Linux.com

Feature: Migration

Trashware is rightware for cash-strapped organizations

By Marco Fioretti on October 04, 2004 (8:00:00 AM)

Share    Print    Comments   

Trashware often means "badly designed or useless software,"  but in recent years the term has came to indicate something else which could have an important impact on computer users. I use trashware to refer to trashed hardware. We all see perfectly good working computers dumped as soon as the latest and cutest software slows them down. But trashware is not trash, and a number of groups are working to save those "obsolete" computers from the landfill and using free software to make them useful again for fun, profit, or service.

Trashware preservationists are motivated by deeply different reasons. Some find it worthwhile to preserve knowledge of all operating systems of the past. Many of these programmers and engineers are fascinated by the history of all computers, not just x86 PCs. Eric Smith's page on retrocomputing gives a good idea of the strange brews of hardware still lingering out there. Retrocomputing.net, "the shelter where old computers escape from destruction," hosts a wider gallery of more than 1,100 machines, and links to museums, collectors shows, and many other related resources. The Italian group ReFUN also has as its main goals "to have fun by revaluing old quality hardware, to learn original and extremely effective solutions, and preserve the history of IT."

Other hackers see obsolete machines as just one more part, or a new side, of a bigger picture. Refurbishing a computer with the right free software becomes a way to provide equal opportunities to those who cannot afford the latest hardware and desktop software (be it free or proprietary). Most people on Earth must still work many months to afford a new computer for work or study, and lots of schools in the so-called First World aren't swimming in money either. Just a few months ago, the University of United Nations recommended that "useful lives [of personal computers] be extended to lighten the burden they put on Earth's air, land, water and human health."

For all these reasons, many LUGs and other organizations work to bring theoretically obsolete machines back to life, for use by institutions with little or no budget available for computers. Computers dismissed by private citizens or businesses are collected, equipped with the proper software, and shipped to the field, be it Junior's room, his school, or local or foreign non-governmental organizations (NGO). Some groups, like the Canadian Working Centre, also provide non technical services like job search resources and career counseling. In the U.S., the not-for-profit National Cristina Foundation works as a donation channel for recycled computers. In this case the machines are given for training to people with disabilities, students at risk, and economically disadvantaged persons. Other examples of this category are the Hawaii Open Source Education Foundation and the Austrian NGO VUM, active in the Democratic Republic of Congo and other African countries. In Italy you can find trashware support at Progetto Faber, the Empoli GOLEM, and any of the other groups listed on the Italian trashware portal.

There is a third category of player in the trashware world. Some hacker groups don't ship any computers, but focus on providing the right software to make all this possible. This is why we still have many lightweight GNU/Linux distributions like DeLi (Desktop Light) Linux. This system, based on Slackware 7.1, provides a desktop for old boxes, from 486 to Pentium MMX 166 or so, in no more than 250MB of disk space. The main packages are the 2.2.26 kernel, XFree 3.3.6, Siag Office, dillo, Sylpheed, and GCC 2.95. Basic SMTP, Usenet news, and HTTP daemons are also included.

The RULE project (for which I am the project coordinator and one of the founders) wants to make it easy to Run Up-to-date Linux Everywhere. It does it with custom installers that can place standard Red Hat 9 or (still in alpha stage) Fedora Core 2 packages in as little as 32MB of RAM and 500 to 600MB of disk space. The beauty of this "not being another distribution" is that nothing prevents end users from installing and updating the same applications, with the same tools and online support, as thousands of other people.

In the Debian arena, the previously mentioned Working Centre has a spinoff which recently released the Working Centre Linux Project, a similar solution to RULE.

Is this trashware or rightware?

One of the merits of all these groups is that they help everybody else ask the right questions. The approach that hardware becomes so cheap so quickly that software inefficiency is irrelevant is applicable, in practice, only to a minority of users. Apart from the pollution caused by careless disposal of electronic circuits, many people simply haven't enough money to afford new boxes every other year. Even more important is the fact that they don't need to. Many of the people still waiting for their first computer need it only for basic tasks like Web surfing and email. This should not mean that they must buy some hyper-powered gaming station, or give up, just to name a couple of things, HTML4 Web sites and digital signatures. This is why sometimes I wonder if "rightware" -- that is, hardware with just the right power one needs, and nothing more -- might not be a better name for these systems.

My list of trashware resources is obviously incomplete. Please don't hesitate to let me, and all NewsForge readers, know of any other initiative in these fields.

Marco Fioretti is the author of The Family Guide to Digital Freedom and contributes regularly to Linux.com and other IT magazines.

Share    Print    Comments   

Comments

on Trashware is rightware for cash-strapped organizations

Note: Comments are owned by the poster. We are not responsible for their content.

bill forever!

Posted by: SarsSmarz on October 04, 2004 09:02 PM
For this, I love our bill. I just got a hardly-used 650MHz Toshiba laptop from the wife's company (all ms) for $200 (CDN). It now has full Debian and is a great programming machine for the university kid.

#

This story hits home

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on October 05, 2004 12:42 AM
As a perpetually poor college student I have come to appreciate older hardware. My fastest machine is an Athlon 2500XP. I have a duron 800 Mhz server, a dual PIII 500Mhz machine, and a PII400Mhz machine. They all run the latest Kernel and KDE much quicker than they ever ran windows. I have come across many people that have perfectly good computers, but they are percieved to be slow because windows is so choked with spyware, virii, and other hidden software. I tell them I can install Linux and their machine will run flawlessly for many more years, but they decline and end up spending more money on a new machine. That's why we need to increase awareness that people can donate their old machine to various charities. They can donate old cars and boats so why not add computers to that list? Unfortunalty shipping the darn things is pretty expensive, but if we can get around that then I think it will be economically and socially viable.

 

#

Re:This story hits home

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on October 05, 2004 02:17 AM
> My fastest machine is an Athlon 2500XP

And that's old?! My fastest machine is a 500MHz Celeron, followed by a 166MHz Pentium I with 72Mb RAM, and a 75MHz Pentium I with 32Mb.

All of them run Linux - the first with Mandrake 9.1 with XFCE4, the other two with the excellent DeLi Linux and IceWM (the slowest machine has no X running at all).

All of these machines are in perfect working order, and they run fast with their respective configurations. It is this kind of machine, which is so often ending up down the dump polluting the water supply, which can be salvaged and got working as simple desktops, servers, routers, firewalls... Sure DeLi Linux is pretty basic, but you get a fully- networkable PC with word processing, spreadsheet, email, browser, etc. on a machine which otherwise could only run DOS or Windows 3.1. Linux is way ahead of those two.

#

check out FreeGeek

Posted by: Charles A. McCarthy on October 05, 2004 05:02 AM
in Portland, Oregon (USA):
<A HREF="http://www.freegeek.org/" title="freegeek.org">http://www.freegeek.org/</a freegeek.org>

    They provide computers in exchange for a few hours of volunteer help, and give instruction on using and maintaining the machines.

    I found them by accident during a visit to Portland last spring, took a tour of their facilities, and was favorably impressed. They have a large building, and are very much a going concern.

    A place worthy of emulation. Browse their site for details.

Charles McCarthy

#

Why just organizations...

Posted by: Sameer Verma on October 05, 2004 05:54 AM
Why limit trashware use to organizations only? Why not use it at home<nobr> <wbr></nobr>:-)

I have a Toshiba Satellite that runs my home network (wired and wireless), with a few desktops/laptops and a couple of servers (which are also trashware) behind it.

Here's more: http://lists.svlug.org/pipermail/svlug/2004-April<nobr>/<wbr></nobr> 047160.html

#

Re:Why just organizations...

Posted by: Sameer Verma on October 06, 2004 05:41 AM
Sorry, wrong URL. Here's the correct one.

<A HREF="http://lists.svlug.org/archives/svlug/2004-April/047160.html" title="svlug.org">http://lists.svlug.org/archives/svlug/2004-April/<nobr>0<wbr></nobr> 47160.html</a svlug.org>

#

Flash Drive text editors for Africans with marginal Internet access

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 193.219.5.34] on August 15, 2007 10:18 PM
Thank you for your article and many links. I and our Minciu Sodas laboratory ask for help on several related projects. We're developing online software to help people with marginal Internet access so they might download our community's activity (typically 1 MB zipped per week of letters, wiki pages, chat) onto their flash drive so they might read it and respond offline and then upload their responses when they are back at an Internet cafe. http://www.worknets.org/wiki.cgi?Offline The next step would be to have text editors for the contents of flash drives http://www.worknets.org/wiki.cgi?WordProcessor That is why we're interested in trashware and assembling computers in Africa from locally and globally sourced parts http://www.worknets.org/wiki.cgi?AssemblingComputers We are working at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mendenyo/ and we also are assembling in Italian http://groups.yahoo.com/group/minciu_sodas_IT/ Thank you for any help you might provide!

#

Flash Drive text editors...

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 193.219.5.34] on August 15, 2007 10:19 PM
I forgot to add my name, Andrius Kulikauskas, ms@ms.lt

#

This story has been archived. Comments can no longer be posted.



 
Tableless layout Validate XHTML 1.0 Strict Validate CSS Powered by Xaraya