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General Computer Thread

this is crazy...

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Brain cells driving around a robot, this was 17 years ago

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Finally starting the switch to Linux, I gave Ubuntu a try on my Windows 7 desktop, using a bootable thumb drive. I purchased a Lenovo laptop from Amazon with Linux Ubuntu installed as the OS, to use in conjunction with my desktop machine during the transition period. Goodbye Microsoft, hello Linux.
 
Finally starting the switch to Linux, I gave Ubuntu a try on my Windows 7 desktop, using a bootable thumb drive. I purchased a Lenovo laptop from Amazon with Linux Ubuntu installed as the OS, to use in conjunction with my desktop machine during the transition period. Goodbye Microsoft, hello Linux.
Will you also be installing Linux on this older device?
 
Will you also be installing Linux on this older device?
I may later, or might get a new machine. The Windows 7 machine I'm using has an Intel i7 at 3.4 GHz and 16GB of RAM. I might wait to see if the market will allow for more Linux computers to hit the market, increasing my choices, as others become disaffected with Microsoft, and get something with Linux only as an upgrade.
I also have programs on my Windows 7 machine that might not work with Linux.
 
Luckily Linux is a lot less bloated and slow than Windows is so a mid range refurb would already be enough to get things going, anything i5/i7 8th/9th/10th gen would be fine as would AMD's first, second and third gen Ryzen chips be.
Just make sure it has somesort of SSD, HDD's are usable under Linux but quite a bit slower.

As for new machines with Linux pre-installed
 
Luckily Linux is a lot less bloated and slow than Windows is so a mid range refurb would already be enough to get things going, anything i5/i7 8th/9th/10th gen would be fine as would AMD's first, second and third gen Ryzen chips be.
Just make sure it has somesort of SSD, HDD's are usable under Linux but quite a bit slower.

As for new machines with Linux pre-installed
Thanks, my current Windows desktop has 3 SATA Seagate Barracuda HDDs with 22TB of storage, with 14 total partitions. I'll probably get a separate desktop for Linux from System 76. Once again, thanks for the link.
 
So a Pentium II machine kicked the bucket, I suspect the capacitors on the mainboard are to blame, so out with the old stuff, I'll recap the board and probably the powersuply as well but that's for after I retire or something..

And there it is a 1990's InWin A500 casing, 1mm thick steel everywhere, little rust here and there and the plastic is a tad yellow but that has its charm I guess.
And there's a Sempron 145 machine without casing.. Geforce 315 OEM gfx card, 1 TB drive and the board has floppy and IDE available... so yep the A500 now holds a 2.8Ghz Sempron 145, it's running XP, somehow it kinda sorta fits. :D
Rather crazy that a more than 30 year old casing design can still be used for modern hardware.. :mallory:

 
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when will people learn you don't trust usb keys with anything important :)

an e-voting projecting in Switzerland hit a snag when due to issues with the USB key they won't able to decrypt about 2300 votes because 3 usb keys failed though they article doesn't mention that the nature of the failure beyond saying they had the correct code.

perhaps using a smart card or something like a yubikey would have been been a better option - probably the latter.

get one of the nfc models and it will enter the value for you nice and easy.

 
The only acceptable backup for something that important is an LTO tape..
Ah well, next time they'll do better.

I don't use any external drive as a backup drive, they're transit vehicles for data to be backed up on another computer.
 
The only acceptable backup for something that important is an LTO tape..
Ah well, next time they'll do better.

I don't use any external drive as a backup drive, they're transit vehicles for data to be backed up on another computer.

I don't think they were being used a backups per se but held the decryption key to unlock the ballot files which is why a device such as a Yubi key would be a viable option.
 
Then I hope that company will crash and burn faster than the AI bubble..

Atlassian has been on the slide for quite sometime iirc,

Price went up, product quality went down.

Also had a free community edition that was a good gateway in till they killed it off.
 
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