Old PCs

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GreatEmerald
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Old PCs

Unread postby GreatEmerald » 14 Jan 2011, 17:39

I'm curious about how you all handle old PCs that get obsolete after you get a new one. I bet there are some interesting stories to be shared here.

In my family, we have 6 PCs, I don't remember if we ever had to throw one away. Probably we didn't. So anyway, the oldest PC is from the '98 era, I remember the days we had Win98SE there. It had received quite a bit of upgrades and now runs Windows XP and even has 384MB RAM. It's also incredibly fast for a PC that old for some reason, that is, it's very responsive, although it does take time to process things. We use it as the machine for floppy reading and writing and maintenance for embroidery machines (which are also quite old).

The second oldest PC is an old laptop, HP Compaq NX9030. It's like burnt out or something now. Quite unresponsive compared to the PC there, although it was capable of running Unreal Tournament 2004 on medium settings back in the day. I really don't have any idea about what happened, even reinstalling OSs doesn't work. But my brother still uses it, and he claims that he's fine with it. (Blatant lies, but he's too thrifty to admit it :disagree: )

The others are still in very active use. The next PC we had is now used in my mother's work place, the one after that is in my brother's house and the next two are here at my home.


Another interesting thing with old computers came up today in my school. They used a bunch of really old, slow PCs in computer classes earlier, but then got a sponsor which provided both classrooms with new shiny PCs (dualcore and such, really top-notch pizzaboxes for our uses). The old PCs are now being integrated into the network and being set up in classrooms other than IT. (There is also a store-room filled with electronics from the old PCs somewhere. The view is spectacular to say the least.) And there are I believe 6 PCs that are now in the reading-room, full with an internet connection for everyone to use.

However, only 5 of those are in use. The last one caught my eye, though. First of all, it had a mouse mat, but no mouse to begin with. Then, it had no way to turn on the monitor from what I could see. However, the PC's lights were on and it seemed to be working. I managed to find the monitor's on button (it was situated on the side of it for some odd and ancient reason). It revealed Windows XP and the fact that the PC was incredibly slow. And I mean really. Like you wouldn't believe. When idle and you try to do anything, it will probably take around a minute for it to do it. Not just running programs, but also things like menu display. It even renders the default WinXP wallpaper a few lines at a time. I really don't have much of an idea about why it's like that (possibly a virus at work, it really can't be that slow normally), but that allowed me to have some fun with it.

First of all, I killed off explorer (remember, no mouse!), then called up the command prompt. Then went into fullscreen mode. From there I explored a bit, then launched firefox (took a long time), then downloaded the Lynx browser (zip archive). Unzipping it was quite difficult, however: .zip extension was assigned to WinZip, a trial version that was long expired. The menu also showed that 7-zip was installed...but in Russian. That means I have no idea what to press to extract it. Luckily, under Open With there was a choice of Compressed Folders. I managed to install Lynx, then closed Firefox, went back to the command prompt and launched it. And there, a fully working PC again! Doesn't lag a bit! No fancy graphics, but it at least worked and allowed you to browse the internet without lagging. And do anything else for that matter, as long as you know how to handle the command line.

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Unread postby Pol » 14 Jan 2011, 19:12

I sold them or stock them. So, they may share the fate with old TV, giving theirs life new purpose - doing box under flowers.

Anyway it was much easier to sold them few years ago, than now. Because some of them are simply useless nowaday.

I do own P3 with RDRAMs (which will travel to Brno soon) and one P4 Northwood 1,7GHz. Which still can cope with the internet somehow.. - just there's no use for it.
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Unread postby Kalah » 14 Jan 2011, 19:42

Well, in Norway in general, old PCs are being thrown away. We're really great at discarding old things even though they still technically work. Me - I have only two "old" discarded PCs.

The second one was a Dell Inspiron laptop that I bought about 10 years ago. It got old really quickly, and I tired of it soon enough. It was taken to the local waste facility for processing.

My first ever PC, however, is still alive. It's a Hewlett-Packard something-or-other, with 256MB RAM, and I bought it back in 1996. I luvved it to death and played great games on it - Master of Orion II, Championship Manager, and other classics. It is currently in retirement: my dad put it in his old workplace to do some really simple tasks; something about displaying low-res. images of circuit conductor schematics - all I know is that it didn't require a good PC, just a working one.
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Unread postby ThunderTitan » 15 Jan 2011, 23:20

Well my last old PC is being used by my brother, and it's HDD failed so he's using the HDD of an even older PC which we had stashed somewhere...

Usually i try to give them away if they still work but i'm not using them... but mostly they're broken by the time we're no longer using them...
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Unread postby Variol » 16 Jan 2011, 03:50

I connected my old PC (over 8 years) to my TV last week. I'm playing Wizardry 8 on it right now. It runs amazingly well!

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Unread postby Ethric » 16 Jan 2011, 09:38

Speaking as someone without a longterm memory of any kind... ehmm, I think my old pc's are tossed in the bin. Well, taken to the dump, anyway. I have my "old" stationary one at my dad's, though. I say "old" because it isn't, really. 3.5 years, decent specs. But it doesn't work. My brother tried fixing it up, we got a new HD for it, and he fixed the overheating of the cpu by some cleaning and applying of new paste between it and the fan. All is well then? Nope, still bluescreens like there's no tomorrow, for no appearant reason. And there's an annoying thing: if it was an old and decrepit PC, I'd have no qualms throwing it away. But it should be good for many more years, we just don't know what's wrong with it. Might be the powering, or the motherboard, who knows (not the ram though, tested it). So chances are it'll just get thrown away.

Now I have a snazzy laptop I'm quite pleased with, keeping an old laptop in case of emergency.
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Unread postby Kalah » 16 Jan 2011, 13:02

The really annoying thing is probably that if you hadn't opened it up and tried fixing it yourselves, you could have demanded to have it fixed since it's less than 5 years old, couldn't you ...
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Unread postby Ethric » 16 Jan 2011, 15:04

Well, no, of course not. You think I've had a PC for more than 3 years without mucking about in it? :tongue:
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Unread postby Kalah » 16 Jan 2011, 16:55

No, I guess that would be too much to ask of anyone. :angel:
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Unread postby Pol » 16 Jan 2011, 19:45

Ethric wrote:Speaking as someone without a longterm memory of any kind... ehmm, I think my old pc's are tossed in the bin. Well, taken to the dump, anyway. I have my "old" stationary one at my dad's, though. I say "old" because it isn't, really. 3.5 years, decent specs. But it doesn't work. My brother tried fixing it up, we got a new HD for it, and he fixed the overheating of the cpu by some cleaning and applying of new paste between it and the fan. All is well then? Nope, still bluescreens like there's no tomorrow, for no appearant reason. And there's an annoying thing: if it was an old and decrepit PC, I'd have no qualms throwing it away. But it should be good for many more years, we just don't know what's wrong with it. Might be the powering, or the motherboard, who knows (not the ram though, tested it). So chances are it'll just get thrown away.

Now I have a snazzy laptop I'm quite pleased with, keeping an old laptop in case of emergency.
Than again, it may be always diagnosed properly and saved. :P
You don't mention if you tried another psu, what processor you're using and so on. But I bet that there will be some pc shops in your neighborhood which can do diagnostic for you..

And btw, the bsods carry very useful information. They're a great helper for solving that.
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Unread postby Ethric » 17 Jan 2011, 15:26

Pol wrote:
Ethric wrote:with, keeping an old laptop in case of emergency.
Than again, it may be always diagnosed properly and saved. :P
You don't mention if you tried another psu, what processor you're using and so on. But I bet that there will be some pc shops in your neighborhood which can do diagnostic for you..
This is true, of course. But professionals want money for it; it'd probably cost as much as it is worth (being used and all) to get it fixed, particularily if you factor in that there'd probably have to be a change of parts.
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Unread postby Angelspit » 17 Jan 2011, 16:16

I gave my last PC to the lady who takes care of my son during the day. Her family use it mostly to access the Internet anyway. The one before that we managed to sell if I remember correctly. I usually try to keep my PCs for as long as possible, so by the time I'm done with them they're kind of outdated.
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