TVNZ 7 Timeline, 2012 prints on plexiglass, inkjet and collage on canvas prints, adhesive print on plastic TV, haloween rubber eyeball, broken Samsung 3d glasses, ties, Samsung TV base, aluminium, book, packaged Disney «Pirates of the Caribbean» themed
CRT tube television, Samsung Smart televisions, t - shirts and metal hangers dimensions variable acquired in 2012
Not exact matches
The EPA also knows that this so - called e-waste contains cadmium, mercury and other toxic substances, and it is responsible for making sure that lead - laden monitors and
television sets with cathode - ray
tubes (
CRT) are disposed of properly and the parts recycled.
In 2005 about 61 percent (107,500 tons) of cathode - ray
tube (
CRT) monitors and
televisions collected for recycling were exported outside the U.S. for remanufacture or refurbishment, the EPA says.
The EPA does have regulatory authority when it comes to managing hazardous waste, but lead - laden cathode - ray
tube (
CRT) monitors and
televisions sent to landfills are about the only electronic devices that are classified as hazardous under current federal guidelines.
Over the past five years a handful of these companies have invested $ 3 billion in factories to build flat screens, and in April NEC announced that it had produced a thin screen measuring 33 cm in diagonal that displays full - colour pictures with a finer definition than those produced by conventional
televisions with cathode - ray
tubes (
CRT).
31 / 41 — Simon Denny, Channel 4 Analogue Broadcasting Hardware from Arqiva, Sudbury, 2012, viewers watching video archive showing historical artworks dealing with attempts at alternatives to
television from the 1960s — 1990s on
CRT tube TVs imported from China.