Originally posted by: jogiba
I seen this post on another forum.
"I have a Dell XTS 500 with Windows 98SE and 5GB of memory left on a 10Gb Hard drive. My computer?s getting slower every day and it's at a point that it's just about worthless. It takes seven minutes to boot up and a ridiculously longtime to load web pages.
I don't think there's anything mechanically wrong with the computer is just clogged up with stuff and I don't know what to do about it. I want to keep the computer but I see it dying more and more every week.
Any contribution is greatly appreciated. Thanks."
WTF is wrong with people wasting time on a dumpster special ?
Since everyone here has practically disagreed with your opinion of the matter (including me to be honest) I'll actually
agree with you on the matter as well.
Sometimes people don't let go of things. I know it's functional, it works, and yatta yatta, but like that t-shirt you got back in 1987 that's paper thin and the logo on it practically incomprehensible, it's just time to move on.
But people don't, and they continue to use things... old things. Because it does what they need it to do. Like a old a pair of shoes that's almost literally falling apart. They just keep wearing them because they need to run in the sand or dirt at the local park. It's just a basic view upon things and there's nothing wrong with it.
Granted technology has always had a theme associated with "high tech, latest and greatest" when it comes to computers, some people just keep some old tech around. You can't blame a lot of people either, because including myself, I have tons of spare parts from generations of computer building. The computer I'm typing on right now was made entirely of spare computer parts, as all it does all day is stay on and download/upload my p2p programs and torrents.
I don't know where the fine line is (If any) but sometimes people need to get a reality check on things. Sure, using an old computer is fine and dandy for what they need, but it's also not a time saver or cost efficent situation as they turn it out to be. The computer in the OP's post for example can be replaced literally with modern budget tech that's way, way faster for around $120 bucks. I'm talking about an entire rig ready to go minus a monitor, with 64 bit processor and other tidbits.
I don't know why this post is so long, I'm just really talkative about this issue for some reason because it's just one of those things.