Sherri is a Cat
Well-Known Member
...he actually -paid- for Windows. That's a sad thought.
Well, well, well!!!
What IS this world COMING TO?
...he actually -paid- for Windows. That's a sad thought.
I've never actually built a computer from the ground up with new components. I have, on occasion, started with various piles of parts and some decrepit old computers and cobbled together some decent (for the time, and for the price) machines. A particular favorite received the host name "Gazeem", after the thief in Alladin, about whom Jafar said, "Gazeem was obviously unworthy."My last 10 computers or so, are all home built.
I have back in the Windows Vista days and back then it was expensive.I've never actually built a computer from the ground up with new components.
This is what I do nowadays is build the best desktop I can out of whatever I can find cheap from local thrifts and garage sales.I have, on occasion, started with various piles of parts and some decrepit old computers and cobbled together some decent (for the time, and for the price) machines. A particular favorite received the host name "Gazeem", after the thief in Alladin, about whom Jafar said, "Gazeem was obviously unworthy."
In all honesty I experience the same joy if not more by cobbling together working desktops with spare parts from other desktops others have tossed.My last ten or so computers have all been "refurbs", which is to say, "I cleaned the outside and, sometimes the inside, and installed linux on them. Some day maybe I'll have "extra money" and will build a spiffy new system... and, no doubt, experience the same "future shock" that @gvisoc described.
Those are always the best kind and I'll always acceppt an offering as such.But our last four were used ones, offered to me for the taking.
That's what would be the important deciding factor imo.I would have never bought a mini PC myself. But this Asus VivoPC VM60 i5 meets all our needs. My wife uses one, but with an i3. And the price was right!
That a bummer I remember them well as I recapped several of them when capacitor kits were cheap.The 2 computers before that were Dell tower units; one for me and one for my wife. But, they contained those electrolytic capacitors that were famous for failing after a few years. Damaged the main hard drives and the external USB drive that I kept Timeshift backups on. Yeah.![]()
I save all kinds of my data although I really never seem to need or ever use it but I'll continue to save it.I never got around to salvaging any data off of them l. Guess I don't need it.
I'll probably never build another new PC either.I'll likely never build another PC, either.
I get plenty of computer hardware for free as friends and family members upgrade to newer Windows boxes (or get screwed over by viruses or failed updates) and I keep an eye on the thrift shops. But, honestly, the thrift shops around here almost never have computer stuff in them - unless you're looking for a "wireless g" router or a low quality USB keyboard. I think there are folks on staff at those shops who cherry pick the good stuff before it ever hits the shelves.This is what I do nowadays is build the best desktop I can out of whatever I can find cheap from local thrifts and garage sales.
I'll spend unduly much time mucking with that before wiping it and installing Linux.
Yeah it can be hit and miss at thrift stores.I keep an eye on the thrift shops. But, honestly, the thrift shops around here almost never have computer stuff in them
I don't doubt that at all it happens and as long as it get sold most thrift stores don't care who buys it.I think there are folks on staff at those shops who cherry pick the good stuff before it ever hits the shelves.
On stuff like that I'll just do a complete restore to a last working point which usually / sometimes works.Whatever it is, it will undoubtedly have a borked Windows install and I'll spend unduly much time mucking with that before wiping it and installing Linux.![]()
If it's a laptop and I can restore a working Windows on it I'll remove all personal information and sell it.I wouldn't muck about with Windows,
That's pretty much the case for me with "other people's" old PCs but with family members, I usually ask if there's anything they want to have retrieved.That reminds me of a recent conversation. I may post about it in my profile, or maybe in off-topic.
But the response I'd give to that is, "I value my time more than that." By that I mean that I'd just intall Linux. I wouldn't muck about with Windows, especially if there's a potential for the device to have somene's personal information on it. That's also a bit of a CVA situation. "No, I didn't look at your personal information and am not the source of your frustration. I installed Linux without ever looking to see what was on the drive."
remove all personal information and sell it.
I usually ask if there's anything they want to have retrieved.
i would be inclined to randomly overwrite the entire disc before installing another OSIf it's a laptop and I can restore a working Windows on it I'll remove all personal information and sell it.
In early 2002, thinking of improving my computer hardware knowledge, I took a course in computer hardware, completing the course as shown here:... when you're 45, you don't work with your hands, and you've never done it before.
Background: my 2017 desktop PC died in November. This was my very sane line of thinking: "Hey, I am going to build one with fresh-of-the-oven AMD hardware, with very little and very tiny nanometers and all the Zens and the chidens and the numbers and whatnot, to have future-proof compatibility on Linux, because AMD publishes their own perfectly fine Linux opensource driver, because I am a full grown-up, and and and because engineer and and I've been using Linux for twent... yak yak yik yak yak yik yik yik".
What can go wrong.