I finally converted my old i5-2410 to Lubuntu 20. I was tired of waiting over 5 minutes for my windows 10 laptop to boot up and at least the pc
will have another 5 years of life that I could use for email or web
browsing or even telneting to bbses. I thought this would be better for
the plannet than to buy another laptop right now.
just run windows 10 or windows 7.Cant. The system cant support the ssd drive i paid for, refused to boot
by the way, get a ssd and your load time will be very fast.
just run windows 10 or windows 7.
by the way, get a ssd and your load time will be very fast.
Cant. The system cant support the ssd drive i paid for, refused
to boot up.
Quoting Tracker1 to Utopian Galt <=-
On 11/8/21 14:06, Utopian Galt wrote:
just run windows 10 or windows 7.
by the way, get a ssd and your load time will be very fast.
Cant. The system cant support the ssd drive i paid for, refused
to boot up.
Wild... could probably try clonezilla to copy your old drive to the new drive. No idea on how/why it wouldn't boot though. (2.5" Sata SSD?)
--
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Jazzy J wrote to Tracker1 <=-
@MSGID: <61B4CEB3.233.dove-unix@jayscafe.net>
@REPLY: <618D6F1B.371.dove-unix@roughneckbbs.com>
Quoting Tracker1 to Utopian Galt <=-
On 11/8/21 14:06, Utopian Galt wrote:
just run windows 10 or windows 7.
by the way, get a ssd and your load time will be very fast.
Cant. The system cant support the ssd drive i paid for, refused
to boot up.
Wild... could probably try clonezilla to copy your old drive to the new drive. No idea on how/why it wouldn't boot though. (2.5" Sata SSD?)
--
Michael J. Ryan - tracker1@roughneckbbs.com
-!-
Synchronet Roughneck BBS - roughneckbbs.com
I've got a host of laptops running *buntu 20.04, and my servers. I
have a sole laptop that dual boots with Windows 10 (will be 11 when it
is allowed to upgrade.)
With server management and programming, IMHO, the *nix environment
rocks. Couple that with an installation of VS Code and you'll have
quite a system for a few more years.
Working with Windows, SafeBoot or whatever they are calling their boot protection scheme must be disabled.
SSDs are the way to go. YMMV, but you
can boot to a live Ubuntu 20.04 USB drive, attach the SSD to the system and do a dd if=<path to old drive> of=<path to new drive> and it will
copy the image of the old drive to the new. Just make sure the new
drive is larger than the original.
Once dd is finished, open gparted and expand the partition to fill the drive, using ntfsresize -- I believe that gparted will ask you if you
want to run it -- to resize the ntfs information to match the
partition.
Once you boot into Windows, run a chkdisk on it and you should be good
to go.
Good luck and happy computing!
Jazzy J
* AmyBW v2.16 *
... You can logout any time you like, but you can never leave!
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I finally converted my old i5-2410 to Lubuntu 20. I was tired of waiting over 5 minutes for my windows 10 laptop to boot up and at least the pc
will have another 5 years of life that I could use for email or web
browsing or even telneting to bbses. I thought this would be better for
the plannet than to buy another laptop right now.
I think you made a good choice on keeping stuff out of the landfill; however, for what it's worth, I've made a real push during
the
last 4-5 years to refresh my systems with very power efficient systems for my project, tinkering, and work. Older systems
generally
consume more electricity, so that's something to keep in mind to potentially offset environmental impact when you do decide to
upgrade.
Cant. The system cant support the ssd drive i paid for, refused
to boot up.
Wild... could probably try clonezilla to copy your old drive to the
new drive. No idea on how/why it wouldn't boot though. (2.5" Sata
SSD?)
My Laptop is a Thinkpad T43, and I'm running Debian Bullseye. Works
Ok, except the HDD doesn't start properly when cool. Can't find an
IDE SSD for that machine.
Linux is a great way to get extra lifespan out of an old machine.
Earlier in 2021 I converted all of my computers from Windows to Linux (Pop!_OS for PCs and Debian for SBCs) and I haven't looked back. I do
have a spare SSD in my primary driver that boots Windows 11 as a
fallback, but really the only time boot it is monthly to apply updates
to Windows.
I think you made a good choice on keeping stuff out of the landfill; however, for what it's worth, I've made a real push during the last
4-5 years to refresh my systems with very power efficient systems for
my project, tinkering, and work. Older systems generally consume more electricity, so that's something to keep in mind to potentially offset environmental impact when you do decide to upgrade.
Tracker1 wrote to Boraxman <=-
@MSGID: <61C9C0AE.376.dove-unix@roughneckbbs.com>
@REPLY: <61C5AF3B.2876.dove-nix@bbs.mozysswamp.org>
On 12/24/21 04:18, Boraxman wrote:
Cant. The system cant support the ssd drive i paid for, refused
to boot up.
Wild... could probably try clonezilla to copy your old drive to the
new drive. No idea on how/why it wouldn't boot though. (2.5" Sata
SSD?)
My Laptop is a Thinkpad T43, and I'm running Debian Bullseye. Works
Ok, except the HDD doesn't start properly when cool. Can't find an
IDE SSD for that machine.
Linux is a great way to get extra lifespan out of an old machine.
Gotcha, didn't realize it was quite that old... *might* be able to try
a newer drive via USB boot assuming the bios on that old device
supports it. May also be able to find a PCMCIA adapter if there's one
on the laptop. No idea on drivers for that though.
Looks like it's USB 2.0 ... so 30-60 MBps transfer rate... just about
any USB 2-3 external drive should be able to make that, probably as
fast as your internal hdd, or a hair slower. Again, assuming it will
boot to USB at all.
A decent USB 3.x thumb drive could also work... 64gb drives are
relatively cheap at this point, but random io vs. sustained io is kind
of a crap shoot, but most should handle it... or USB<->sata hdd/ssd.
Don't know that there's much reason to go ssd over hdd given the
bandwidth limits, but wouldn't hurt and should have a longer lifetime.
Re: Linux on old laptop
By: WitNik to Utopian Galt on Sat Dec 25 2021 11:30 am
I think you made a good choice on keeping stuff out of the landfill; howe the
last 4-5 years to refresh my systems with very power efficient systems fo generally
consume more electricity, so that's something to keep in mind to potentia upgrade.
That's an excellent point, by the way.
Recently I checked to see how much power was being used by the "media PC" ty
Both utilized >40W constantly when on, with spikes higher than that dependin
Have replaced the media PC completely and the media-watching stuff from the
The guts of the media PC box are going to head off to recycling.
I finally converted my old i5-2410 to Lubuntu 20. I was tired of waiting over 5 minutes for my windows 10 laptop to boot up and at least the pc
will have another 5 years of life that I could use for email or web
browsing or even telneting to bbses. I thought this would be better for
the plannet than to buy another laptop right now.
Re: Linux on old laptopNot Linux, but I use OpenBSD under an old Atom N270 netbook
Is mpv better than vlc when it comes to video playback? vlc struggles to play videos on my twelve-year-old laptop.
But hi-resolution videos are going to struggle from the computational demands.
Is mpv better than vlc when it comes to video playback? vlc struggles to
play videos on my twelve-year-old laptop.
fusion wrote to Boraxman <=-
On 05 Aug 2022, Boraxman said the following...
primary question basically is if your laptop has hardware accelerated decoding .. for example h264 playing fine and h265 chopping and playing like hot garbage. since older laptops wouldn't support the newer codec.
fusion wrote to Boraxman <=-
On 05 Aug 2022, Boraxman said the following...
primary question basically is if your laptop has hardware accelerated decoding .. for example h264 playing fine and h265 chopping and playing like hot garbage. since older laptops wouldn't support the newer codec.
My 2020 Roku TV has a bit of a problem with h.265. Not a show-stopper, but h.264 plays much more smoothly.
Is mpv better than vlc when it comes to video playback? vlc struggles to pla
Re: Linux on old laptop
By: Kaelon to Utopian Galt on Sun May 01 2022 02:07 pm
Re: Linux on old laptopNot Linux, but I use OpenBSD under an old Atom N270 netbook
with:
- cwm
- tmux
- mpv+yt-dlp
- sfeed
- nsxiv cli tools
- mednafen/nethack/slashem/nfrotz
- catgirl
- bitlbee and
- lynx/links.
For cursed JS sites I use luakit.
Specs:
\- -/ os OpenBSD 7.1
\_/ \ host 0493200000001C00000300000
| O O | uptime 9h 47m
|_ < ) 3 ) pkgs 441
/ \ / memory 615M / 1015M
/-_____-\
Most resources are being used by Links -g rendering a huge page
but fast as hell.
With the previous OSes (XP or 7 starter), the netbook would be a doorstopper.
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