 10-percent over the previous models. WDs latest WD Caviar Green hard drives consume up to 20 percent less power and offer a 10 percent increase in performance over the previous previous models.



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Categories:Computers, Peripherals, Uncategorized