Depending on your point of view, breaking the one billion actively-used PCs
barrier is either representative of the power of technology, or the waste of
man.
More than a billion PCs have now been installed worldwide, according to
Gartner. The analyst
defines the installed base as the estimated number of PCs in use, as opposed to
the number shipped over time.
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That is an important distinction. After all, how many of us have old desktops
stored away in the loft?
Gartner says the answer runs into many thousands, with a little more than 180
million of the one billion installed PCs to be replaced this year.
Most stored PCs are stuffed with legacy files or more importantly, personal
data. The proliferation of unprinted holiday snaps and credit card details is
likely to mean people are loath to dispose of their legacy equipment.
Additional pressure comes from legal and environmental concerns. The WEEE
directive, for example, has increased pressure on providers and users to dispose
of technology in an environmentally-sensitive manner.
But regulation and charity can only soak up so much toxic waste. While some
retired PCs are re-used and recycled, many millions are simply dumped into
landfill.
Estimates suggest as many as three million PCs are landfilled in the UK every
year.
And the continual churn of computers means the problem is likely to
exacerbate.
Gartner reports the worldwide installed base of PCs is growing at a little less
than 12 per cent annually. At that pace, it will surpass two billion units by
early 2014.
Suitable solutions are not easy to find. Some users choose to dump old
equipment on unsuspecting family, such as the 486 I lumbered my parents with -
before my mum realised it was too slow to process a game of patience, never mind
access the internet.
And while the billion PCs installed around the globe have helped spread
information access, whether such access remains centralised in the hands of the
West remains a moot point.
Pushing a green information revolution to the rest of the world is likely to
rely on users finding environmentally-sensitive homes for the next billion PCs.
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