A little off topic, but related question: Who can take away my old monitors? I have about 20 or so old Sun and HP monitors (some work, some, not so much working), and I know that I can't just toss them in the dumpster because of that whole environmental, polution, kill-the-planet thing. So, does anyone know who I can call to take them away?
TIA, Kenny PS I can't wait until Hostraders, either. I have to empty out the storage facility that they are in. Quoting Benjamin Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > On Sat, 19 Jan 2002, Michael O'Donnell wrote: > > My no-name monitor with Trinitron innards made smoke and some > > snap-crackle-pop sounds before dying the other night. Any > > recommendations for repair shops? > > If it is repairable (i.e., the tube is not blown), any place that > repairs > TVs should be able to repair a monitor. However, keep in mind that the > cost > of repair will often be 50% or more the cost of a brand new monitor. At > those prices, repairing an old monitor becomes a poor business decision. > > -- > Ben Scott <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > | The opinions expressed in this message are those of the author and do > not | > | necessarily represent the views or policy of any other person, entity > or | > | organization. All information is provided without warranty of any > kind. | > > > ***************************************************************** > To unsubscribe from this list, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with the text 'unsubscribe gnhlug' in the message body. > ***************************************************************** > --------------------------------------------------------- "There's nothing you shouldn't speak of if you've got something to say, and there's no one to be scared of, just get them out of your way." -- The Alarm ***************************************************************** To unsubscribe from this list, send mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with the text 'unsubscribe gnhlug' in the message body. *****************************************************************