JustARegularNerd

joined 8 months ago

Yeah the E6430, as far as I understand it, was mainly a chipset upgrade to support Ivy Bridge processors, with some additional niceties like USB 3.0 and minor cosmetic differences.

I also had that sting from it too! Usually when it was on charge, I just always thought it was some kind of static electricity or otherwise some poor grounding.

[–] JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

I bought a T480 coming on a year ago as my first ThinkPad. I'm pretty happy with it, feels rugged and I've now fully conditioned myself to using the TrackPoint. Happy with the weight of it for the screen size, I have the 1080p one and it's not bad at all.

My work device is a L14 Gen 3 with the Ryzen 5 something and it's okay. I don't like the flatter TrackPoint buttons but they're still more than usable. I actually dropped it from about waist height from my car, and apart from some scuffs on the corners it's still completely functional.

I do miss the media keys and CPU upgradability of my old Latitude E6420 (had that bad boy up to an i7-2760QM, 16GB DDR3, 512GB SSD) but it was just so bulky in comparison and the screen maxed out at only 1600x900 (which yes, I upgraded on it too).

One more thing for me to go on a tangent about, ThinkPad X240 was a poor choice as a secondary. I thought I wouldn't care about the weird touchpad but it's barely usable for me, either as a touchpad or TrackPoint. I'm selling that shit on to get either an X220 or X250 onwards, depending on what comes up.

[–] JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

I love how that video has aged even better by the fact the guy's using Windows 8

[–] JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 1 week ago (1 children)

"disable AI" checkbox

They're not that nice, if they did it, it would just be "Reduce AI experiences"

I meant it in the sense of using an obscure operating system to be less likely to be targeted by a threat actor.

Or to be more general, using obscure software for increased security, over actually correctly configuring and using secure software.

Viruses already exist for Linux and have for a long time. They are less prevalent than Windows but this obviously shouldn't be the primary defense strategy for your device.

[–] JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

...security by obscurity? Guess when Linux finally explodes in popularity, you'll see me over on FreeBSD instead

[–] JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com 27 points 4 weeks ago (4 children)

I'm gonna beat the same drum most people beat here, you know it's dystopian when you need the manufacturer's permission to be "let" delete something from your device. This criticism equally applies to Android devices with locked bootloaders.

Re the web browsers I think you're right. You may get away with a more lightweight browser like SeaMonkey or Falkon, maybe like 1 tab of Chromium lol

Distros I'd try on that would be Linux Mint Debian Edition, Debian w/ lightweight DE like LXDE or Xfce, or Arch Linux 32 if you really want to make it minimalist. Gentoo if you're very adventurous but with my EEE PC I found compile times took up to days.

I see, thanks for the clarification and bonus tidbit on that!

[–] JustARegularNerd@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

For those across the pond, 3658mm of rain (12')

Really sets it in seeing it in mm

Edit: See below comment, I completely misinterpreted the storm surge meaning

Seconding LMDE, been on it for a year on my study laptop. Literally never ever had a problem so far, and being an "out of box" distro there's minimal work needed to daily drive.

Working at a computer shop, Lenovo ThinkPads are usually pretty fine, but the main fault we've seen with them is lack or completely missing thermal compound. On one occasion I saw my colleague's machine not post, and IIRC we had to reset the CMOS to get it back up.

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