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Should I repair my old laptop?
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Originally posted by MepisReign View PostHello,
Not to rip this thread apart. Since is an old machine you could install something "lite", Ubuntu server with Openbox as WM, it will FLY....
The thing is, it still flies as it is! It's running K 12.04LTS and is as fast and wonderful as the day I bought it. It was starting to have some issues with things dying--its fan, its network card, its battery--so I debated repairing it or replacing it. I ended up buying a new laptop to replace it, but now I hate to just dump the old one because it's still perfect in terms of its performance. So NOW I'm debating if I really want to plunge in and try to repair it myself...or not. I'm pretty sure I don't want to spend money on having it repaired, but I have no experience repairing laptops other than replacing hard drives.
Nice!
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Originally posted by DoYouKubuntu View Post...
Exactly. Really, I never use any of my desktops any more. I mean actually sit down in front of them and use them. They're all accessible to me via my network, so I do access files on them and also backup files on them, but never by actually sitting at one. ...."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostI'm curious. Assuming your other machines are on the same 192.168.1/24 network, how do you access them? SAMBA? NSF? SSH? FTP?
They're all mounted in each computer's fstab, so as long as a computer is powered on, its hard drives, printers, USB drives, etc., are all available across the network. Now if I could just figure out how to scan something from a different room, I'd be all set!
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Originally posted by MepisReign View PostThe fan and the HDD surely will have to be replaced
on the network card issue, you could use an external one pcmcia or express card depending on the mobo available slots. Just a thought...
So it's looking like it's just the fan that NEEDS to be replaced at the moment. That can't be that hard...right?
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Originally posted by TeunisReplacing a (the) fan should be reasonably easy.
Even getting one for a 4? y/o laptop should be possible.
How sure are you it's actually broken and not just unplugged or stuck due to dirt or so?
I once had a Toshiba where the fan got noisy, by putting a drop of WD40 near the bearings it would be quiet again for several months.
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Jul 2011
- 9524
- Seattle, WA, USA
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Pan-Galactic QuordlepleenSo Long, and Thanks for All the Fish
- Jul 2011
- 9524
- Seattle, WA, USA
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Originally posted by SteveRiley View PostTake it outside in the driveway and beat the shopt out of it with the biggest, baddest sledgehammer you can lift. It'll feel sooooooo good.
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