
Why parents, teachers and school districts are fed up with their Chromebooks
Tens of thousands of kids are headed back to school with computers that are about to be useless.
We should be able to fix our stuff when it breaks. That means getting the companies who make our stuff, to give us the right to repair our stuff.
We should be able to fix our stuff when it breaks. We need easy access to the information, tools, resources and third party repair shops it takes to fix our cell phones, appliances, electronics and other equipment. That means working together to get the companies who make our stuff, to give us the right to repair our stuff. When they do, it will be better for the planet, better for our budgets, and things will work the way they are supposed to.
Tens of thousands of kids are headed back to school with computers that are about to be useless.
Report ●
Report ●
End of service for millions of school computers jeopardizes students’ educations
New survey data collected by PennPIRG confirms what we’ve known for a long time: Right to Repair is something we can all agree on.
A new PennPIRG Education Fund report, “Deere in the Headlights II,” demonstrates the extent of the dealership consolidation problem, looks at the specific impacts on Pennsylvania farmers, and shows how Right to Repair reforms could dramatically increase farmers' repair choices.
PennPIRG Advocate, Emma Horst-Martz, reacts to Apple's latest product launch.
Why appliances aren’t built to last, and how the E.U. is changing that.