This week I’m refurbishing a 15+ yr old computer which was stalling on windows 10 and got abandoned. Currently making a huge backup to an Icy box (the self built variant of a wd passport or similar).
On wednesday, a friend comes over and we’re repasting the old i5. I might add some ram and a better but used cpu later which should give this thing another 10 yrs as a server. The mainboard is full of features and would accept a 4 core with 8 threads and 16 GBs of DDR3. Nothing to play recent games on but maaaaany docker containers will run on this baby! :)
Let me know what you’re doing to spit on consumerism and built-for-the-landfill-economy.
Reminder: I made a petition on change.org to make consumer electronics manufacturers open their devices after they stop supporting them. Please sign it, your support is needed.
Probably the best advice I saw when I was considering getting a new one was that there are a ton of these things sitting in Goodwill stores, and they all do pretty much the same exact thing and have since the 00s - so if you’re interested in one, it’s worth just hitting up a couple Goodwill stores around you and there’s a good chance you find one. I realized after posting that my machine is 20 years old, not 14, so you’re going to have a tough time picking out a machine that won’t do the job, and you’ll be reducing how much new stuff needlessly gets made and how much goes to the landfill.
When it came to maintenance, the bread machine kneads the dough with a pulley + a spindle in a pan that connects to a flipper, and my spindle was starting to freeze up, so I ended up using food-safe mineral oil to lubricate the spindle and I was back in business.
Gl & good hunting! Hope you find something you enjoy.