- Aug 25, 2001
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Is there an identifiable dichotomy there?
I did some work for a client, that has two older laptops.
One is an older laptop, with a Core2-era mobile chip, 512MB of DDR2, and a 60GB HDD, with 109 bad sectors, running Win7 Ultimate. (It was given to them.)
Client wants to update laptop with more RAM. I went to Crucial.com, looked up the model, and they claim it can take 2x1GB DDR2-667 SO-DIMMs, and they want to sell a kit for $39.99. Not too bad, to max out the laptop, and make it usable.
It took literally almost 5-10 minutes to load web sites. The HDD was thrashing, running Win7 on 512MB of RAM. I think it was running Avast too, which surely takes up RAM and slows it down too.
Their other laptop, has a cracked screen and two busted USB ports, from being dropped. They inquired if I could fix screens and USB ports. (I don't.)
It does have 4GB of RAM (probably DDR3, it's a newer laptop).
I cleaned some malware off of the second machine, and several times, I had to reboot, because the app / OS hung with a swirly cursor. This suggests that the HDD has bad sectors (likely from being dropped), and needs to be replaced as well. (Because of time constraints, and the OS hanging, I didn't have a chance to load HDTune on that machine, and check the SMART data for re-allocated sectors.)
I quoted the client a reasonable price on an SSD for the first laptop (my cost at Newegg), since it had been dropped a few times, and the person using it was likely to drop it again, and I suggested a replacement SSD instead of HDD, because it was mostly immune to being dropped. Along with the price listed at Crucial. (Of course, I will charge for labor to install both of them, and clone the OS.)
At what point (price), is it worth it to just scrap machines, versus trying to limp along with ancient or broken machines?
Rather than
First laptop:
$66 SSD
$50 OS clone
$40 2x1GB DDR2 SO-DIMM
$40 RAM installation
Second laptop:
New screen? (Microcenter will replace cracked screens starting at $119.99)
New motherboard? (I assume USB ports are soldered to mobo)
New HDD/SSD? (Due to bad sectors accumulating)
Re-install OS, due to malware and bad sectors?
What about selling the client a desktop, and helping them purchase a newer laptop at retail or something?
I've got some desktop machines that were either built or purchased, that I would love to sell the client, but I need to talk to them more at length about the "bigger picture", and getting the most for their money.
If mobility is important (the second laptop is sitting on a desk, opened part-way to use the keyboard, hooked up to a CRT monitor, so I'm guessing "no", at least for one of the PCs), then I could see fixing up the first laptop. (Actually, it needs a battery replacement too, so perhaps the current answer to mobility needs is "no" for the first laptop as well.)
I have an older Core2-era laptop (with a brand-new battery from Ebay) I could sell the client. It's an MSI, with an NV IGP, dual-core, DVD-RW, 3GB DDR2, Win7 64-bit. And a 120GB SSD. I think that I would want as much or more for it though, than an brand-new Bay Trail Craptop. (It's very nice, cost $400+ originally, and that was on sale.)
I bought a pair of Bay Trail N2830 laptops, with 4GB DDR3 / 500GB HDD, DVD-RW, Win8.1 for $230 ea at BestBuy a few months ago. I barely use them, but I want to keep them.
I have a nice little "petite" E-350 ITX rig I built, slightly used, but with a "new" 50GB (factory refurb) OCZ Vertex2 SSD. (Which I suspect was actually "new old stock", I didn't see any power-on hours in SMART.) 4GB RAM, Wifi N150 2.4Ghz. Legit Win7 64-bit included.
I also have a Lenovo Sandy Bridge i3 PC, with 4GB / 1TB, DVD, no WiFi, that I picked up cheap enough I could sell it cheap and still make a profit. It's a full-sized mid-tower though, not a SFF. OEM Win8 64-bit included, along with a keyboard and mouse.
Part of the problem, the client has very little money, or acts that way. (Had a nice big TV, but again, CRT, so it could have been a freebie from someone else.)
I'd like to make back some money, for the freebie malware-removal that I gave them, but I want to do the right thing overall for the client, even if that means that I just assist them in buying a newer $200 laptop somewhere.
Along with this example of this dichotomy, I present this other thread:
http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2401128
Thoughts? (On either how I should proceed with assisting my client, or thoughts on people that prefer to fix up, piece by piece, and limp along with broken or older PCs, rather than save up and replace them outright.)
Edit: HP is introducing some $200 Win8.1 Bay Trail laptops in colors.
http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2401927
I did some work for a client, that has two older laptops.
One is an older laptop, with a Core2-era mobile chip, 512MB of DDR2, and a 60GB HDD, with 109 bad sectors, running Win7 Ultimate. (It was given to them.)
Client wants to update laptop with more RAM. I went to Crucial.com, looked up the model, and they claim it can take 2x1GB DDR2-667 SO-DIMMs, and they want to sell a kit for $39.99. Not too bad, to max out the laptop, and make it usable.
It took literally almost 5-10 minutes to load web sites. The HDD was thrashing, running Win7 on 512MB of RAM. I think it was running Avast too, which surely takes up RAM and slows it down too.
Their other laptop, has a cracked screen and two busted USB ports, from being dropped. They inquired if I could fix screens and USB ports. (I don't.)
It does have 4GB of RAM (probably DDR3, it's a newer laptop).
I cleaned some malware off of the second machine, and several times, I had to reboot, because the app / OS hung with a swirly cursor. This suggests that the HDD has bad sectors (likely from being dropped), and needs to be replaced as well. (Because of time constraints, and the OS hanging, I didn't have a chance to load HDTune on that machine, and check the SMART data for re-allocated sectors.)
I quoted the client a reasonable price on an SSD for the first laptop (my cost at Newegg), since it had been dropped a few times, and the person using it was likely to drop it again, and I suggested a replacement SSD instead of HDD, because it was mostly immune to being dropped. Along with the price listed at Crucial. (Of course, I will charge for labor to install both of them, and clone the OS.)
At what point (price), is it worth it to just scrap machines, versus trying to limp along with ancient or broken machines?
Rather than
First laptop:
$66 SSD
$50 OS clone
$40 2x1GB DDR2 SO-DIMM
$40 RAM installation
Second laptop:
New screen? (Microcenter will replace cracked screens starting at $119.99)
New motherboard? (I assume USB ports are soldered to mobo)
New HDD/SSD? (Due to bad sectors accumulating)
Re-install OS, due to malware and bad sectors?
What about selling the client a desktop, and helping them purchase a newer laptop at retail or something?
I've got some desktop machines that were either built or purchased, that I would love to sell the client, but I need to talk to them more at length about the "bigger picture", and getting the most for their money.
If mobility is important (the second laptop is sitting on a desk, opened part-way to use the keyboard, hooked up to a CRT monitor, so I'm guessing "no", at least for one of the PCs), then I could see fixing up the first laptop. (Actually, it needs a battery replacement too, so perhaps the current answer to mobility needs is "no" for the first laptop as well.)
I have an older Core2-era laptop (with a brand-new battery from Ebay) I could sell the client. It's an MSI, with an NV IGP, dual-core, DVD-RW, 3GB DDR2, Win7 64-bit. And a 120GB SSD. I think that I would want as much or more for it though, than an brand-new Bay Trail Craptop. (It's very nice, cost $400+ originally, and that was on sale.)
I bought a pair of Bay Trail N2830 laptops, with 4GB DDR3 / 500GB HDD, DVD-RW, Win8.1 for $230 ea at BestBuy a few months ago. I barely use them, but I want to keep them.
I have a nice little "petite" E-350 ITX rig I built, slightly used, but with a "new" 50GB (factory refurb) OCZ Vertex2 SSD. (Which I suspect was actually "new old stock", I didn't see any power-on hours in SMART.) 4GB RAM, Wifi N150 2.4Ghz. Legit Win7 64-bit included.
I also have a Lenovo Sandy Bridge i3 PC, with 4GB / 1TB, DVD, no WiFi, that I picked up cheap enough I could sell it cheap and still make a profit. It's a full-sized mid-tower though, not a SFF. OEM Win8 64-bit included, along with a keyboard and mouse.
Part of the problem, the client has very little money, or acts that way. (Had a nice big TV, but again, CRT, so it could have been a freebie from someone else.)
I'd like to make back some money, for the freebie malware-removal that I gave them, but I want to do the right thing overall for the client, even if that means that I just assist them in buying a newer $200 laptop somewhere.
Along with this example of this dichotomy, I present this other thread:
http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2401128
Thoughts? (On either how I should proceed with assisting my client, or thoughts on people that prefer to fix up, piece by piece, and limp along with broken or older PCs, rather than save up and replace them outright.)
Edit: HP is introducing some $200 Win8.1 Bay Trail laptops in colors.
http://forums.anandtech.com/showthread.php?t=2401927
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