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#101
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On Nov 30, 6:32 pm, "Eisboch" wrote:
"Reginald P. Smithers III" wrote in messagenews:irednY29jq78Dc3anZ2dnUVZ_uTinZ2d@comca st.com... I don't think I could buy Imus's salsa. You should at least try it. It's very good ... probably one of the best. And the last I knew, Imus products ... the salsa and household cleaners have the profits donated to charity. BTW .... Imus returns to radio next week. Eisboch Tomorrow morning he is back. And yes, his stuff is for charity too, he does a lot of work for kids. |
#102
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() wrote in message ... On Nov 30, 5:09 pm, "D.Duck" wrote: wrote in message ... On Nov 29, 5:09 pm, "D.Duck" wrote: wrote in message ... On Nov 29, 3:34 pm, wrote: On Nov 29, 8:59 am, wrote: On Nov 29, 8:55 am, HK wrote: wrote: On Nov 29, 8:44 am, HK wrote: Well, I am taking the plunge. I am updating my old IBM T23 laptop from Win2k to WINXP Pro. It's a great little laptop, though technology long passed it by, and at the moment it only has 384KB of memory. If the update "takes," I'll update the RAM to 512KB. This is the machine I let household guests use. Gosh, if it works out, I'll be as up to date OS-wise as the great computer gurus here. Yeah, that's a problem. Someone changes a harddrive, or installs windows and they think they are a CNE.. We go in and clean up their messes, all the time ![]() Hopefully, it won't be a problem. I repartioned the single hard drive and am reformatting it to get rid of all traces of the old OS. There's an active mailing list for the IBM (now Lenovo) portables, and the gurus there said I should be able to do the OS upgrade with minimal hassle. The only worry I have is being able to find all the device drivers, but I was assured that won't be a serious issue. We shall see. I also have a master driver CD around somewhere... Though I like the IBM portables, this is my last, since the new owner of "Thinkpads" is now a mainland Chinese company.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I always end up back with Toshiba, and I use mine in the shop! Going to XP you should have few driver problems. The only poblem we are having is some of the drivers want to see "C" as the boot drive, and we have Vista there...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Same here, I really like Toshiba laptops. I'm on my second one, the first is still running just fine for my daughter.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I have been loyal to them ever since I desk tested a few in the woodshop about a decade ago.. They are unstopable... They are not unstoppable. Just let dust get into the cooling system and they do stop. Taking them apart to clean them up is real joy. Been there, done that. How do you keep the dust of the air ducts?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Take them apart ![]() there... The last one had an epoxy plug that I fabricated to fit in the power button hole, when the button disintegrated. I did have one about 4 years ago that had a lot of recalls so I tried HP last time around.. I was back at the electronics store begging after about two months and three seperate shipping charges to send it out for service, Best Buy (our favorite) finally agreed with me and just traded me for a new toshiba... I will never stray again, although that Panasonic work site model looks pretty cool... What precautions do you take to keep dust, grit, etc out of the cooling system?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Compressed air, and a screwdriver... I just take them apart when they get dirty. This one has not been in the woodshop yet.. In other words you do nothing until it starts shutting down due to overheating? If you use compressed air applied to the unassembled case, assuming your assembly is like mine, I think all you'd do is blow crap into the cooling assembly. Look at the photo associated with Step 23. That's a pretty good view of the cooling system on my Toshiba. On my unit, A75 it's a major disassembly project to get at the cooling stuff. http://www.irisvista.com/tech/laptop...5/satA75_3.htm The first time I took mine apart, not a job I relish, it was really plugged. Took more than compressed air to get it clean. Lots of picking and prodding to loosen accumulated crud. After the first disassembly/reassembly I ended up with a "very" sensitive Z key, to the extent that if you just nudged the laptop the Z would activate and keep repeating. I was very careful but still ended up with that problem. Nothing that 50 bux and a new keyboard didn't fix. |
#103
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posted to rec.boats
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On Nov 30, 6:53 pm, "D.Duck" wrote:
wrote in message ... On Nov 30, 5:09 pm, "D.Duck" wrote: wrote in message ... On Nov 29, 5:09 pm, "D.Duck" wrote: wrote in message ... On Nov 29, 3:34 pm, wrote: On Nov 29, 8:59 am, wrote: On Nov 29, 8:55 am, HK wrote: wrote: On Nov 29, 8:44 am, HK wrote: Well, I am taking the plunge. I am updating my old IBM T23 laptop from Win2k to WINXP Pro. It's a great little laptop, though technology long passed it by, and at the moment it only has 384KB of memory. If the update "takes," I'll update the RAM to 512KB. This is the machine I let household guests use. Gosh, if it works out, I'll be as up to date OS-wise as the great computer gurus here. Yeah, that's a problem. Someone changes a harddrive, or installs windows and they think they are a CNE.. We go in and clean up their messes, all the time ![]() Hopefully, it won't be a problem. I repartioned the single hard drive and am reformatting it to get rid of all traces of the old OS. There's an active mailing list for the IBM (now Lenovo) portables, and the gurus there said I should be able to do the OS upgrade with minimal hassle. The only worry I have is being able to find all the device drivers, but I was assured that won't be a serious issue. We shall see. I also have a master driver CD around somewhere... Though I like the IBM portables, this is my last, since the new owner of "Thinkpads" is now a mainland Chinese company.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I always end up back with Toshiba, and I use mine in the shop! Going to XP you should have few driver problems. The only poblem we are having is some of the drivers want to see "C" as the boot drive, and we have Vista there...- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Same here, I really like Toshiba laptops. I'm on my second one, the first is still running just fine for my daughter.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I have been loyal to them ever since I desk tested a few in the woodshop about a decade ago.. They are unstopable... They are not unstoppable. Just let dust get into the cooling system and they do stop. Taking them apart to clean them up is real joy. Been there, done that. How do you keep the dust of the air ducts?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Take them apart ![]() there... The last one had an epoxy plug that I fabricated to fit in the power button hole, when the button disintegrated. I did have one about 4 years ago that had a lot of recalls so I tried HP last time around.. I was back at the electronics store begging after about two months and three seperate shipping charges to send it out for service, Best Buy (our favorite) finally agreed with me and just traded me for a new toshiba... I will never stray again, although that Panasonic work site model looks pretty cool... What precautions do you take to keep dust, grit, etc out of the cooling system?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Compressed air, and a screwdriver... I just take them apart when they get dirty. This one has not been in the woodshop yet.. In other words you do nothing until it starts shutting down due to overheating? If you use compressed air applied to the unassembled case, assuming your assembly is like mine, I think all you'd do is blow crap into the cooling assembly. Look at the photo associated with Step 23. That's a pretty good view of the cooling system on my Toshiba. On my unit, A75 it's a major disassembly project to get at the cooling stuff. http://www.irisvista.com/tech/laptop...5/satA75_3.htm The first time I took mine apart, not a job I relish, it was really plugged. Took more than compressed air to get it clean. Lots of picking and prodding to loosen accumulated crud. After the first disassembly/reassembly I ended up with a "very" sensitive Z key, to the extent that if you just nudged the laptop the Z would activate and keep repeating. I was very careful but still ended up with that problem. Nothing that 50 bux and a new keyboard didn't fix.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - We really count on our systems here to earn a living. We take them apart often, before they shut down. My SO's desktop is actually harder than mine to clean as she is also a smoker. We also back up and format, reload software on a regular basis, just as a precaution. Most of our computers are dedicated to specific types of software/function so only the play boxes get bogged down really, like this one. (Satellite A-135) |
#104
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() wrote in message ... We really count on our systems here to earn a living. We take them apart often, before they shut down. My SO's desktop is actually harder than mine to clean as she is also a smoker. We also back up and format, reload software on a regular basis, just as a precaution. Most of our computers are dedicated to specific types of software/function so only the play boxes get bogged down really, like this one. (Satellite A-135) You guys motivated me to take this laptop apart and clean it. It's a three year old HP Pavilion zd8000 that has performed flawlessly since I got it. Anyway, I shut it down, carefully turned it upside down and removed all the accessible screws. No way would it come apart. After several attempts, the "leave well enough alone" buzzer went off in my head. I removed a couple of covers (the ram bay and the harddrive bay), hooked up a little computer vacuum gizmo that came with a hand-held Oreck vacuum cleaner and carefully vacuumed whatever dust I could get to with the little brush. Put the screws back in and decided to forget about it. Eisboch |
#105
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Eisboch" wrote in message ... wrote in message ... We really count on our systems here to earn a living. We take them apart often, before they shut down. My SO's desktop is actually harder than mine to clean as she is also a smoker. We also back up and format, reload software on a regular basis, just as a precaution. Most of our computers are dedicated to specific types of software/function so only the play boxes get bogged down really, like this one. (Satellite A-135) You guys motivated me to take this laptop apart and clean it. It's a three year old HP Pavilion zd8000 that has performed flawlessly since I got it. Anyway, I shut it down, carefully turned it upside down and removed all the accessible screws. No way would it come apart. After several attempts, the "leave well enough alone" buzzer went off in my head. I removed a couple of covers (the ram bay and the harddrive bay), hooked up a little computer vacuum gizmo that came with a hand-held Oreck vacuum cleaner and carefully vacuumed whatever dust I could get to with the little brush. Put the screws back in and decided to forget about it. Eisboch Chicken. :) |
#106
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posted to rec.boats
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On Nov 30, 7:45 pm, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message ... We really count on our systems here to earn a living. We take them apart often, before they shut down. My SO's desktop is actually harder than mine to clean as she is also a smoker. We also back up and format, reload software on a regular basis, just as a precaution. Most of our computers are dedicated to specific types of software/function so only the play boxes get bogged down really, like this one. (Satellite A-135) You guys motivated me to take this laptop apart and clean it. It's a three year old HP Pavilion zd8000 that has performed flawlessly since I got it. Anyway, I shut it down, carefully turned it upside down and removed all the accessible screws. No way would it come apart. After several attempts, the "leave well enough alone" buzzer went off in my head. I removed a couple of covers (the ram bay and the harddrive bay), hooked up a little computer vacuum gizmo that came with a hand-held Oreck vacuum cleaner and carefully vacuumed whatever dust I could get to with the little brush. Put the screws back in and decided to forget about it. Eisboch Personally, I say you probably made a good call. It is so easy to break little tabs and such, especially if you don't know what you are looking at. The biggest problem is deciding which screws really hold that part you are digging at, although like I said, they are getting easier as "convention" is established. |
#107
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "D.Duck" wrote in message ... "Eisboch" wrote in message ... Put the screws back in and decided to forget about it. Eisboch Chicken. :) yup. I'll let it die of natural causes. Eisboch |
#108
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 19:45:51 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote:
wrote in message ... We really count on our systems here to earn a living. We take them apart often, before they shut down. My SO's desktop is actually harder than mine to clean as she is also a smoker. We also back up and format, reload software on a regular basis, just as a precaution. Most of our computers are dedicated to specific types of software/function so only the play boxes get bogged down really, like this one. (Satellite A-135) You guys motivated me to take this laptop apart and clean it. It's a three year old HP Pavilion zd8000 that has performed flawlessly since I got it. Anyway, I shut it down, carefully turned it upside down and removed all the accessible screws. No way would it come apart. After several attempts, the "leave well enough alone" buzzer went off in my head. I removed a couple of covers (the ram bay and the harddrive bay), hooked up a little computer vacuum gizmo that came with a hand-held Oreck vacuum cleaner and carefully vacuumed whatever dust I could get to with the little brush. Put the screws back in and decided to forget about it. Eisboch http://h10032.www1.hp.com/ctg/Manual/c00291986.pdf Let's see if you can resist it. --Vic |
#109
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posted to rec.boats
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#110
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posted to rec.boats
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![]() "Vic Smith" wrote in message news ![]() On Fri, 30 Nov 2007 19:45:51 -0500, "Eisboch" wrote: Put the screws back in and decided to forget about it. Eisboch http://h10032.www1.hp.com/ctg/Manual/c00291986.pdf Let's see if you can resist it. --Vic Thanks a bunch. I'll give it a shot someday when I have extra patience. It's hard to believe that 30 something years ago I could take a Mod 28 Teletype machine completely apart, down to each individual part and then put it back together and it would work. Of course back then I could actually *see* what I was doing. Eisboch |
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