Devices’ second lives
Capitol Asset Recovery in Beltsville has made a $5.5 million-a-year business of buying, then refurbishing or destroying, electronics.
5 Seconds
Zach Boorstein, vice president of sales at Capitol Asset Recovery, stands among boxes of computer parts that have been readied for recycling. About 2.6 million pounds of old office equipment pass through the facility every year.
Jeffrey MacMillan / Capital Business
FEATURED PHOTO GALLERIES
Oklahoma tornado wreckage, London terrorism attack, NASA’s Dream Chaser, Triton unmanned aircraft and more.
Terrorism cited in London cleaver attack
Two assailants hacked to death a British soldier on a busy southeast London neighborhood street Wednesday afternoon before delivering an apparent...
Assessing tornado damage in Oklahoma
Amid great destruction, residents of the Oklahoma City suburb of Moore begin to assess the severity of the twister that hit Monday.
Mr. D.C. Pageant contestants compete for charity
Contestants in the Mr. D.C. Pageant, a fundraising event, helped raise more than $15,000 for the Children’s National Medical Center.
Okla. tornado loosely followed path of 1999 twister
Monday’s powerful tornado in suburban Oklahoma City loosely followed the path of a killer twister that slammed the area in May 1999.
- Spam
- Obscene
- Duplicate







Loading...
Comments