Monday, October 6, 2014

iFixit Teams Up With Microsoft To Launch Repair Guidance Site

iFixit and Google are brewing up a new service that will try to help its users learn how to fix everyday gadgets like Smartphones, tablets and laptops. This new service has been hailed as revolutionary since none of the IT majors have ever backed such an initiative. This website is designed to impart the skill-sets necessary to fix devices and will relay information to enable them to do the same. The idea behind this initiative, undertaken by the Pro Tech Network, is to help set up new lines of business and save precious materials in use in most smartphones in the same process. If you want to know more about this initiative, you can contact our Microsoft fix it department.

The network will provide a huge array of services that range from in-depth repair manuals, an open community where individuals get to ask questions and share valuable information, small business accounting, cash-flow worksheets and marketing tips. Environmental Sustainability group manager from Microsoft, Josh Henretig posted in a blog post that the company wants to ensure that devices as much as possible are used for as long as possible in order to cut down on electric waste. He mentioned, “By providing free online training for people to set up a phone, tablet or PC repair business, we hope to increase the reuse of these devices.”

“Some studies have suggested that you would need to use a tablet or phone for tens of years before the usage footprint was larger than the manufacturing footprint. With this in mind, anything that can be done to extend the life of these smaller, low-power devices can have a positive environmental benefit.”

Henretig continued to add that most devices have materials that can be reused once extracted from the parent device. “With mobile electronics containing valuable and often scarce resources, including copper, gold, lead, zinc, beryllium, tantalum and coltan, they represent a large materials resource that can be 'mined' by recycling them to help build the next generation of devices. “ The entire premise behind this new venture is to popularize reuse and recycle and create a generation of DIY enthusiasts who are capable of reusing “Junk”.

Microsoft seems to have found the right partner since iFixit has been a popular service which has experience in fixing devices that are hard to repair. If this initiative takes traction, it might make a slow but steady change to the extremely high e-waste that is generated in the recent years. The accumulation of this waste will cause adverse effects to the environment if it continues to remain unchecked. Contact our Microsoft fix it solution to know more about the harmful effects of untreated e-waste.

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