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Thanks guys - for the laptop help!
I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all
that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html |
Thanks guys - for the laptop help!
On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote:
I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. |
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5:52 PMMr. Luddite
- show quoted text - Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. --- Win 10s not bad Richard, no more than what t I do with one I can't see any diffrence from Win7 |
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On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:52:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote: I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. Get used to paying Microsoft a recurring charge too. That is their goal. They want subscription software, not pay and run forever. I have still not found anything I want to do that XP won't do for me. Maybe I should just follow you guys around and pick up the machines you throw away. ;-) Bear in mind I was in the computer biz for 30 years, dealing with thousands of customers over the years. The ones who were most successful always ran a generation or two behind the bleeding edge. Their hardware was field tested, all of the ECs were installed and the "lemons" were history. (imagine the poor suckers who bought a "noodle snatcher") The same was true of the software. Older versions had all of the bugs shaken out. |
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Mr. Luddite
- show quoted text - "Looks like a nice one. Â*Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. Â*:-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. Â*This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Â*Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it." One good thing about the two trips my HP NoteBook made to the repair center....it came back with Windows 8 after the 2nd trip and that's what I've been using on it since last July. |
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On Wednesday, March 29, 2017 at 7:54:42 PM UTC-4, True North wrote:
Mr. Luddite - show quoted text - "Looks like a nice one. Â*Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. Â*:-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. Â*This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Â*Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it." One good thing about the two trips my HP NoteBook made to the repair center...it came back with Windows 8 after the 2nd trip and that's what I've been using on it since last July. Win8 sucks. Everyone thinks so. Too bad you didn't take the free Win10 upgrade while it lasted. |
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On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:52:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote: I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. That's OK. If I have all kinds of problems, I'll just blame you folks! |
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On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:52:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote: I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. I've not had any problems with W10, but it does have some things I'm not wild about, like the 'apps' window. I've still not figured that thing out. |
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On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 16:54:41 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote:
Mr. Luddite - show quoted text - "Looks like a nice one. *Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. *:-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. *This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. *Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it." One good thing about the two trips my HP NoteBook made to the repair center...it came back with Windows 8 after the 2nd trip and that's what I've been using on it since last July. When I bought my desktop, Win 8 was just out a few months. The dealer told me he'd load Win 7 and that I should wait until the next version *after* Win 8 came out. You must be one of the lucky ones! |
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On 3/30/17 7:19 AM, justan wrote:
"Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: On 3/29/2017 7:45 PM, wrote: On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:52:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote: I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. Get used to paying Microsoft a recurring charge too. That is their goal. They want subscription software, not pay and run forever. I have still not found anything I want to do that XP won't do for me. Maybe I should just follow you guys around and pick up the machines you throw away. ;-) Bear in mind I was in the computer biz for 30 years, dealing with thousands of customers over the years. The ones who were most successful always ran a generation or two behind the bleeding edge. Their hardware was field tested, all of the ECs were installed and the "lemons" were history. (imagine the poor suckers who bought a "noodle snatcher") The same was true of the software. Older versions had all of the bugs shaken out. Doesn't mean squat when the older computer with an older OS ****s the bed due to a mother board blowing up or the hard drive crashing. I am not into computer repair or building like you are. When it dies I buy a new one. Same here. I used to fix mainframes but since the PC took over and became a throwaway item i have little interest in monkeying with hardware. It's hard enough keeping all of the devices talking to each other. Well, of course, it isn't *that* difficult, depending on which devices and what you want them to do when they "communicate." |
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On 3/30/17 8:39 AM, justan wrote:
Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 3/30/17 7:19 AM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: On 3/29/2017 7:45 PM, wrote: On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:52:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote: I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. Get used to paying Microsoft a recurring charge too. That is their goal. They want subscription software, not pay and run forever. I have still not found anything I want to do that XP won't do for me. Maybe I should just follow you guys around and pick up the machines you throw away. ;-) Bear in mind I was in the computer biz for 30 years, dealing with thousands of customers over the years. The ones who were most successful always ran a generation or two behind the bleeding edge. Their hardware was field tested, all of the ECs were installed and the "lemons" were history. (imagine the poor suckers who bought a "noodle snatcher") The same was true of the software. Older versions had all of the bugs shaken out. Doesn't mean squat when the older computer with an older OS ****s the bed due to a mother board blowing up or the hard drive crashing. I am not into computer repair or building like you are. When it dies I buy a new one. Same here. I used to fix mainframes but since the PC took over and became a throwaway item i have little interest in monkeying with hardware. It's hard enough keeping all of the devices talking to each other. Well, of course, it isn't *that* difficult, depending on which devices and what you want them to do when they "communicate." Without going into details, powerline hits can cause unpredictable things to happen. Recovery can be easy or it can be difficult. Without going into details, I assign a fixed address to every device I can, and also to my server, which is attached to a large UPS. When we get a surge or lose power, even if everything momentarily shuts down, when I restart or if the UPS takes over, the devices seem to hold their addresses. The phones attach on their own via wi-fi, and don't need a fixed address...they find the server by name. |
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 05:45:29 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: On 3/29/2017 7:45 PM, wrote: On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:52:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote: I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. Get used to paying Microsoft a recurring charge too. That is their goal. They want subscription software, not pay and run forever. I have still not found anything I want to do that XP won't do for me. Maybe I should just follow you guys around and pick up the machines you throw away. ;-) Bear in mind I was in the computer biz for 30 years, dealing with thousands of customers over the years. The ones who were most successful always ran a generation or two behind the bleeding edge. Their hardware was field tested, all of the ECs were installed and the "lemons" were history. (imagine the poor suckers who bought a "noodle snatcher") The same was true of the software. Older versions had all of the bugs shaken out. Doesn't mean squat when the older computer with an older OS ****s the bed due to a mother board blowing up or the hard drive crashing. I am not into computer repair or building like you are. When it dies I buy a new one. If you are running a imager like Acronis, losing a hard drive is no big deal (viruses etc) You just stuff in the new drive and reload the last good image you have. It is just a few clicks after you boot the recovery CD. If I simply replace a bad machine with one that is similar, that image will basically work too, although I may need to tweak a few drivers. Running XP, Microsoft has stopped screwing with you about changing hardware. In fact you can run multiple machines on the same license. If your plan is to just buy a new machine every time you have a glitch, with a new OS to learn and rebuilding your PC from scratch you are screwing with PCs more than me. |
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 11:12:32 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote:
Wrote in message: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 07:19:17 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Same here. I used to fix mainframes but since the PC took over and became a throwaway item i have little interest in monkeying with hardware. It's hard enough keeping all of the devices talking to each other. Yet you don't mind learning a new OS every time Bill Gates wants a new car. The hardware is the easy part Sure I mind but some of the new hardware and software doesn't play well with Win 3.1 === Even in the corporate mainframe world users eventually become forced into hardware and software upgrades. It's too expensive for the vendors to make and support software that is backwards compatible with older hardware, and the hardware vendors have no market incentive to do more than is absolutely necessary. Eventually the increased reliability and environmental efficiency of the newer CPUs becomes compelling and that triggers both hardware and software upgrades. The same is true with PCs if you want to take advantage of better graphics, network speeds, larger hard drives, energy efficiency, etc. |
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On 3/30/2017 11:58 AM, justan wrote:
Wrote in message: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 08:39:39 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Without going into details, powerline hits can cause unpredictable things to happen. Recovery can be easy or it can be difficult. Power hits can be fairly easily mitigated if you have decent surge protection and UPS. Working with 1000 customers who refused to turn off their computers and unplug them every afternoon when we had a thunderstorm got us pretty good with surge protection. Most of that knowledge world wide came from Florida. The only recent hardware failures I could attribute to powerline are a gfi outlet and a device that had some operational issues even after a factory reset and reconfiguration. The only surge protection we have is built into the mains panel. Most of my devices are inexpensive and easily replaceable. I can't justify the cost of individual surge protectors. Having only a laptop, an iPad, and a networked printer I can't justify having a UPS either. The laptop and iPad battery last plenty long enough and the printer has never lost it's connection to the network. |
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|
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|
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 12:25:06 -0400, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: Having only a laptop, an iPad, and a networked printer I can't justify having a UPS either. The laptop and iPad battery last plenty long enough and the printer has never lost it's connection to the network. I haven't bought a UPS in years but I have a bunch. Most people just chuck them when the battery dies. If you buy batteries from the manufacturer, they cost almost as much as a new one but they are commodity items on the net that sell for a fraction of what APC wants. We have most of the stuff in the living room on UPS (TV, sat box, this PC etc). I have had power failures and not even noticed until I noticed the kitchen light went out ;-) Most are just blips that last a few seconds until the recloser can operate. That will still put you in the penalty box for 5-10 minutes until everything reboots and gets going again. Your DVR loses what it was doing etc. |
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wrote:
On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 11:58:44 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Wrote in message: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 08:39:39 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Without going into details, powerline hits can cause unpredictable things to happen. Recovery can be easy or it can be difficult. Power hits can be fairly easily mitigated if you have decent surge protection and UPS. Working with 1000 customers who refused to turn off their computers and unplug them every afternoon when we had a thunderstorm got us pretty good with surge protection. Most of that knowledge world wide came from Florida. The only recent hardware failuresI could attribute to powerline are a gfi outlet and a device that had some operational issues even after a factory reset and reconfiguration. The only surge protection we have is built into the mains panel. Most of my devices are inexpensive and easily replaceable. I can't justify the cost of individual surge protectors. Surge protection goes farther than simply plugging in a few protectors. For most of the country, that may work for you but we get an ass kicking thunderstorm just about every day for half the year. Our biggest problems in the 80's was Colorado. Lots of lighting, and the disk controller we had had a **** power supply. Pass transistors that passed ever line glitch through. |
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 14:24:59 -0400,
wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 13:48:17 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 11:12:32 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Yet you don't mind learning a new OS every time Bill Gates wants a new car. The hardware is the easy part Sure I mind but some of the new hardware and software doesn't play well with Win 3.1 The main limitation with W3.1 is in graphics and full motion video. DOS (the engine under W3 and lower) does a good job with music, pictures and excels with text based applications. There are DOS tools that handle text far better than any windows program in a much tighter package. I still use "CE3", a subset of the IBM E editor, when I want to select data and manipulate it from HTML tables or anything else I can paste from a windows file. === I'd argue that the main limitation with Win 3.1 was the lack of working memory, and I/O bandwidth. I used to get frequent memory crashes back in the day if I tried to have more than a couple of windows open at the same time that I was browsing the web with Netscape. Windows 98 and Win NT fixed some of that but it really wasn't until Win 7 that things really stabilized. I push my machines fairly hard with a number of different apps running more or less continuously. I was never able to do that reliably prior to Win 7. I never really used W3.1 that much. I was a DOS guy and there were software work arounds that got past Bill Gates thinking 640K was enough for anyone. DOS dBase IV was smart enough to use all the memory you could throw at it. I found the diminishing returns came at around 2 meg. I had 6.5m on my AT machine and I kept 4m in a Ram Drive. If I was in a hurry, I loaded the whole directory, program, data etc to the ram drive and executed it there. dBase really screams if it is all in RAM, even on an old 8 mz 286. http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Woodiy%20AT.jpg |
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On 3/30/2017 2:19 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 12:18:35 -0400, wrote: Even in the corporate mainframe world users eventually become forced into hardware and software upgrades. It's too expensive for the vendors to make and support software that is backwards compatible with older hardware, and the hardware vendors have no market incentive to do more than is absolutely necessary. Eventually the increased reliability and environmental efficiency of the newer CPUs becomes compelling and that triggers both hardware and software upgrades. The same is true with PCs if you want to take advantage of better graphics, network speeds, larger hard drives, energy efficiency, etc. I understand that but if I was running a data center, I would still stay one or two levels back. Let the pioneers catch the arrows. XP does not seem to have a problem handling any network speed or hard drive I throw at it and it is hard to find a PC that uses less power than an old laptop. It is certainly not going to be that I7 sports car John is looking at. If energy is an issue, you want the smallest, slowest machine that will get the job done hence my W/98 server and my WYSE "thin client" machines. I still have a small XP based laptop that I used on the boat and RV from time to time. Bought it back in 2002 or 2003. Still works but spends it's retirement sitting on a closet shelf. I took it out and fired it up shortly before we moved last year. I liked XP when it was the current OS for Windows ... it was very stable .... but I noticed right away (after using Win7 for quite a while) that for the general use I use a computer for it doesn't come close to Win7 in terms of overall performance. It's just slower at everything. |
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 18:32:45 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote: wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 11:58:44 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Wrote in message: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 08:39:39 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Without going into details, powerline hits can cause unpredictable things to happen. Recovery can be easy or it can be difficult. Power hits can be fairly easily mitigated if you have decent surge protection and UPS. Working with 1000 customers who refused to turn off their computers and unplug them every afternoon when we had a thunderstorm got us pretty good with surge protection. Most of that knowledge world wide came from Florida. The only recent hardware failuresI could attribute to powerline are a gfi outlet and a device that had some operational issues even after a factory reset and reconfiguration. The only surge protection we have is built into the mains panel. Most of my devices are inexpensive and easily replaceable. I can't justify the cost of individual surge protectors. Surge protection goes farther than simply plugging in a few protectors. For most of the country, that may work for you but we get an ass kicking thunderstorm just about every day for half the year. Our biggest problems in the 80's was Colorado. Lots of lighting, and the disk controller we had had a **** power supply. Pass transistors that passed ever line glitch through. We never really had a problem in the computer room. It was always cash registers, ATMs and remote terminals that got fried. Pretty much anything with a wire coming in from outside or long unprotected wires in the building. Motels, mall stores with multiple locations in the mall and terminals running between buildings were the worst. |
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2:28 PMMr. Luddite
- show quoted text - I still have a small XP based laptop that I used on the boat and RV from time to time. Bought it back in 2002 or 2003. Still works but spends it's retirement sitting on a closet shelf. I took it out and fired it up shortly before we moved last year. I liked XP when it was the current OS for Windows ... it was very stable .... but I noticed right away (after using Win7 for quite a while) that for the general use I use a computer for it doesn't come close to Win7 in terms of overall performance. It's just slower at everything. ..... My wife has a retired Lappy that here company bought for her some X bomber years ago. It had Netscape for a browser and AOL 3.0. That's when AOL paid good money to have computer mfj's load their stuff on every machine trying to bait potential customers. At the time it was state of the art. Of course that was then(over 20 years ago) and this is now... |
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wrote:
On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 18:32:45 -0000 (UTC), Bill wrote: wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 11:58:44 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Wrote in message: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 08:39:39 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Without going into details, powerline hits can cause unpredictable things to happen. Recovery can be easy or it can be difficult. Power hits can be fairly easily mitigated if you have decent surge protection and UPS. Working with 1000 customers who refused to turn off their computers and unplug them every afternoon when we had a thunderstorm got us pretty good with surge protection. Most of that knowledge world wide came from Florida. The only recent hardware failuresI could attribute to powerline are a gfi outlet and a device that had some operational issues even after a factory reset and reconfiguration. The only surge protection we have is built into the mains panel. Most of my devices are inexpensive and easily replaceable. I can't justify the cost of individual surge protectors. Surge protection goes farther than simply plugging in a few protectors. For most of the country, that may work for you but we get an ass kicking thunderstorm just about every day for half the year. Our biggest problems in the 80's was Colorado. Lots of lighting, and the disk controller we had had a **** power supply. Pass transistors that passed ever line glitch through. We never really had a problem in the computer room. It was always cash registers, ATMs and remote terminals that got fried. Pretty much anything with a wire coming in from outside or long unprotected wires in the building. Motels, mall stores with multiple locations in the mall and terminals running between buildings were the worst. We lost Macy's California Point of Sale terminals to IBM because your sales guy was smarter. Our sales guy tole Macy's that the data lines had to go via conduit because of the fluorescent lights. IBM guy said their did not need conduit. He knew the fire department required conduit. Smarter. |
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 14:52:34 -0400, wrote:
On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 14:24:59 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 13:48:17 -0400, wrote: On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 11:12:32 -0400 (EDT), justan wrote: Yet you don't mind learning a new OS every time Bill Gates wants a new car. The hardware is the easy part Sure I mind but some of the new hardware and software doesn't play well with Win 3.1 The main limitation with W3.1 is in graphics and full motion video. DOS (the engine under W3 and lower) does a good job with music, pictures and excels with text based applications. There are DOS tools that handle text far better than any windows program in a much tighter package. I still use "CE3", a subset of the IBM E editor, when I want to select data and manipulate it from HTML tables or anything else I can paste from a windows file. === I'd argue that the main limitation with Win 3.1 was the lack of working memory, and I/O bandwidth. I used to get frequent memory crashes back in the day if I tried to have more than a couple of windows open at the same time that I was browsing the web with Netscape. Windows 98 and Win NT fixed some of that but it really wasn't until Win 7 that things really stabilized. I push my machines fairly hard with a number of different apps running more or less continuously. I was never able to do that reliably prior to Win 7. I never really used W3.1 that much. I was a DOS guy and there were software work arounds that got past Bill Gates thinking 640K was enough for anyone. DOS dBase IV was smart enough to use all the memory you could throw at it. I found the diminishing returns came at around 2 meg. I had 6.5m on my AT machine and I kept 4m in a Ram Drive. If I was in a hurry, I loaded the whole directory, program, data etc to the ram drive and executed it there. dBase really screams if it is all in RAM, even on an old 8 mz 286. http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Woodiy%20AT.jpg I would have been happy if they'd stuck with Win 3.1 for Workgroups forever. I loved it. |
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 19:56:37 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote: We lost Macy's California Point of Sale terminals to IBM because your sales guy was smarter. Our sales guy tole Macy's that the data lines had to go via conduit because of the fluorescent lights. IBM guy said their did not need conduit. He knew the fire department required conduit. Smarter. That must be a California thing. If you use plenum rated cable, properly supported, I know of no fire reg that requires conduit for low voltage ... and we never had a problem with fluorescent lights, in spite of the urban legend that would not die. All of our signal cables were balanced pairs, pretty much immune to the switcher in an electronic ballast. Sixty hz was never a problem (magnet ballast). I had 100' of UTP Cat 5 coiled above my desk right on a fluorescent and I could patch it into any LAN, 3270, S-loop or whatever at the panel to prove it to the non believers. You could also watch the data going by on a scope if you wanted. There were lots of urban legends that got dispelled in the late 80s when IBM got serious about selling data cabling, LAN management and communication contracts. Some of us went to school on it. They had a very cool lab in Dallas where we could learn about just about anything that goes down a wire. That part was mostly how to do the phone company's job (breaking the finger pointing tie). That was followed up by BICSI training for the guys like me who were actually trained for writing wiring contracts. |
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 16:23:12 -0400, Poco Deplorevole
wrote: I would have been happy if they'd stuck with Win 3.1 for Workgroups forever. I loved it. W/95 was the release that brought LAN management to the masses. That replaced W3.11 WFWG. I admit it was easier to set up a network. That also morphed to NT which has it's share of fans. W/98 was really the bug fix as much as anything and SE made it very solid if you had all of the patches. Most of the crashes were actually caused by things you loaded on top of SE. Memory management has always been shaky with MS and they let too many people have the keys to the kingdom. They kept stepping on each other's patch. XP was supposed to fix that and it actually works a whole lot better. The best I can figure 7 was supposed to address security holes in WiFi (I know networking got more cumbersome). W/8 added tablet support and 10 is aimed at taking MS to a subscription model according to the chatter I hear. |
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Poco Deplorevole wrote:
On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 18:52:36 -0400, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 3/29/2017 6:29 PM, Poco Deplorevole wrote: I'll let you know what I finally get, but I'm leaning towards that HP now. Thousand bucks for all that seems like a decent deal. https://www.costco.com/HP-ENVY-17t-L...100317268.html Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it. I've not had any problems with W10, but it does have some things I'm not wild about, like the 'apps' window. I've still not figured that thing out. Ignore it. I don't use it either. |
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Poco Deplorevole wrote:
On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 16:54:41 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - show quoted text - "Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it." One good thing about the two trips my HP NoteBook made to the repair center...it came back with Windows 8 after the 2nd trip and that's what I've been using on it since last July. When I bought my desktop, Win 8 was just out a few months. The dealer told me he'd load Win 7 and that I should wait until the next version *after* Win 8 came out. You must be one of the lucky ones! What does this have to do with guns? |
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|
Thanks guys - for the laptop help!
On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 20:22:31 -0400, Alex wrote:
Poco Deplorevole wrote: On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 16:54:41 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - show quoted text - "Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it." One good thing about the two trips my HP NoteBook made to the repair center...it came back with Windows 8 after the 2nd trip and that's what I've been using on it since last July. When I bought my desktop, Win 8 was just out a few months. The dealer told me he'd load Win 7 and that I should wait until the next version *after* Win 8 came out. You must be one of the lucky ones! What does this have to do with guns? Hey, we both use our 'puters to buy guns! By the way, Carmen is loving that SR1911 more and more each time we shoot it. |
Thanks guys - for the laptop help!
Poco Deplorevole wrote:
On Thu, 30 Mar 2017 20:22:31 -0400, Alex wrote: Poco Deplorevole wrote: On Wed, 29 Mar 2017 16:54:41 -0700 (PDT), True North wrote: Mr. Luddite - show quoted text - "Looks like a nice one. Now that a few of us have suggested HP, you'll probably have all kinds of problems with it. :-) I am also starting to shop for a new laptop. This one is getting a bit long in the tooth although it still works fine. Not too excited about Win 10 though, but I suppose I'll get used to it." One good thing about the two trips my HP NoteBook made to the repair center...it came back with Windows 8 after the 2nd trip and that's what I've been using on it since last July. When I bought my desktop, Win 8 was just out a few months. The dealer told me he'd load Win 7 and that I should wait until the next version *after* Win 8 came out. You must be one of the lucky ones! What does this have to do with guns? Hey, we both use our 'puters to buy guns! By the way, Carmen is loving that SR1911 more and more each time we shoot it. That's true. He can thank Harry for his contribution! |
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