My wife has asked me not to turn the house into a tech junkyard.

  • Addv4@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    “What do you mean, ‘Why do I need that stack of old ThinkPads?’. They were free!”

      • Samsy@lemmy.ml
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        13 days ago

        We are trash pandas at your next companys trash bin. They follow like minions M$ directly into Win11 hell.

      • Addv4@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        Make friends with your local IT guys. Thinkpads are less common these days, because they’re “Chinese”, so it is more common to find dells (which usually are worse in my experience).

        • Cenzorrll@lemmy.world
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          13 days ago

          Unrelated, but I just took apart my old IBM thinkpad from 2003/2004 to clean it up and get all nice and pretty for it’s last few years of updates. I also did my newer-ish HP laptop from 2016 at the same time.

          The thinkpad was just beautifully laid out, with thought put into the placement of vents, heat sinks, heat generating components, alternative air pathways if the entire bottom was blocked, easy maintenance of components, etc.

          The HP was …not. The weakest ass heat sink I’ve ever seen, miles away from the processor (no wonder it sounded like a wind tunnel when playing a youtube video). One intake vent where your thigh would be if in your lap and the exhaust right where your knee would be. Extra bonus was the placement of the CPU (running usually 80c+) is right above your junk, the vent being offset from the processor a smidge.

          Granted I’m comparing enterprise vs consumer laptop in the days when there was a massive difference in quality between the two, but damn, this experience has me decided (again) that internal layout and design is just as important as specs, even more so if you need more powerful components.

    • neidu3@sh.itjust.works
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      13 days ago

      I have a literal suitcase full if 4TB SAS drives. Because they were free and pretty much unused.

      Fun fact: A pelicase of 37 3.5" drives is the max weight you’re allowed in a single checked piece with common airlines. I had to give three drives to the check in clerk.

    • Diplomjodler@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      And just think how quickly you can get them all up and running with NixOS! All those endless hours of learning finally put to good use!

        • GrapheneOSRuinedMyPixel@sh.itjust.works
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          13 days ago

          Who needs documentation? The code is self-documenting! The entire thing’s on GitHub, just check the issues to figure out what’s going on! Didn’t work? Sorry, the thing got broke a few months ago. Just go through the commit history and I’m sure you’ll be up and running in no time!

          I’ve also made a module that fixes your specific issue and uploaded it to my self hosted gitlab instance. The server is down right now? Well, isn’t that better? Now you can make the thing yourself! Remember to upload your thing to your GitHub, name it something like “nixos” and never mention it anywhere.

          • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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            13 days ago

            Just put my custom flake into your inputs! No, I won’t give ydu an example on how to integrate it into your config. The Flakes schema is an incredibly easy concept to grasp, after all. /s

            • GrapheneOSRuinedMyPixel@sh.itjust.works
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              12 days ago

              Well, if you can’t figure out how to integrate the flake in 30 seconds by month 6, you clearly have a skill issue. Or a “sleeping at night instead of writing nix” issue. Better use a noob-friendly distro like arch.

              Seriously though, despite all the flaws, there is no other packaging system where I can as painlessly use random forks of packages. I absolutely love how I’m able to run gnome-mobile on my x64 tablet. True to the NixOS way, I found the overlay on someone’s GitHub, there were only the files, no further instructions.

              I also have a USB with live debian at all times, because you never know when you stumble upon a thing that just can’t work with NixOS

              • Prunebutt@slrpnk.net
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                12 days ago

                I really dig it as well, but hoo boy: the documentation still is… incredibly rough.

                I’ve spent several evenings now trying to set up the development environment for a python package with additional binary file requirements (model weights) that I want to be included in the package.

                It kinda works now with pyproject-nix, but I can’t manage to get an editable devshell running. And now it needs to unpack the requs everytime. 🙄

          • iopq@lemmy.world
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            12 days ago

            What do you mean the entire thing broke a few months ago? It broke only weeks ago, NixOS has the freshest breakages in the linux ecosystem

            • GrapheneOSRuinedMyPixel@sh.itjust.works
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              12 days ago

              Who cares if it breaks? You can always just boot a previous generation! Need to rebuild without the breakage? You surely must now how to add a package from an earlier commit via flakes by now, right?

              • iopq@lemmy.world
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                12 days ago

                I’m just waiting for the moment I can update my packages (when all the unstable builds get updated)

    • DivineDev@piefed.social
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      13 days ago

      I mean if they’re free you can always sell them for cheap and feel good about making some money while reducing e-waste

      • Addv4@lemmy.world
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        13 days ago

        Usually it’s more a give away after installing mint on them, but it’s better than genuinely just tossing them for stuff newer than 7-8th gen intel.

  • Rooty@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    Madness? Buying a new computer every 2 years because the OS vendor is in cahoots with hardware manufacturers is madness. This is rational usage of resources for your benefit.

    • utopiah@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      OS vendor is in cahoots with hardware manufacturers

      That’s pretty much the strategy since Microsoft has been established. It’s not very creative, it’s not even legal, so it’s impressive (in a bad way) that they manage to keep on making it work.

      • ulterno@programming.dev
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        12 days ago

        it’s not even legal

        Isn’t there one that has both, the OS vendor and the hardware seller as a same entity?

    • ReginaPhalange@lemmy.world
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      13 days ago

      I have 3 old cellphones that for the life of me, no matter how hard I tried - couldn’t install an alt android OS on it

      One device was compatible - but I couldn’t unlock the boot loader

      One device was never tested against any alt OSes

      One device was carrier locked.

      I also have one old Galaxy Tab that I spent weeks trying to flash another ROM to it - and it fails every time.

      I’m 0/4 on trying to reanimate old android hardware - it’s just too difficult and too much hoops to go through.

      At least I’m fairly capable with installing Linux on old laptops - and given that a new wave of Win11 compatible laptops is coming - I’ll get to do it more frequently soon.

      I haven’t tried to do LUKS yet, and I’m dying to get my hands on a Yubikey and learn what I can make it do.

      • rumba@lemmy.zip
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        13 days ago

        Mobile device flashing is a fucking alien world. Samsung products are not good for it, especially in the US.

        The alt OS’s are mainly built against ancient hardware, and the SKUs that work are so limited that they’re not particularly cheap on the used market.

        The best thing you can do is go fairphone or pixel and specifically get one of the models that is directly claimed as supported.

        If you can’t get it to work, find the OS forums and hop in, someone will bend over backward to help you out if you’re nice about it.

    • notarobot@lemmy.zip
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      13 days ago

      Yeah. I have like 5 collecting dust. Should give them away (not us) but I’m pretending that I’ll set up a fake cloud service to try terraform (open stack maybe?)

  • mlg@lemmy.world
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    13 days ago

    Getting visibly annoyed whe you find out you can’t easily run mainline linux on some proprietary piece of hardware like a phone or smart TV.

    But hey at least my robot vacuum runs on Ubuntu by default lol.

    • lengau@midwest.social
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      12 days ago

      Yeah this is basically what I do. People like giving me their stuff because I’m transparent about the deal:

      1. If at all possible, I will wipe it for you.
      2. If it’s usable, I will either add it to my TrashCloud™ or (especially for laptops) set it up for a kid.
      3. Parts/devices that I cannot get working I will take to electronics recycling.
      4. No iPhones/iPads.
      • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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        11 days ago

        Big thumbs up from me on the no iPhone/iPad policy.

        That crap is ewaste as soon as Apple inc, decides it’s not worth supporting anymore with no option to load a different OS on it. Arguably, it’s ewaste before that, but I digress.

        It just sucks that the hardware is made specifically to be incapable of running anything but the OS it was built for, which is entirely controlled by a profit-driven company by way of closed source software.

        Say all the bad things you want about them (I certainly do), but it’s hard to say that their hardware isn’t good. It’s just sabotaged at the factory by their firmware and OS, condemning it to a mediocre and finite existence.

        • lengau@midwest.social
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          11 days ago

          I love Lemmy.

          I was wondering whether I was going to have to explain that rule to a crowd of angry zealots, furious that I could possibly oppose the Great and Mighty Apple like that.

          I’m not opposed to having macs in my collection (though as it so happens right now I don’t have any), because it’s not about hating Apple and entirely about whether I can do something useful with the hardware.

          A majority of the ARM hardware I have is old Android phones booting a pretty standard Linux distro with custom kernels. Most of them have drivers missing for various pieces of hardware, but as long as they can boot, connect to my homelab network over USB and run containers, they make excellent build/test devices.

  • Steamymoomilk@sh.itjust.works
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    13 days ago

    5457I

    I feel personally attacked IT WAS $5

    OK

    Freebsd is very different from linux, ive spent a few hours trying to get gpu drivers working for this crusty CPU.

    Old hardware has a special place in my heart, aswell as my shelf >:)

  • Ordinary_Person@lemmy.ca
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    13 days ago

    Unless you have an Asus m32cd_a_f_k20cd_k31cd motherboard. I’ve tried EVERY bloody configuration in the bios possible and several different distros, and they all crash / freeze during installation. Fuck you Asus 🤬

    • jdnewmil@lemmy.ca
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      13 days ago

      Just because you have OS install media and hardware does not mean the hardware functions. In fact, old hardware often fails MEMTST.

      • Ordinary_Person@lemmy.ca
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        13 days ago

        I’m sure that is often the case. But with this series, Its this specific model. A friend of mine has the Asus M32 from the previous year and he was able to get mint installed without any issues. Just bad luck with the model I bought. It’s always given me headaches so not being able to switch to linux tracks

    • rapchee@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      my workplace is selling a few optiplex 3040-s with i3-6100, 4gigs of ram of unqualified variety, 120gb ssd, 512 gb hdd, for about 55$, is that a good deal? (this is in hungary btw)

      • MystikIncarnate@lemmy.ca
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        12 days ago

        I’ve seen worse deals. The platform itself is probably worth that much (meaning the mainboard, chassis, and all the accompanying stuff like heatsinks and power supplies)… 6th gen CPUs are probably dirt cheap, assuming those systems use a socketed CPU, and you wanted to upgrade to something more than an i3. I can’t imagine RAM would be much more.

        You can probably turn these into very decent little machines for under $100 each and a bit of effort.

        It really depends on whether you need the extra capability for a bit of effort or you’re fine with the i3 with 4G RAM.

        I usually want to replace the storage on a used system with something new or refurbished because of wear and tear, but that’s me. Still, that’s not a bad deal. Free would be a great deal, but I’m not sure you could ask for better.

  • DivineDev@piefed.social
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    13 days ago

    So far I have resisted but I still regret not buying the 160GB ram HP workstation for 20 bucks a couple weeks ago :(

    Also, it’s a good idea to have 2 or 3 SBCs sitting in a drawer unused, for the sole purpose of looking at them when the urge to buy something hits again.

  • Frezik@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    13 days ago

    That’s exactly what I did in the late 90s/early 2000s. Never regretted it.

    Try getting Linux to run on a 486 w/4MB RAM and a 40MB hard drive. You tend to learn a lot while getting the most out of that.

  • ZkhqrD5o@lemmy.world
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    12 days ago

    Hot take

    If the world was running on GNU/Linux for endpoints, tech-normies would still be using computers from 2010. And this would cut massively into laptop OEM’s bottom line. Therefore I think it’s a quiet conspiracy where laptop manufacturers or the computer OEMs shut up about Windows being bad because just imagine if everyone would be running GNU/Linux. You could use laptops from 2010 with “regular” distros and be completely fine. With light distros you could use things from the 1990’s for all tech normie tasks, web-browsing, text editing, e-mail, etc.

    TLDR: Microshit Windows bad.

    • squaresinger@lemmy.world
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      12 days ago

      Before the arbitrary Windows 11 hardware restrictions, this was exactly what was happening on the Windows side as well. There are still tons of 10-15yo Windows devices around, happily running Win10.

      “Regular” people also only upgrade their PC once the old one breaks or if they really encounter something that doesn’t work on the old PC (mostly games if they do play somewhat modern games).

      In fact, Windows used to have really awesome long-term-support and forever long upgrade support. You can easily run Win10 on a quality high-performance PC from 2008. But with Win11, they just tossed all that in the drain.

    • DeltaWingDragon@sh.itjust.works
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      10 days ago

      Your theory is based on the assumption that only Windows/Microsoft software increases in bloat exponentially.

      This is not true: look at the internet. For example Gmail used to have a basic HTML version, but Google killed it, and the normal version takes longer and longer to load even on new hardware. New Reddit also is a mess of over-Javascript-frameworked capitalistry, complete with those annoying grey lines that appear where text should be when the page is loading.

      Even open-source software is not immune to this. KDE on an Intel Celeron/2GB RAM computer feels very slightly sluggish, like walking through an atmosphere that’s too thick.

      Wirth’s Law states that as more features are added to a piece of software, it will become slower.

    • rarsamx@lemmy.ca
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      12 days ago

      In that thought experiment there are more scenarios. Remembering that stepping on a butterfly can change… This is, small input changes can have big repercussions down the line.

      You cannot assume what Linux would be in that scenario.

      Who knows if it would have been colored by a main corporation.

      Capitalism would have found a way to leverage it and new computers would be sold.

    • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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      11 days ago

      While I do agree that the Windows upgrade circle is vicious and manufacturers benefit from it every time they sell a new machine. It’s not the whole problem Linux needs to over come.

      There is an incredibly large amount of sheer inertia that needs to be overcome. And that’s a lot harder to to break than the upgrade cycle because users don’t like change. It’s like a huge boulder rolling down a mountain. And while you can see little pieces of it chip off now and then. It’s due to the sheer size of that boulder that it ain’t stopping anytime soon.

      It’s going to a lot longer before the “Year of Linux” ever happens.