DCBassman
Guru
- Location
- The lumpy far South West
Yup, troubleshooting compatibility from the do-it-deliberately side can be a bit teeth-grinding...Just time consuming...
Yup, troubleshooting compatibility from the do-it-deliberately side can be a bit teeth-grinding...Just time consuming...
And still didn't fix it. More drastic measures needed, so some research showed what bits of software needed disabling. That definitely worked.Yup, troubleshooting compatibility from the do-it-deliberately side can be a bit teeth-grinding...
I usually grab an OEM licence key from eBay for £3/4 ish.Eldest just put together a PC for youngest son. The SSD had windows 7 on it . Just upgraded to 10 and it’s not activating , boooo . Might have to buy another copy . Not sure on the history of the original install.
Think that’s what I did the last time but….. think EBay have tightened up on some stuff /coughI usually grab an OEM licence key from eBay for £3/4 ish.
Choose something lightweight OS wise. Been a long time since I delved into the dark side.Hmm... I might try putting Linux on a diddy laptop donated to me by a mate. One of those old Asus EEEPCs.
It is running Win 7 and is SLOW. I'd be interested to see if it is usable for anything with Linux on it.
Mind you, I already have Linux on my old Dell and I don't use that...
Any ideas for dedicated use of underpowered devices? It seems a shame to recycle working tech but what is it good for!
Re-installing this from scratch in order to put /home on a second drive, in this case a fast 128GB SD card. main drive was a little cramped at only 32GB, so we'll see how this works. Will have to put the Timeshift system restore cache on there too.Asus TP200SA now running Linux Mint 20.2 Xfce, entirely ok, but no tyre-burner.
Any ideas for dedicated use of underpowered devices? It seems a shame to recycle working tech but what is it good for!