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Decluttering: What to do with the electronic junk?

So… What do you do with old CD backups? I mean, really old CD backups that you no longer feel any compulsion to store in the closet?

The other day, when I realized the point had come where I will never have to go back to GDU again (except to return the keys to their office, which I’ll do on the 31st), I decided to shovel everything that has to do with that place out of my home office. This entailed filling the blue barrel to its rim, since I work at home a lot and so my office contains a lot of printouts and digital media related to the job.

It also dragged along with it a lot of other junk of the sort that piles up like dust. Some of it, you suspect you might need some day, so you stash it in the closet. Some, you’re just too lazy to figure out what to do with it, so you stash it in the closet. And some you really should keep, so you stash it in the closet.

So there was plenty of stuff to empty out.

In amongst all that junk were several large containers of old CDs and Zip disks containing Quicken and Word backups, none of which are relevant to anything today. Despite their antiquity, though, they do contain personal information that I’d just as soon not have seen by any random viewers, especially of the sort who go through trash.

The Zip disks were easy to disable: a tap with a hammer dents the metal disk in the center, which I expect will render them unusable.

But all those CDs… That’s another matter. There are hundreds of them. Many are e-books I sold to my students on the side, to help generate something closer to a living wage than GDU pays its lecturers. I don’t give a damn whether anyone reads those. But some contain personal information—because I didn’t have an external disk drive on those old PCs, I was in the habit of backing up Quicken, Excel, and Word files regularly.

Breaking them is problematic. They can be shattered if you hit them hard enough with a hammer. But “shatter” is the operative term: they scatter glass-like shards all over the place, some of which want to fly up into your face.

I understand some shredders will grind them up. Mine will take credit cards, but I’m not so sure about CDs. Just as soon not wreck that thing.

So the question is: How can I render these things unusable without making an unholy mess?

Image: Pbroks13, CD Layers. Wikimedia Commons.

7 thoughts on “Decluttering: What to do with the electronic junk?”

  1. my dad just got a paper shredder that will shred cds. mom isn’t too happy about that because she wants cd shard free shredded paper for her compost bin.

  2. 1s in the microwave each. We did that in college for kicks. Also generates a pretty light show. Has a small chance of ruining your microwave, though.

    Will scraping the surface with a razor work?

  3. Two words: skeet shooting. Or if that doesn’t work here are couple more practical ideas:

    1 ) Rub them along the sidewalk / driveway
    2) Use sandpaper
    3) Buy a couple cheap knives from the dollar store and gouge the CDs with them

  4. @ Money Beagle: Skeet shooting! I like it. Will one of these things fit in a skeet trap?

    Guess i’druther blow up the skeet trap than the microwave…

  5. @money beagle – did number 3 recently. It’s fine as long as you gouge them deep enough but not really practical if you have a ton of them. I only had a couple to destroy so it was fine.

    We do have a heavy duty shredder that can kill ’em old CDs dead.

    My 2 year old daughter also plays with them old CDs. It keeps her busy and she’d scratch them to unusable heaven in no time.

    Other suggestions: Coasters, decor (f you’re the artsy type)…

  6. I use a pair of tin snips to cut from the edge to the center. It’s quick and not messy at all.

    You might be able to do it with heavy kitchen shears.

    Regards

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