In with the old
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Marisa O’Neil
Old computers never die, they just sit in the garage collecting dust
after newer, faster models replace them.
Paul DeMarco and the Seafaring Masonic Lodge of Newport Beach hope
people on Saturday will donate their glorified paperweights -- like
that old 133 megahertz desktop that seemed so state-of the-art when
it came out. The lodge plans to refurbish the old computers to donate
to a Costa Mesa elementary school.
“My computer just died and I thought: ‘What should I do with it?’”
DeMarco said. “No one wants old computers. You can sell them for
maybe $50. But if they’re capable of running [Microsoft] Word and are
being thrown away, why should people do that when they could get a
tax-deductible receipt?”
After talking to his girlfriend, a fifth-grade teacher at
Killybrooke Elementary School, DeMarco thought that even older
computers would still help students write their papers.
“She was telling me how students’ papers were coming back to her
and I realized a lot of kids don’t have computers and can’t find
typewriters. And most classrooms don’t have any or only have one or
two for the whole class.”
Computers collected will go to fifth- and sixth-graders at
Killybrooke.
Because the school’s network requires a Pentium III processor or
higher, those computers can go to the school. But the children will
get the old dinosaurs that can still manage basic word processing.
“Some will go to students directly to take home and be theirs,”
DeMarco said. “Some of the faster ones can be in the classrooms.”
All the computers will be prepped for word processing and Internet
access. If they don’t have modems, DeMarco said, the lodge will
provide some. Members will clean and fix up the computers, making
sure no inappropriate material is on them.
On Saturday from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., DeMarco and fellow mason Rich
Allum will collect the unwanted computers, printers, monitors and
other hardware at the Seafaring Masonic Lodge, 1401 E. 15th St. in Newport Beach. Donors will receive a receipt for tax-deduction
purposes.
This is the first such computer collection by the lodge, DeMarco
said. If it is successful, they will plan more in the future.
“I’d love to get 400 computers and give one to every kid and move
on to the next school,” he said.
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