How to Green Your Life with the Tech You Already Own

By Dean Burgess

You don’t need to be a climate scientist or a full-time minimalist to live more sustainably. You probably already have the tools—it’s just a matter of adjusting the way you use them. That phone buzzing in your pocket, the smart plug you set up last winter, even your humble Google Calendar—they’re not just conveniences; they’re opportunities. And when you start to see your everyday tech as part of the solution, not just the problem, a more sustainable lifestyle starts to feel less like a sacrifice and more like a shift.

Let Your Thermostat Do the Work

If you've got a smart thermostat in your home, you're already ahead of the curve. These things are like quiet roommates who care about your utility bill and the planet at the same time. The key is letting it learn your rhythms—when you’re home, when you’re not, and when you’re just pretending to work from the couch. Once it’s dialed in, you barely have to think about it, and your energy use starts to drop without you lifting another finger.

Ditch the Paper Clutter

Reducing paper waste doesn’t have to mean scanning every receipt you’ve ever touched—but digitizing the essentials is a solid place to start. Instead of creating a maze of random files on your desktop, using a tool to merge PDFs can keep all your documents in one place and save you from digging through ten folders for one form. It’s cleaner, quieter, and makes you feel like the kind of person who knows where their car title is. Once you get into the habit, that overstuffed drawer starts to feel like a relic.

Your Phone Isn't Just for Group Chats

Most people carry around a supercomputer without realizing it could double as a personal sustainability coach. With a few well-chosen apps or even just calendar reminders, you can turn your phone into a tool for habit tracking, meal planning, or ride sharing. It's not about being perfect; it's about nudging yourself toward better habits. And when your tech starts supporting your values instead of just feeding your screen time, it feels like a little win every day.

Buy Used Like It’s the Default

There’s something quietly satisfying about buying something secondhand, especially when it still has that fresh-out-of-the-box feel. These days, it’s less about thrift and more about mindset—why buy new if gently-used works just as well? Your phone or laptop can easily connect you to secondhand marketplaces, community exchanges, or even repair tutorials when things break. And every time you choose reuse over new, you’re cutting back on waste without making a big scene about it.

Stream with Intention

It's tempting to leave Spotify running while you're in the shower, cooking dinner, and texting your cousin about brunch—all at the same time. But how you stream—video, music, podcasts—can actually make a difference when it comes to energy use. Try setting your devices to auto-off timers, download playlists instead of constantly streaming, or just... pause once in a while. There’s something surprisingly grounding about being a little more intentional with how you consume content, and your devices will thank you for the break.

Use Your Calendar Like a Low-Key Sustainability Hack

This might sound too simple to matter, but your digital calendar can quietly make your life a lot more eco-friendly. Batching errands on the same day, scheduling public transit routes in advance, or even setting recurring reminders to water your plants or check your pantry before shopping—it all adds up. You’re not reinventing your life; you’re just organizing it with a bit more intention. The less you're scrambling, the less you're wasting—time, gas, food, energy.

Make Remote Work Actually Work

Working from home isn’t automatically green—it’s what you do with the setup that counts. Turning off your printer when it’s not in use, adjusting your monitor’s brightness, even shifting your desk toward natural light—these are tiny tweaks that slowly add up. And once you get into the rhythm, you might find you actually feel better working this way, too. A calmer, cleaner workspace tends to match a calmer, clearer mind.

Repurpose Before You Replace

When something stops working, your first instinct might be to toss it, or trade it in for a newer model. But your tech—whether it’s a tablet, a speaker, or a phone—isn’t always done just because it’s not the latest version. Try repurposing instead: an old tablet can become a kitchen recipe screen, an aging laptop might still work fine for a family member or a school in need. It’s a quiet kind of creativity that makes you feel like a problem-solver instead of just another consumer.

The path to a more sustainable life doesn’t start with a big purchase or a dramatic gesture. It starts with curiosity. What if the gadgets already in your home could make you more mindful, more organized, and more aligned with the way you want to live? No guilt, no lectures—just a series of small choices, made a little better every day, with the help of the tech that’s already in your hands.

Join the One Earth Film Festival to experience powerful films that inspire action and foster community resilience in the fight for environmental and climate justice!

Dominican University Honors Writing Students Review 2025 One Earth Film Festival Film Selection: The Grab

Dominican University Honors Writing Students Review 2025 One Earth Film Festival Film Selection: The Grab

The 2024 film, “The Grab,” directed by Gabriela Cowperthwaite, is a riveting documentary that follows journalist Nathan Halverson on his quest to track the throughlines between agriculture and increasing political tensions. Halverson tells us to “follow the money” and recounts his discoveries while researching.

Dominican University Honors Writing Students Review 2025 One Earth Film Festival Film Selection: Food Inc 2

Dominican University Honors Writing Students Review 2025 One Earth Film Festival Film Selection: Food Inc 2

“Food, Inc. 2” expertly showcases how the current practices of the food industry vandalize local farmers, migrant and low-income workers, livestock, the American diet, and the planet. Via narratives from across the globe, the documentary emphasizes how the fractured food system serves a select few multinational corporations while drastically undermining the workers and consumers that fuel it. It underscores how the common denominator between the environmental crisis, migrant crisis, and obesity crisis is the food industry itself.

Dominican University Honors Writing Students Review 2025 One Earth Film Festival Film Selection: Bad River

Dominican University Honors Writing Students Review 2025 One Earth Film Festival Film Selection: Bad River

The documentary film Bad River by Mary Mazzio and members of the Bad River Ojibwe travels through time to actively voice a story of persistence and strength. Alongside the winding path of Bad River, their forebears were known as the Lake Superior Ojibwe, protectors of an ancient freshwater lake. Just as they faced cultural annihilation and degradation in the past, the Bad River tribe of today encounter new battles to protect their land and their way of life.

“Cafeteria Man”: Turning a Lunchroom into a Battleground for Justice Filmmaker Interview with Richard Chisolm

“Cafeteria Man”: Turning a Lunchroom  into a Battleground for Justice Filmmaker Interview with Richard Chisolm

When filmmaker Richard Chisolm got a phone call from longtime friend and producer Sheila Kinkade, he didn’t expect it to lead to one of his most formative projects. Sheila had read one news about Tony Geraci, a bold new hire arriving in Baltimore to overhaul their city’s deeply flawed school lunch system. Her words: “This sounds like a really good film.”

And it was.

“When We Cycle” Filmmaker Interview with Arne Gielen and Gertjan Hulster

“When We Cycle” Filmmaker Interview with Arne Gielen and Gertjan Hulster

In When We Cycle, Arne Gielen and Gertjan Hulster take us into the great unknown—a future where bicycles reframe society’s relationship to speed, space, and community. The film is far more than a documentary. It’s an exploration of possibilities: What if our cities were redesigned with the cyclist at heart? Do fast, efficient rides win all the privileges, or is there room for a more inclusive, reflective scenario? With insights from various experts and everyday cyclists, the film challenges us to imagine urban futures that are sustainable, connective, and alive with possibility.