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posted by [personal profile] cathyr19355 at 12:44pm on 19/08/2007 under , ,
I mentioned in one of my recent posts how we came home from our Sword Camp vacation, only to find that [livejournal.com profile] esrblog's desktop machine had shut down and refused to reboot due to a dead graphics card fan.

So the following day, we went to our favorite cheap spare-parts computer store, Alpha Computer in Frazer, PA, and bought some more memory and a new graphics card. Unfortunately, [livejournal.com profile] esrblog's window manager kept crashing. A 9-hour memory test came up clean, so he figured the problem was with the new graphics card.

Thus, the day after that, we went back to Alpha Computer, and persuaded them to replace the new graphics card with a different variety of new graphics card without further charge. Unfortunately, the new new graphics card failed to solve the problems. In fact, the machine acquired a new problem--Firefox started crashing. Often.

On Friday night, [livejournal.com profile] esrblog tried to compile some C++ code for a Wesnoth project he's working on, and the compiler crashed. According to him, that's a symptom of bad memory--despite the prior favorable memory test. Seems that none of the problems were with the new graphics card/s after all.

So, on Saturday morning, a little before noon, we went back to Alpha Computer to get a replacement for the memory he'd bought. This time, he tested each one by attempting to do a C++ compile. To his surprise, all of the possibilities failed the test. Wondering if the relevant socket had gone bad, he returned all the memory sticks and got a refund.

By this time, [livejournal.com profile] esrblog was wondering whether it wouldn't save trouble just to get a new desktop machine. So after a quick lunch, we went to our favorite used computer seller, Second Source in West Chester, PA, to see whether he could get Jason, the Saturday manager, who is a fan of his, to quote him a price for taking the old desktop machine off his hands. He also wanted to price inexpensive used laptop machines, since he needs to go on a business trip on the 23rd and wanted to have a machine available to him.

Jason couldn't quote us a price right off, but he observed that if a new laptop is what [livejournal.com profile] esrblog wanted, Micro Center in Wayne, PA (our favorite shop for buying computer accessories) sells IBM X60s and X61s--the sort of machine [livejournal.com profile] esrblog is used to, and really wants.

So we got back in the car and headed to Micro Center, where a salesman confirmed that they have such laptops, on sale, for $1699 (plus tax, of course).

At this point, [livejournal.com profile] esrblog noted that, since the machine comes with Vista (which he will not use), he should go home and get a Ubuntu boot disk to confirm that one of these machines will, in fact, run Ubuntu. So we drove home (a half-hour's drive) and came back with the disk. It did boot (once a change in options was made at the bios level) so he bought one. After that we ate dinner, had some great ice cream at Handel's (Chocoholic Chunk!), and ran a few errands (not necessarily in that order) before heading home.

By the time we got home it was 8 P.M., and I was no longer in the mood to do anything useful, so I spent the rest of the night playing a buggy campaign in Battle for Wesnoth. I had previously reported the bugs, which managed to give me a level 3 Necromancer, a level 3 Mage of Light, a few Bone Knights, and a Bone Shooter--all in a campaign (Liberty) where I was not even eligible to recruit units I could level up into those units. Yes, it made the campaign insanely easy, but it was fun all the same.

[livejournal.com profile] esrblog also had me get out my digital camera so that he could document NOT using Vista and installing Ubuntu over it (a procedure which supposedly may make it possible to get a refund of the license price out of Microsoft, and at least will make for a great anti-Microsoft photo essay for his website). So we did that. The most interesting thing about the process is that the screen that shows you the license is set up to make it impossible to move onward without checking "yes, I accept the license!" It has no other option, you see, and the "next" button is grayed out--presumably until you check the box. He didn't, of course.
Mood:: 'tired and frustrated' tired and frustrated
There are 15 comments on this entry. (Reply.)
 
posted by [identity profile] ddelony.livejournal.com at 06:40pm on 19/08/2007
I would think that installing Ubuntu would be a free upgrade over Vista. :-p It is frustrating, however, when computer hardware doesn't work when you want it to. Unfortunately, laptops are even more difficult to fix than desktops, as I found out the hard way (http://www.crosspond.com/apple/home).

 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 12:23am on 20/08/2007
Yes, troubleshooting is the worst part. It was only on the third visit to Alpha that the real second problem with the desktop box was diagnosed.
 
posted by [identity profile] zsero.livejournal.com at 10:05pm on 19/08/2007
I just got an X60, and am finding the lack of a touchpad hard to adjust to. Keeping my index finger on the red-button-thingy and a thumb on the left-click button is uncomfortable, and I'm constantly hitting the space bar instead of the left-click.
 
posted by [identity profile] ddelony.livejournal.com at 10:41pm on 19/08/2007
It seems that the hacker laptops of choice are either Mac laptops or Thinkpads.
 
posted by [identity profile] jmaynard.livejournal.com at 12:11am on 20/08/2007
Yup. My last two have been Macs, and the next one likely will be as well.
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 01:30am on 20/08/2007
And the only reason [livejournal.com profile] esrblog isn't interested in Mac is that he wants all of his machines to run the same system.
 
posted by [identity profile] ddelony.livejournal.com at 02:01am on 20/08/2007
I suppose that Mac OS X being closed-source where it really counts (namely the GUI) would probably hurt its chances with him as well.
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 01:12am on 21/08/2007
So far as I know, you're right.
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 01:31am on 20/08/2007
I prefer scratch-pad mice myself, but [livejournal.com profile] esrblog hates them; he'll only use a "nipple" mouse such as the X60s supply. Good luck in getting used to yours.
 
posted by [identity profile] jmaynard.livejournal.com at 03:00am on 20/08/2007
I prefer the eraserhead mouse (PC term; use it in good health) myself, but I'm stuck with using trackpads. Bleh. At least I can tell OS X to turn OFF that stupid thump-to-click function; without that turned off, and on systems where I can't turn it off, I'm constantly clicking when I don't want to, and that usually results in focus going elsewhere.
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 02:43am on 21/08/2007
It hardly qualifies as an "eraserhead" in my book--but then I associate that character with the much bigger eraser you could fit over the head of a pencil whose built-in eraser was used up.

BTW, I also like click-to-focus, but that's me. :-)
 
posted by [identity profile] flaviarassen.livejournal.com at 06:08am on 21/08/2007
How did he continue doing anything if he didn't hit the accept button?
Or were you saying that he gave up doing anything??
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 03:06am on 22/08/2007
No.

The answer is that he restarted the machine. At an appropriate point, he put a CD with Ubuntu Linux on it in the drive. That made the machine ask whether he wanted a partition created (i.e., to load Ubuntu into a separate area of the drive from Windows, permitting one to choose to boot into one operating system or the other). He clicked, "no", and told the machine to just copy Ubuntu over the entirety of the drive, effectively erasing Windows.
 
posted by [identity profile] flaviarassen.livejournal.com at 04:37am on 22/08/2007
Yanno, I bet if I explained to The Hubby (tm) how
I pattern draft, it would sounds just as sensical :-)

No - I got it in general, but it's more a case of
"Ok, I'll take your word for it, he's the expert."
 
posted by [identity profile] cathyr19355.livejournal.com at 03:10am on 23/08/2007
Fair enough. Because he wanted me to take photographs of the different screens, I watched most of the process, and it did work, take my word for it. :-)

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