International e-waste Day stories
Businesses driving green initiatives thrive with virtualisation, slashing energy costs by 80% and minimising e-waste. A sustainable future awaits.
IT&C vendors evolve, aiming for eco-friendliness to meet the rising demand for sustainable tech among informed customers.
While the initial hype surrounding green IT may have died down, the interest and implementation of green products and services continues to rise.
As critics debate NZ's green impact, the nation's slow but rising environmental awareness suggests eco-critics may soon be history's footnotes.
New Zealand businesses are looking to leverage technology to drive sustainable practices and reduce carbon emissions.
NZ businesses focusing on genuine corporate responsibility find it's not just ethical, but profitable too, with Ricoh leading by example.
NZ gears up for eDay on Nov 6th, offering over 50 spots to safely recycle PCs and phones, aiming to combat e-waste and protect the environment.
Reviving IT assets offers a greener future, marrying economic gains with environmental responsibility—a vision for sustainable tech evolution.
The UK gov updates procurement policies to focus on green tech and tackles e-waste, showing serious commitment to combatting climate change.
Just throwing away that old computer equipment is no longer acceptable, as it contains things toxic to the environment.
E-waste poses a very real threat to the environment, but your purchasing and recycling choices can assuage this.
Earlier this year, Kiwi students were challenged to imagine a world where technology solves the toughest problems.