Rescued

Edit: Unfortunately, the images originally included in this post are gone, because of hosting problems in late 2009. My apologies.

I’m still on the prowl for a very old laptop to use as a guinea pig for Ubuntu tweaks, and I have a couple of leads on machines that sound fully functional, though they may turn out to be pricey. That would be a shame, but I suppose I should see that as an opportunity to invest in an antique, instead of resurrecting a fallen hero.

Speaking of fallen heroes, I was offered (and accepted) another Thinkpad into the family yesterday. This one was, quite literally, out on the junk heap in a shed for a year, before someone spotted it and gave it to me. This is a Model 2655, which I believe makes it an A21e — 750Mhz Celeron mobile processor, 128Mb of PC100, Intel PRO/100 onboard NIC, ATI Rage Mobility M, CDRW, Japanese keyboard and so forth. Hard drive is a 20Gb IBM-DJSA-220, which I think is similar to the one that just died on me. Best of all, the battery actually holds a charge.

I removed a thick layer of dust and goo and peeled off the Windows ME stickers, and it’s a rousing machine now. With only one defect — the screen was shattered at some point, so I get a very depressing spiderweb effect everywhere.

I’ll have to look into prices on replacement screens, mostly because I think this one might be worth keeping. I like that it has an onboard network card, and a Rage Mobility is almost a real graphics card. (I used to have a Dell CPx that had a Rage in it, and it could do some very simple video acceleration without too much sweat.)

It’s a little faster than what I want for speed testing — after all, the Thinkpad I already own is 200Mhz slower than this one — but we’ll see what happens. I did a minimal Ubuntu installation already (Arch kernel panicked on it, but I think I have a mischievous CD) and it seemed sufficiently functional … and sufficiently slow. And any processor geek will tell you a Celeron behaves slower than a Pentium of the same clock speed, which is probably true.

If I can get a proper screen on it and get a working distribution in place, maybe it will stay on hand. Or maybe it will go to charity. Who knows. 😀

14 thoughts on “Rescued

  1. Pingback: Crux and XFCE at 750Mhz « Motho ke motho ka botho

  2. Pingback: Because I’m such a nice person « Motho ke motho ka botho

  3. Pingback: The XFCE shortlist yields promising fruit « Motho ke motho ka botho

  4. Pingback: Two fresh systems « Motho ke motho ka botho

  5. Pingback: A Thinkpad, a kernel panic, a workaround « Motho ke motho ka botho

  6. Pingback: Adjusting rc.sysinit, adjusting udevadm « Motho ke motho ka botho

  7. Pingback: New screen ordered « Motho ke motho ka botho

  8. Pingback: Case in point: An rtorrent slave setup « Motho ke motho ka botho

  9. Pingback: Role reversal « Motho ke motho ka botho

  10. Pingback: The prodigal son returns « Motho ke motho ka botho

  11. Pingback: One out, one in « Motho ke motho ka botho

  12. Pingback: Howto: Switch to a console lifestyle « Motho ke motho ka botho

  13. Pingback: Howto: Find an old computer « Motho ke motho ka botho

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Google photo

You are commenting using your Google account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s