Just found 62 sticks of RAM in my dad's garage, freezer tells me to stick them on my ceiling, any other suggestions?

Last edited by Lieutenant_Jensen (2008-05-09 15:36:59)
Aye, you could get a few quid of you flog them on eBay as a job lot - untestedLieutenant_Jensen wrote:
Sell them.
EDIT: Or send them to me.
dunno, some of it is marked EDO.TheEternalPessimist wrote:
eBay, you'd be supprised what they can sell for lol.
Is it all old EDO memory?
They are pretty damn worthlessScorpion0x17 wrote:
Give 'em to charity, if you can/there's a charity that will take them in Iceland.
If not, sell them on ebay.
Charity then - the kind of charity I'm thinking of is one that takes peoples old PC parts, refurbishes them, put's them together into working machines and then sells them very very cheap to people who can't afford new PCs.PBAsydney wrote:
They are pretty damn worthlessScorpion0x17 wrote:
Give 'em to charity, if you can/there's a charity that will take them in Iceland.
If not, sell them on ebay.
And I bet half of them don't even work.
Would be hard to do with RAM, it would be easier to just recycle them.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Charity then - the kind of charity I'm thinking of is one that takes peoples old PC parts, refurbishes them, put's them together into working machines and then sells them very very cheap to people who can't afford new PCs.PBAsydney wrote:
They are pretty damn worthlessScorpion0x17 wrote:
Give 'em to charity, if you can/there's a charity that will take them in Iceland.
If not, sell them on ebay.
And I bet half of them don't even work.
Kurazoo wrote:
Inb4freezer
Refurbing RAM, yeah that would be difficult, but at the very least they will test them, keep the ones that work, and, I would hope, recycle the ones that don't.Defiance wrote:
Would be hard to do with RAM, it would be easier to just recycle them.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Charity then - the kind of charity I'm thinking of is one that takes peoples old PC parts, refurbishes them, put's them together into working machines and then sells them very very cheap to people who can't afford new PCs.PBAsydney wrote:
They are pretty damn worthless
And I bet half of them don't even work.
Dude, EDO RAM. 72-pin RAM for 2- 3- and 486 processors as well as early Pentiums. That RAM is worthless.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Refurbing RAM, yeah that would be difficult, but at the very least they will test them, keep the ones that work, and, I would hope, recycle the ones that don't.Defiance wrote:
Would be hard to do with RAM, it would be easier to just recycle them.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Charity then - the kind of charity I'm thinking of is one that takes peoples old PC parts, refurbishes them, put's them together into working machines and then sells them very very cheap to people who can't afford new PCs.
That's why I said give them to a charity that builds cheap PCs to sell to poor people.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Dude, EDO RAM. 72-pin RAM for 2- 3- and 486 processors as well as early Pentiums. That RAM is worthless.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Refurbing RAM, yeah that would be difficult, but at the very least they will test them, keep the ones that work, and, I would hope, recycle the ones that don't.Defiance wrote:
Would be hard to do with RAM, it would be easier to just recycle them.
Shit man, you know your stuff.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Dude, EDO RAM. 72-pin RAM for 2- 3- and 486 processors as well as early Pentiums. That RAM is worthless.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Refurbing RAM, yeah that would be difficult, but at the very least they will test them, keep the ones that work, and, I would hope, recycle the ones that don't.Defiance wrote:
Would be hard to do with RAM, it would be easier to just recycle them.
Exactly. Especially in the 3rd world. I used to work for a charity that refurbed old computers for use in schools throughout the 3rd world.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
That's why I said give them to a charity that builds cheap PCs to sell to poor people.Freezer7Pro wrote:
Dude, EDO RAM. 72-pin RAM for 2- 3- and 486 processors as well as early Pentiums. That RAM is worthless.Scorpion0x17 wrote:
Refurbing RAM, yeah that would be difficult, but at the very least they will test them, keep the ones that work, and, I would hope, recycle the ones that don't.
Sheesh. And coming from you too Freezer!
Nothing is utterly worthless - some people still use 2- 3-, 486's and early Pentiums.