Laptop Project

Keith W

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Since buying my new laptop last year the old one has just been sitting gathering dust in the cupboard.

The old one is in pretty good nick cosmetically & the only problem it has is the battery no longer holds a charge.

The laptop is a Compaq Presario C300 series.

Anyway I have decided to drag it out and try and give it a new lease of life and make some kind of use of it.

First on the list will be to get a replacement battery.

Next will be to get some new RAM, it has 1GB in it at the moment and can take up to 2GB so will be ordering a 2GB kit for replacement.

It also only has an 80GB hard drive in it at the moment so will be getting a replacement for that at some point as well.

At the moment the operating system is XP and I may replace that with a flavour of Linux.

I shall enjoy doing this little project and who knows I may even post some pictures of my progress :lol:
 
Well a new battery is on order and should hopefully be here by the end of the week, need to pop that in and see if all works well and holds a charge before proceeding.

The hard drive currently installed is an 80GB 5400rpm one, I am looking to replace it with a drive around 250GB, the thing is though do I replace it with a 5400rpm or a 7200rpm one?
 
always 7200rpm if possible or preferably SSD from ebay (it will only use SATA I so why pay for III?). 5400 is slow as dog and I know that after dealing with them for the last 8 years.

Linux is a good plan - nice and capable OS, sadly without a few remaining apps like LR. I used to like Ubuntu but they seem to have started making the desktops into some Mac/win8 parody. Maybe good old Debian is the best now? or Fedora?
 
I have tried Ubuntu, Suse, and several others in the past, just for nerdy interest. I found Ubuntu the easiest to get used to as a Windows user, a basic linux book is handy too, like a DOS for Dummies if you dont know and linux cmds. It will probably run better than XP :-)
 
I have tried Ubuntu, Suse, and several others in the past, just for nerdy interest. I found Ubuntu the easiest to get used to as a Windows user, a basic linux book is handy too, like a DOS for Dummies if you dont know and linux cmds. It will probably run better than XP :-)
Ubuntu changes too much for my liking. You're always pretty much on the wavefront. I have 3 12.04LTS machines here (running xbmc and MythTV) and whilst they do their job nicely, I'd look for a different distribution if I were gong to use one on a daily basis for use as my daily computer.

I'd probably try Mint, Fedora or, going slightly more leftfield, run FreeBSD as PC-BSD. My home server runs it and I'm happier with that than any other of the *nix variants I have here (I also have a Fedora virtual machine for development for work).

The great thing about a "project" laptop is as long as you haven't started to rely on it being stable, you can just re-install a different OS to see what it is like....
 
I was thinking I may go Minty with the OS

This is definitely just a "project" laptop, have plenty of other computer options in the house for the more serious stuff
 
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