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Recycling

Recycling is the reprocessing of materials into new products. Recycling generally prevents the waste of potentially useful materials, reduces the consumption of raw materials and reduces energy usage, and hence greenhouse gas emissions, compared to virgin production. Recycling is a key concept of modern waste management and is the third component of the waste hierarchy. Recyclable materials, also called "recyclables", may originate from a wide range of sources including the home and industry. They include glass, paper, aluminium, asphalt, iron, textiles and plastics. Biodegradable waste, such as food waste or garden waste, is also recyclable with the assistance of micro-organisms through composting or anaerobic digestion. Recyclates are sorted and separated into material types. Contamination of the recylates with other materials must be prevented to increase the recyclates' value and facilitate easier reprocessing for the ultimate recycling facility. This sorting can be performed either by the producer of the waste or within semi- or fully-automated materials recovery facilities. There are two common household methods of recycling. In curbside collection , consumers leave presorted recyclable materials in front of their property to be collected by a recycling vehicle. With a "bring" or carry-in system, the householder takes the materials to collection points, such as transfer stations or civic amenity sites. Recycling Recycling is beneficial in two ways: it reduces the inputs (energy and raw materials) to a production system and reduces the amount of waste produced for disposal. A study conducted by the Technical University of Denmark found that in 80% of cases, recycling is the most efficient method to dispose of household waste.[2] Some materials like aluminum can be recycled indefinitely as there is no change to the materials. Other recycled materials like paper require a percentage of raw materials (wood fibers) to be added to compensate for the degradation of existing fibers. Recycling aluminium saves 95% of the energy cost of processing new aluminium[2] because the melting temperature is reduced from 900 °C to 600 °C. It is by far the most efficient material to recycle. Recycling plastic saves 70% of the energy used in creating new plastic, and paper recycling saves 40% of the energy required to make a new product.[2] The resources being processed are purer, thus less energy is needed to process them. Additionally less energy is needed to transport them from the place of extraction (e.g. bauxite/aluminium ore mines in Brazil or coniferous forests in Scandinavia as compared to domestic areas). This reduces the environmental, social, and usually the economic costs of manufacturing. For example, bauxite mines in Brazil displace indigenous people, create noise pollution from blasting, machinery and transport, and create air pollution in the form of particulates (dust). The habitat loss and visual destruction is also negative both to the aesthetic qualities of the areas and the local environment. The most commonly used methods for waste disposal (landfill, pyrolysis, incineration) may be environmentally damaging and unsustainable. Therefore any way to reduce the volume of waste being disposed in this fashion may be beneficial. The maximum environmental benefit is gained by waste minimization (reducing the amount of waste produced), and reusing items in their current form such as refilling bottles. In the past recycling has been a fragmented industry with recycling companies only accepting specific materials for recycling, or only common materials such as plastic or metals. More recent approaches have resulted in recycling companies that accept a wide variety of materials or emerging market materials such as ceiling tiles, carpet, stained wood etc.. An example of a company that accepts a wide variety of materials, including emerging recycling markets is the Green Recycling Wiki Recycling computer recycle computer recycle computers Juniper Networks, Inc. Gillian Anderson Andover Maine Foundry Networks offers a complete line of high-performance enterprise and service provider switching, routing, application traffic management, and network wide security solutions. computer recycling nationwide computer recycling nationwide laptop computers Cisco Liquidation Halle Berry asset recovery Manitoba Foundry's comprehensive portfolio of products enable network convergence and deployment of feature-rich and secure network infrastructures to support advanced data, voice, and video applications. high tech recycle high tech recycle computer notebooks Cisco routers Heather Graham buy computer Maryland Foundry's products provide industry-leading features, performance, reliability, and scalability for a wide range of infrastructure deployments in Enterprise and Service Provider environments. hi tech recycle hi tech recycle recycling Cisco Switch Heather Locklear buy used computer Massachusetts Foundry's complete product portfolio enables converged and complete end-to-end networking solutions from the edge to the core of today's networking infrastructures. recycling computer recycling computer recycle computer Heather Mills McCartney cheap computer Michigan Foundry's Server Iron family of application delivery and traffic management switches is the industry leader in high availability, acceleration, security and scalability for business-critical IP, Web and Void applications. sell my computer sell my computer desktop computers computer closeout Heidi Klum cheap pc Minnesota The Server Iron provides a total solution for server load balancing, application (Layer 7) switching, server farm and application security, SAL acceleration, compression, and multi-site redundancy. sell my laptop sell my laptop computer laptops E-series routers are broadband edge routers. Helen Hunt cheap paces Mississippi The Server Iron products are almost exclusively used by over 2,000 of the world's most demanding organizations. sell your lap top sell your lap top buy computer The E series was developed by Ionosphere, which Juniper acquired in 2002. Jaime Pressly Cisco Liquidation Missouri Cisco Liquidation surplus computer surplus computer laptop computer The E series routers run the Janise operating system. Janet Jackson Cisco routers Montana Cisco routers used Cisco buyer used Cisco buyer computer monitors Juniper J-Series routers are small customer-premises equipment. Jennifer Connelly Cisco Switch Nebraska Cisco Switch used computer recycling used computer recycling notebook computers M-series routers are multiservice edge routers. Jennifer Garner computer Nevada computer

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a Computer networking devices are units that mediate data in a computer network. Virginia Gravis computers b Computer networking devices are also called network equipment, Intermediate Systems (IS) or Interlocking Unit (IOWA). Vanessa L. Williams laptop computers c Units which are the last receiver or generate data are called hosts or data terminal equipment. Uma Thurman computer notebooks d Some hybrid network devices: Teri Hatcher recycling Used e better than 120 times 600 Network Hardware Multilayer Switch: a switch which, in addition to switching on OBI layer 2, provides functionality at higher protocol layers. Sophie Marceau recycle f Protocol Converter: a hardware device that converts between two different types of transmissions, such as asynchronous and synchronous transmissions. Sophie Marceau desktop computers g Bridge Router(Router): Combine router and bridge functionality and are therefore working on OBI layers 2 and 3. Sophie Anderton computer laptops h Digital media receiver: Connects a computer network to a home theatre Sophie Anderton buy computer i best Used for all Network Hardware today Hardware or software components that typically sit on the connection point of different networks, e.g. between an internal network and an external network: Sharon Stone laptop computer j Proxy: computer network service which allows clients to make indirect network connections to other network services Shannon Doherty computer monitors k Firewall: a piece of hardware or software put on the network to prevent some communications forbidden by the network policy Shannon Doherty notebook computers l Network Address Translator: network service provide as hardware or software that converts internal to external network addresses and vice versa Shania Twain liquidators m Network Equipment Technologies and Elands Deliver Unified Communications Solution for Shaker liquidation n Network Equipment Technologies Program Solution for All of Your Pre-Owned, Refurbished, and Used Cisco Network Hardware! Selma Hayek recycling centers o computer sales Sarah Michelle Gellar cheap computer Oklahoma computers for sale Sarah Jessica Parker used computer q liquidator Sandra Bullock used laptops r cheap pc Reese Witherspoon computer store s computer equipment  

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A personal computer (PC) is a computer whose original sales price, size, and capabilities make it useful for individuals, intended to be operated directly by an end user, with no intervening computer operator. A personal computer may be a home computer, or may be found in an office, often connected to a local area network. The distinguishing characteristics are that the computer is used only (or mostly) by one person at a time, in a very interactive fashion. This is opposite to the batch processing or time-sharing models which allowed large expensive systems to be used by many people, usually at the same time, or large data processing systems which required a full-time staff to operate efficiently. The capabilities of a personal computer have changed greatly since the introduction of electronic computers. By the early 1970s, people in academic or research institutions had the opportunity for single-person use of a computer system in interactive mode for extended durations, although these systems would still have been too expensive to be owned by a single person. The introduction of the microprocessor, a single chip with all the circuitry that formerly occupied large cabinets, lead to the proliferation of personal computers after about 1975. Early personal computers generally called microcomputers, sold often in kit form and in limited volumes, and were of interest mostly to hobbyists and technicians. By the late 1970s, mass-market pre-assembled computers allowed a wider range of people to use computers, focusing more on software applications and less on development of the processor hardware. Throughout the 1970s and 1980s, home computers were developed for household use, offering personal productivity, programming and games. Somewhat larger and more expensive systems (although still low-cost compared with minicomputers and mainframes) were aimed for office and small business use. Workstations are characterized by high-performance processors and graphics displays, with large local disk storage, networking capability, and running under a multitasking operating system. Workstations are still used for tasks such as computer-aided design, drafting and modeling, computation-intensive scientific and engineering calculations, image processing, architectural modelling, and computer graphics for animation and motion picture visual effects. Eventually the market segments lost any technical distinction; business computers acquired color graphics capacity and sound, and home computers and game systems used the same processors and operating systems as office-bound computers. Mass-market computers had graphics and memory comparable to dedicated workstations of a few years before. Even local area networking, originally a way to allow business computers to share expensive mass storage and peripherals, became a standard feature of a home computer.