Community Computer Drive Jul. 29th!
What: Digital Independence Community Computer Drive
When: Friday July 29th, 2011, 10am to 4pm
Where: Joan Lorenz Park, The green in front of the Cambridge Main Library located on 449 Broadway, Cambridge, MA 02138
What’s happening: Donate your old computers and technologies. We’ll refurbish them and pass them along to families with low-income who may not have the resources for their own technologies. We’re also giving away two computers in a free raffle.
In his State of the Union address, President Barrack Obama stressed America’s leadership in technology and research as of the utmost importance in our great nation’s success. Yet looking around the community one can see many people who are less than well-versed in the field of high technology. That’s the playing field onto which three Cambridge Rindge and Latin students stepped during the winter of 2009. Noting the nationwide community’s lack of technical proficiency, Arjun Agarwala, Bandhan Zishanuzzaman, and Tom Barrasso started Digital Independence to alleviate the endemic lack of understanding. One and half years later, Digital Independence now has office space both in the Cambridge Innovation Center and the Main Branch of the Cambridge Public Library, and employs a team of nine interns funded by the city of Cambridge.
While Mr. Obama may have been speaking to those members of the national community already highly invested in technology, Digital Independence sees the greatest investment in the future of America in the children who will one day grow up to run its government and industries. Yet many of these children, the ones who will need to lead America one day, who will need to be the most technology savvy individuals in the world if America is to truly succeed, lack the basic technology on which to learn. In response to this problem, and to a general lack of access to technology by many Americans, Digital Independence started “Project Refurb” during the summer of 2010. Taking donated computers, refurbishing them, and donating them back into the community, “Project Refurb” aims to bring technology to those who wouldn’t normally have such access. To support this program, Digital Independence is holding a computer drive on July 29th from 10am-4pm so that enough computer donations may be secured to successfully meet the needs of our community. This drive aims to bring in enough donations to help build a computer lab for the Boston Public Schools, as well as to be able to donate refurbished computers to several less fortunate families in the Greater Boston Area.
(Written by Henry Eccles, Project Refurb Supervisor)