• @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    The magic of a ssd and a lightweight distro running xfce can even perk up an average system from 2010. Bonus points if you can upgrade the memory. You can probably still get to a login prompt in 20-30s, and cold boot to a link saved on the desktop playing music in under a minute.

    That’s about $30 USD in parts. You will probably struggle with more intense tasks. We just replaced desktops with similar specs that were just barely able to run optimized Minecraft a couple years ago.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    This is me with my 11 year old thinkpad t420, sometimes I’ll even ask it to play minecraft or holocure both of which it will mystically play just fine

    Steams interface unironically runs worse on it than those two games

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Steam has been gradually going down the route of becoming a “pretty” interface instead of a fast one, and it’s kind of sad. Excessive use of dynamic svgs for home page animations, dynamic gradients that slow everything down, and probably some backend changes too, and all baked in with the base UI so it’s less responsive than it was before, even on decent hardware. Seems like it all started with Big Picture and the gradual migration of that design style into the main client.

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    My 16 year old iMac valiantly can run roughly one application at a time, which is all I need it to do for background media while working

  • @[email protected]
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    41 year ago

    My daily driver desktop is 8. It was $1100 back then. On it I work two ver-ry nerdy jobs.

    I envy you where 10 years is a long time !

  • LanternEverywhere
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    491 year ago

    I use a 12 year old laptop as my daily driver, and use it to do high res video editing. A decade old computer these days is still highly capable.

    • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)
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      31 year ago

      Last year I still used to use a 16 year old laptop. It could even run Windows 11 just fine. I only tried Asphalt 9 and 8 on it as I don’t play games, but it ran well.

      I still miss that laptop. I really wish it still worked.
      What happened: I finally wanted to learn using 4NEC2. It doesn’t want to run on my new laptop, neither in VM nor WINE. But suddenly, the laptop kept shutting down randomly. Probably issue with the aftermarket battery. It still showed 80% of charge. At one point I said “That’s it. You shut down one more time, I am done and plugging you in.” (The adapter wasn’t with me, so I used it on battery.) It shut down.
      I then plugged in the adapter, but it never turned on again. R.I.P.

      • bufalo1973
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        1 year ago

        Asphalt 9 is from 2018. And it’s a mobile game ported to Windows.

    • Davel23
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      111 year ago

      Up until about a year ago my main gaming rig was a laptop from 2012. Toward the end I had to turn settings down (sometimes WAY down) but it still performed like a champ.

    • @[email protected]
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      161 year ago

      My 12 year old thinkpad is still my daily driver.

      Speakers stopped working 5 years ago tho. Only BT audio out, now.

      • MrScottyTay
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        71 year ago

        You could probably open that up pretty easy and fix that I bet

        • palordrolap
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          41 year ago

          This sort of thing is heavily dependent on how often they get away with pushing their luck.

          With my luck, the moment I’d start fishing around inside the case, something would happen to make it refuse to boot or lose one or more of the RGB channels to the screen or something.

          And the sound still wouldn’t work.

      • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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        11 year ago

        First thing that always went in every Thinkpad I’ve owned is the wireless card lol. Opposite issue for me.

  • @[email protected]
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    131 year ago

    My Surface Pro 3 refuses to die despite the fans giving out, and YouTube plays like shit now thanks to the potato GPU.

    Still use it everyday.

  • astraeus
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    151 year ago

    Looking over at my old Thinkpad X131e with those “I’m going to start a new project with you” eyes

  • TheHarpyEagle
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    121 year ago

    Old laptops also make for great servers and hobby computers. If you don’t need the form factor of a pi or mini pc, throw Debian or whatever on an old laptop and play away! I’ve got jellyfin, my DNS, reverse proxy and an octoprint server running on mine. It’s the little heart of our network.

      • TheHarpyEagle
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        11 year ago

        I was thinking about adding that, but I also don’t want anyone blaming their localized fireworks display on me if it does go bad.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 year ago

          IMO, one of the biggest risks of using a laptop as a server or some type of utility system is that you may not look at it regularly enough to see if the battery has a problem.

          Go look at your hardware folks. Just stare at it for a few minutes every few months or more frequently. See if anything looks strange or different about it.

  • @[email protected]
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    31 year ago

    My laptop is still chugging along since 2011, and I totally feel this comic.

    It got an SSD to really boost performance.

    It still runs Windows 7.

    I can’t create-react-app because I can’t upgrade node to the version it requires.

    Chrome doesn’t update anymore.

    This thing is robust and feels like I’ve had it forever.

    I will be sad when it dies.

    • make -j8
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      171 year ago

      Of course, God bless his kind soul, may the eternal peace lay on his lands

    • @[email protected]
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      121 year ago

      Pretty sure anything capable from the Windows XP era onwards could play an MP3.

      Whether it run the bloated Chromium mess that the Spotify client is, is another matter.

  • @[email protected]
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    141 year ago

    Meanwhile, my two-year old Celeron not being able to reliably play a FLAC file without stuttering…

  • @[email protected]
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    341 year ago

    I love watching videos about plane crashes on my old tablet when I’m cooking or rinsing (non-native here, is that right for doing a dishwasher’s job by hand?).

        • Psychadelligoat
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          31 year ago

          I’ll join with Technology Connections in being that guy who says (in a friendly way, not condescending):

          If you have to rinse your dishes ever then you’re using the wrong soap, have a reeeeeeeeeeeeaaaaally crappy dishwasher (like a multi decade old cheapo model that’s breaking), or are loading your washer wrong. I think TCs video showing literally cooked on cheese coming off of dishes is pretty good proof that no dish out there needs rinsing.

          I used to think my dishwasher couldn’t handle most things without rinsing, then I realized one of my sprayers had been blocked up and i also switched to a powder soap and suddenly everything is clean as fuck without any other changes to my loading habits. This was on a model slightly cheaper than the one TC uses in his video, and was about 7 years old when I saw improvement.

          This is not criticism or anything, but simply trying to spread awareness of a simple thing I know a lot of people are surprised by when I tell them. Many of us are wasting time and effort on rinsing shit that doesn’t need to be, free yourselves!

    • flicker
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      71 year ago

      Native speakers refer to it as “washing the dishes” (the full phrase). “Dishwashing” is technically correct but it’s also awkward and clunky.

      This was spoken from an America-centric POV. Hopefully some other countries will weigh in.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      All the other replies sound very American, it’s “doing the washing up” or just “washing up”

    • Bob
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      371 year ago

      “Washing dishes” or “doing the dishes”. 👍