Updated
Updated · CNET · Jun 18
Google, UC San Diego Turn 2,000 Pixel Phones Into Mini Cloud Platform
Updated
Updated · CNET · Jun 18

Google, UC San Diego Turn 2,000 Pixel Phones Into Mini Cloud Platform

3 articles · Updated · CNET · Jun 18

Summary

  • 2,000 discarded Pixel phones were stripped to their motherboards, clustered in groups of 25 to 50, and rebuilt with Linux to form a small cloud platform for UC San Diego.
  • 20 phones could support a class of more than 75 students, and the full system could handle 100 classes at once while matching or beating an Asus RS720A server rack in many benchmarks.
  • UC San Diego said the reused-phone setup delivered comparable computing power at a fraction of the usual cost and plans to launch it for the fall 2026 semester while studying hardware durability.
  • 62 million tons of e-waste enter the global waste stream each year and only 22.3% is properly recycled, underscoring the project’s value as a small-scale reuse model rather than a data-center replacement.

Insights

Old Pixel phones now rival professional servers. Is this the future of computing or just a clever one-off academic hack?
This server of old phones launches soon; how long can consumer parts last before creating a new e-waste problem?
If old phones can power a university, why do we still treat billions of them as disposable trash every year?