Computer Composting
Computer Composting
(Financial Post, October 1995)
"I don't know much about computers, but one thing I do know is how to smash them up," says Adam Freedman, introducing his father's computer recycling business Hi Tech Recycling.
The idea to recycle unusable computer parts came to Adam's father, Max Freedman as a result of his once-a-week volunteer work in a Toronto-based project that refurbishes outdated PCs for people who need retraining. "This first year I put in money to keep going, the second year we broke even." This year, with the business savvy of his son who is actually a business consultant, Freedman says he might even make money and hire some help.
Max who retired from a career in electronics, operates out of an industrial building in Toronto. The warehouse is littered with boxes of circuit boards, precision electric motors, old hand-drives and tape units. On one side are the hulking ports of old mainframes and minicomputers. Nearby is a pile of old monitors.
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