Goodwill processed 27 million pounds of e-waste in 2005. Much of which it had to pay to do so, diverting from it's mission. There are several ways you can help make e-waste less of a waste in the US. Here's how.
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How to Make E-waste Processing in the US Easier
Erasing Electronics Buyer Remorse
What if, when you bought a laptop, you could know at the time of purchase that you'd get a certain amount back when you're done with it, with free shipping to the buyer? TechForward delivers this, no matter what new products devalue yours in the meanwhile.
How to recycle your cell phone, painlessly
The current options for recycling your cell phone all forget one thing: people are lazy. Pay to recycle? Right! Dig up an old envelope that came with your phone? Not going to happen. Sherwood Folee has a better idea: glue a tiny envelope on the inside of your battery cover. Open it, drop in the mail, done. Cell phone companies, are you listening?
Our love for electronic stuff creates an e-waste problem
We are buying more electronic products, whether we need them or not. Nowadays, we are caught in a cycle where we try to keep up with the latest electronic gadgets. As companies come up with new products with more functions or upgrades, we change our electronic gadgets faster than before.

Amazon’s Kindle signals paper-less books and…eWaste?
Whatever the motivation, Kindle steps recycled paper books and paperless paper up a futuristic notch by re-igniting the e-book market and paving the way for book publishers to go green. Maybe.