In a roundabout way I suppose I did...how about that. :hmm:not respond... you just did
In a roundabout way I suppose I did...how about that. :hmm:not respond... you just did
Welcome to AT. Seeing as you're new I'm going to teach you something about forum equiquette and I'm not going to respond to your drivel.
Well call it "feeding the trolls" here.![]()
I'm actually friends with an architect who helped invent the lithography process that the CPU manufacturers use to this day to produce microprocessors. You should see his collection of Bentleys!![]()
Mint Linux 10 LXDE would be incredible on a P3. I'm sure it would be very useful to a school or something.The solution to e-waste, is to build a working PC with it, and donate it to someone without one. There are still some people out there without a computer.
Edit: Though I'm hard-pressed to figure out what to do with P3 systems.
The solution to e-waste, is to build a working PC with it, and donate it to someone without one. There are still some people out there without a computer.
The solution to e-waste, is to build a working PC with it, and donate it to someone without one. There are still some people out there without a computer.
Edit: Though I'm hard-pressed to figure out what to do with P3 systems.
I would actually be highly interested in your opinion in all this IDC.
There shouldn't be that many names involved.And working for the car maker group Bentley Motors belongs to, I have to admit that those cars are not the greenest ones we offer.
But to your points:
Is a replaced board + CPU actually environmentally relevant waste? I only know cases, where someone else or the owner himself uses it further for less demanding tasks.
Actually replacing hardware with new hardware, which could deliver more performance/watt should also have some positive effect.
But finally not buying anything new and further using old hw would avoid producing any waste while being less efficient - the machine would have to run much longer for a specific task compared to a new one.
So the best would be to avoid technology at all - including Bentleys.
My opinion is that every little bit helps, no matter how small in the big picture.
As such, the debate to have in regards to environmentally considerate engineering, as well as environmentally mindful consumerism, is one that should be made from a position of data, understanding, and accounting.
Take your particular example...the tradeoff between the environmental footprint of discarding an obsolete motherboard versus the the environmental footprint of making every cpu larger and thus more resource intensive to manufacture.
I'm all for the right thing to be done in the interest of the environment, but if you don't have the necessary data or an adequate understanding of the supply chain itself then you aren't likely to be making the right decisions in terms of tradeoffs.
I can appreciate the desire and motivation on your part to precipitate change and awareness.
However, unfortunately you appear to want to be the one who prescribes the exact change that is to transpire, in some detail, while admitting that you are operating at a complete deficit in terms of experience, education, and data regarding the environmental tradeoffs that would be effected to implement your preferred solution.
This is where you undermine your own message and do a disservice to the plight of the very environmental movement you ascribe.
Espouse responsible engineering, espouse responsible consumerism, but don't fancy yourself to be in a position of actually knowing the best solution when you already know for fact that you don't have all the facts necessary to do so nor the experience and education necessary to make use of those facts for such an endeavor.
(in other words "leave it to the experts", and then try and have a little faith that maybe, just maybe, they already concluded that the best option was to make a smaller - less resource consuming to manufacture - CPU in exchange for requiring a moderate number of new motherboards to be manufactured)
You're welcome, and the OP is welcome to use them if they want. ()Thanks for the cliffnotes mr Sick Beast. Would be nice if OP used em![]()
No, I'm not working there, the pseudonym is even a bit older than 8 years and I have chosen it because of living in only ~60 mi distance to Dresden (now ~125 mi).Wow, 27 Posts in 8 YEARS... You surely are talkative. xD
BTW judging from your name I'm assuming that you work at the Dresden Foundry?
And you can get a whole computer, with OS, for the cost of giving it enough RAM to become useful again. Somebody could give you RAM, but they've probably already done that over and over and over by now, and don't have enough sticks of larger capacity, anymore, to upgrade it (I don't think I even have a 128MB stick, anymore).I still have a p3 but only has 128 megs of ram so havnt forund a good os for it.
dont think mint will run since it requires 256megs
No, I'm not working there, the pseudonym is even a bit older than 8 years and I have chosen it because of living in only ~60 mi distance to Dresden (now ~125 mi).
*rant omitted*
Anyway that is not readable and not understandable!
Anybody else who has problems understanding this crypto-stuff?
Or anybody who can read that? Is there a decryption rule available?
Thank you for the tip. It does the trick. Unreadable stuff transforms to clear results. Thank you.I think you are running it on Internet Explorer. Try it on Firefox. The same thing happens when I run it on IE, but not on FF.