Today’s Solutions: May 08, 2026

BY THE OPTIMIST DAILY EDITORIAL TEAM

That outdated phone sitting in your junk drawer could be doing a lot more than gathering dust. According to a new European study, it might just be the next tiny tech hero helping researchers monitor marine life or improve your local bus stop.

The concept is straightforward enough: turn old smartphones into miniature data centres. It might sound like science fiction, but it’s surprisingly affordable and remarkably effective.

“Innovation often begins not with something new, but with a new way of thinking about the old,” says Huber Flores, Associate Professor of Pervasive Computing at the University of Tartu in Estonia. Flores is one of several European researchers behind the new study published in IEEE Pervasive Computing.

A budget-friendly breakthrough

The team found that reprogramming old smartphones into functional data-processing units costs just around €8 (USD 8.60) per device.

Here’s how it works: first, they remove the phone’s battery to prevent chemical leaks, then attach an external power source. Four old smartphones are then grouped together, housed in 3D-printed casings, and transformed into a functional prototype. These devices no longer text or snap selfies, but they can process and store data just fine.

What can these micro data centres do?

Plenty, as it turns out. The researchers tested their system underwater, where it helped count marine species in real-time. Instead of relying on scuba divers to film marine life and bring the footage back to shore for analysis, these tiny data centres do the job on the spot.

But the applications don’t end with the ocean. These repurposed smartphones could also be deployed at bus stops to track passenger numbers and help city planners optimise transit systems. Anywhere real-time data is needed, these pint-sized processors could step in.

Small fix, big picture

Each year, more than 1.2 billion smartphones are produced globally. Most are replaced every two to three years, generating a staggering amount of e-waste and placing heavy demands on natural resources through mining and energy-intensive production.

“Sustainability is not just about preserving the future,” says Ulrich Norbisrath, Associate Professor of Software Engineering at the University of Tartu. “It’s about reimagining the present, where yesterday’s devices become tomorrow’s opportunities.”

While transforming a handful of phones into tiny data hubs won’t solve the world’s e-waste crisis, it does offer a clever and concrete step toward a more circular tech economy.

Source study: IEEE Xplore—Supporting sustainable computing by repurposing e-waste smartphones as tiny data centers

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