I had used an old Acer Travelmate from 2005 until early 2024, 150GB HDD, 2GB RAM, Celeron dual-core 1.67GHz CPU, as my mail mule, running MX Linux 32-bit without a problem. Until the keyboard malfunctioned.
I know that most later model Core 2 CPUs had a 8 GB RAM limit, but 8GB and an SSD ( it's a SATA interface, right?) would make it seem modern with the right Linux install.
The problem is that if you want to go online there is so much bloatware on the web that basically everything eats RAM. I have 32 GB of RAM and with 10-20 tabs open it goes to 90% and sometimes crashes the entire PC on all browsers I tried it's the same. CPU is usually up to around 50% sometimes even 10% while RAM I am afraid that it will fry one day ... Ever since 2019 I kept updating my RAM but what I learned it's useless. There is so much garbage with lots of apps and websites running in background that all act like datamining viruses. Every time I start my PC I waste my time end-tasking bunch of s--t 1st before I can do anything ... Before 2019 I could run everything on a potato PC with just 8GB RAM and SSD. Today it's like I don't have any of that. Even now writing this message stutters like a mofo ... can't keep up with my fast typing at all text on screen lagging behind like crazy.
@@minmogrovingstrongandhealthy I have like 50 tabs open in Chrome on my 32GB Win10 PC and only 31% of the RAM is consumed - what kind of pages do you keep open to reach 90%?
So this. Basically I stopped watching the video at the point when he mentioned that he used a traditional HDD although an SSD would have been dirt cheap. Rule #1 with old laptops: get an SSD.
@@minmogrovingstrongandhealthy Dude, something is wrong on your end. Yeah, the web is bloated AF, but what you described is an order of magnitude worse than the norm. 32 GB of RAM is plenty enough for most people. I run multiple browsers at the same time (I'm a web developer), each with dozens of tabs, and still most of the time I'm at 34 GB out of my 64 GB. And I have other programs opened too. And I'm on Windows 10 too!
I'm using windows 7 pro for my acer aspire 4920g from 2007 ,,, it still running web browsing very well and also old triple A games like max payne 2 , farcry , also fallout 3 but with way down settings ,, i'm in the third world country,, so electronics doesn't come cheap,, we get by with old electronics 😊
The old Thinkpads had several standout features that still, to this day don't seem to have been emulated by other laptop makers: - Indestructible hinge design. Never breaks away from the base of the case. Screen stays in the position you adjust it to. - Pointing stick. I hate touchpads, then because they were garbage and now because I have a hand tremor. - Exterior of the case had a "rubberized" texture which made it easier to hang on to and less prone to skate off a surface to certain damage on impact. - Reasonable keyboard design. My 2cents anyway.
The problem with rubberized texture is that after a decade or so it gets all sticky. Not sure about ThinkPads, though, I had a Dell with that problem. Awful.
Was a massive fan of the pointing stick on Thinkpads, but the trackpad on modern MacBooks is a winner, large surface and super accurate. Haven't seen anything come close on non-Apple laptops though. Even use the external trackpad on desktop over a traditional optical mouse now. The texture on Thinkpads holds smells really easily, which can be an issue with the used market of Thinkpads, very easy to tell if a previous owner was a smoker.
@@sp0el I have an IBM Thinkpad from 1998, and two Lenovo T420s from 2012, and none of them suffer from the sticky coating syndrome. I have plenty of other devices that _do_ suffer from it...
@@sarkybugger5009 Good to hear that IBM/Lenovo have some magic ingredient in their formula then. Some models still suffer from the stickness, as quick google search shows, though. And some people on YT use magic erasers and polish to restore their laptops. Didn't think about doing that for my Dell.
During the pandemic I upgraded a Dell Latitude 131L as a hobby. I put a 64-bit 2.1 GHZ dual core CPU , 150 GB SSD, and went from 512mb to 4GB of memory and replaced Windows XP with Mint 20.2, and it was all done very cheap. Performance? Well there was a definite improvement, but video streaming on it depends on a lot of factors. I personally did not find Chromium any better than Firefox. In fact Firefox did better with UA-cam. As far a movies it was coin toss on whether they were watchable. Letterbox wide-screeen format worked alright since it used less of the screen. The battery was pretty close to death. Why this would be an issue with a laptop that you would leave plugged in anyways, especially if your using an ethernet connection is beyond me. In summary, I enjoy using it either as a way to look up material for something I'm doing on my desktop pc without interupting it, or just to enjoy doing something on a device others may consider useless. Too much abandoned utility in this world.
@@liamjewell62 I just thought of something I checked with Bing's AI Copilot. There are cheap mini PCs and I asked it if in lieu of getting a keyboard and monitor if you could use a lite weight Linux distro on an old laptop with an app that would allow it to be a terminal for the mini PC. I wont go into the details, but basically it said yes. That would be a fantastic project to watch.
T61, 8gb, 128gb, win11, usb2x3, usb3x4, the usb3 speed is 150mbps via express card, T9500cpu. Working perfectly, task manager always on to monitor cpu usage, handles everything very very well.
@@liamjewell62 it's great for web browsing and playing movies etc, it's not very powerful compared to modern ThinkPads but it's really special in looks and in use, the SSD was the biggest upgrade, boots windows 11 in seconds.
I still use a T420 (with a SSD). Perfectly fine for all my mobile computing needs, for more demanding tasks I'd want to use a desktop PC anyway. It doesn't even feel slow, XFCE runs great.
@@johnmadison3472 That's true, the keyboard feels great, not nearly as fatiguing as modern style laptop keyboards. Sometimes I feel like modern laptops are too thin and elegant for their own good. Many have heat and battery issues.
Haha yeah. I have a t430s and its great. I even dock it to use as a desktop. Cinnamon is fine on it and its what I'm currently using but I may switch to xfce just out of preference.
The keyboards on these were amazing. You could type forever on them and they just felt great. A hidden benefit from older, less powerful hardware is since it's slower, you are limited in your multitasking and are basically forced to focus on what you're doing.
I still use a Thinkpad T22 from around 2003 with a Pentium III CPU running at 700 MHz with 512 MB RAM and an IDE SSD on which Gentoo Linux is installed with an i3 desktop. A couple of times a month, I SSH into my home server to write BASH or Python code with a couple of terminal sessions open, I have my email open in mutt on a second desktop and a console music player going on the third desktop - with overhead left to run a few other things too. It has a great keyboard and it is just a very peaceful and distraction-free way to enjoy my computing occasionally.
Best method is to just not install a graphical environment at all. I understand that's not always an option depending on what you're don't ng but if you can do it it's great for avoiding distractions. Second best option is xterm in full screen mode. Alt+Enter and it goes borderless full screen.
One things is very crucial to understand regarding hardware. You absolutely cannot compare computers from different era. For instance if you say 15 years old top of the line processor X is on par as model entry level model Y from like two years ago. They can be comparable when measuring some direct calculation based with some benchmark program etc. HOWEVER things can turn completely around if comparing for instance playing UA-cam videos. Now that couple year old entry level model can do playback possibly with like 5% processor load on 4K 60hz where older X model could struggle to run even 1080p 30Hz video. This is where many processor features come in and if someone is wondering why that example I just mentioned is possible if processors are essentially same when comparing calculation vise. But this newer model can easily support hardware encoding. This is very critical to understand when wondering why some older hardware seems to struggle with seemingly trivial task. Like that Chromebook in video can easily playback pretty much every single media without issues, where the old X61 absolutely can't. Don't get me wrong, I use a lot of old and new hardware and in many cases old hardware can do all the necessary stuff. But you can easily run into seemingly odd performance issues.
They might have similar performance for some tests, but add tasks that make use of newer instructions and the things change quickly. Same with video decoding.
I love my mid 2011 Macbook Air, it is a perfectly usable with Linux despite being less than $100 on the used market these days. It is a genuinely portable laptop even by todays standards, it has a solid keyboard and touchpad, is made of metal and has exceptional build quality because it was quite an expensive computer back then, though as time went on you could really tell the MacBook Air became a budget model. I use it for gaming with Steam link pretty frequently and it is wild to see Cyberpunk 2077 on that 1440x900 display downsampled from 4K on my desktop, and I don't notice any lag either.
My mom absolutely hates it when I try to get these old laptops. She thinks that I have enough of them already. (I have a dell inspiron 1000, an acer nitro 5, and some old broken cromebook) they are super fun to mess with. Especially the inspiron, which was designed to run windows xp. I don't think enough people understand what it means to be a tech enthusiast. It's not all about the high end stuff.
Lots of good lightweight choices out there - Alpine, TinyCore, Slax and many more. It's been fun to watch computing evolve. I started in 1974. Yeah, I'm that old.
Same here, in fact I still have a C64, 1040ST and a 2600 hooked up and use. Main rig is my RHEL/Fedora dual boot workstation. But those oldies are great. And another fella here that keeps hardware until the magic smoke angel takes it to hardware heaven. Linux and BSD make that possible while still staying current (SSL on ancient OSes is painful to make happen --- looking at you SunOS and Workbench).
You're only a bit older than me - I programmed my first computer back in 1983 on a college day release course with my first job in the telecoms industry. It was assembly language programming on a Z80 CPU. But I did maintain a very creaky DEC PDP-11 running RSX-11 in a customer's call centre for a while!
What made this video watchable to the end, for me, was the clear, slower talking, instead of the fast talking on most other channels. This is amazing for an older laptop to just use for linux, maybe an SSD would make it even more useful. Great video
I'm still using my 2013 HP laptop on Arch to this day. But it is considerably more powerful than those laptops you showed on the video. I love how Linux systems still support many cases of older hardware, keeping it relevant to the modern age. In fact, the only thing really keeping these machines "obsolete" is bloated modern web desig making even simple websites require lots of computing power unnecessarily.
Linux is beautiful both for old and new machines. I have a laptop w/ Ryzen 5 5600H and 16 GB of DDR4 and this bad guy was CHOKING in Windows bloat. Have Arch on it now.
I'm beyond thankful for lightweight linux distros because they saved my old 2012 laptop from becoming landfill. I had to move a few years back and I didn't want to rely on my phone all the time for media so I dug up my old inspiron from a decade ago and put in an old cheapo SSD I had lying around. Given that my financial situation collapsed in the 2010s I now can use that laptop as my TV, music player, and even a secondary PC when my friends need tech support. I legit can't imagine life without it and had it not been for enthusiasts' hard work I would've never been able to have the life I have now.
My daily driver is a 2012 T430 3rd gen i7 working perfectly at the same speed as my last company notebook with 8th gen i5 (both 4 cores / 8 Threads), the only benefit of the newer laptop was a better power efficiency. Even the 2nd gen i7 was equally fast, but has worse build in GPU. also the coreduo is working good with enough performance. The biggest problem you have with the old laptops is with the accu (no problem if used with the powerbrick anyway) and perhaps a weak bios battery. Push the RAM to the limit and if possible use a SSD and you will never understand why you needed a "modern" laptop. for 100 to 200$ (including all upgrades like RAM, SSD and 3rd party battery) you will have a powerful notebook with Win7, win 10, Linux or as a hackintosh. Don't forget to update your thermal paste which will be dryed out for sure.
My daily driver is a 2012 T430s 3rd Gen i5 running Windows 10. I also play some games on it too (3d AAA games up until early 2010s), I cap them at 30 fps because it only has integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics.
I really enjoyed the video. Keep going Liam. Btw, what package is the one you're using here: 10:13 i'd like to monitor mi linux laptop specs as well. Thanks!
I just bought the X220 for the price of $15. It's in the rough shape but it's still functional and just needed a keyboard replacement. I put whatever SSD and RAM I have at my disposal and with $30 I have a very functional laptop that I can use whenever I need a Windows/Linux machine (I use Mac as my daily driver). These old computers really don't deserve to be on the e-waste, they just need a better software to keep on chugging.
The X220 is basically in a perfect spot. in 2011 it already had very modern hardware, supporting modern OSes, but is still a proper business machine that can be user serviced.
This thing is the ideal low end programming needed for IOT or any sort of Arduino programming, I was thinking of getting something like a t420 or X220, but this video convinced me that even a good old X61 can get the work done, this one goes to my electronics bench, all for the 4:3.
I have a zero % attention span, but I always watch good content to the end to give the channel an analytics boost. I have a 25 year old HP/Compaq "laptop" with a "Made for Windows Vista" sticker. (The sticker no longer matches the OS). I autoboot into an Atari ST emulator, and use it as a16 bit gaming computer. It's a Core 2 Duo with 4GB of memory (DDR2, so going to 8bg is out of my snack bracket - at $200 to $500 for an 8GB kit.) but it works fine for emulating a 68000 based system. I never throw out old tech, India already has enough of our tech-waste (and the associated health issues effect us all). I always find good reasons to keep stuff. Hell, I still have my very first computer (a TI-99/4A purchased in 1982!) Gets booted up at least a couple times a week. Thrusting obsolescence on things that no longer suit their original build purpose, is a deficit of the imagination. (Pushing 70 myself, so that has particular personal relevance)
@@weewaapharmacy Today, thanks to a prolific Homebrew community we have a Zaxxon that is absolutely indistinguishable from the arcade, a platable Super Mario Brothers demo that matches level one of the Nintendo original, and an Alex Kidd clone that could be playing on a Sega. A couple weeks ago Ghostbusters was released rivaling the C64 and Atari versions. Yup, TI Invaders and Pasec were amazing, but the story continues...
I upgraded my old Samsung "NP-RC-S03DE" step by step. 1. Replace the old HDD with an SSD and installed Linux Mint, Cinnamon Edition 2. Upgraded the RAM from 6GB (4+2) to 16 GB RAM 3. (Maybe replace the GT 540 by something faster but still low TDP, since the GPU can be replaced) I think the i7 2630HQ is already the best CPU I can get on that one and I am uncertain if the CPU is on a socket or soldered.
In 2013 I got an Acer C710 Chrome book. I flashed the bios with seabios. Installed a 500 gigabyte Samsung Evo 960 Sata SSD, 6 gigs of ram. I use Bodhi Linux, with the Moksha desktop environment. Still using it in 2023. ♥️😊
Last time I checked systemd boots faster than runit. I used to use Void and I like it, but I highly doubt there is a huge performance difference to other distros. Even DE doesn't make a huge difference. RAM usage of KDE Plasma vs a window manager is in the realm of 1-200MB probably less. If you don't use it for web browsing, this laptop can be fine for word processing, programming that doesn't need heavy resources, and lofi music and art. M1 Macbooks are looking pretty great with how Asahi Linux development is going and the battery life is great. Idk about the longevity of the hardware though.
I still using my old PC with a i3 3220, 8gbs of ram and a intel hd 2500. On windows the performance is not that good, so I've been using linux exclusively for few years now. Today I use Window Managers(Wayland compositors) and the experience and performance are amazing for such an old hardware. I recently installed cachyos and it made watching videos on youtube a lot better with less cpu usage, something that I could never figure it out how to make it work under vanilla arch even though I follow carefully the wiki. About gaming, I been recently doing a lot of retro gaming with retroarch and the performance its good on the majority of cores available, except PS2 core, but some games do work using the PCSX2 emulator.
I upgraded a 16 or 17-year-old Dell. I replaced the hard drive with an SSD and upgraded the RAM to 4G. It's running the standard Linux Mint, and it runs quite well. Thanks for the video.
Absolutely. If you can pick up and old Core 2 Duo machine from 2006-2007-ish with a 64-bit CPU with 4GB RAM and an SSD containing Linux, it can be a perfectly viable daily driver machine.
idk why but since 2023 youtube started recommend me small youtuber and im glad of that, there is lot of good little youtuber like you, also im watching you on a linux mint, 13years old laptop (originally 2gb ram upgraded to 4) with intel pentium t4500 x), well thanks for this quality video, i hope you get a lot of subscriber, you already get me with this video ;)
I would also like to mention Puppy Linux. It is available as 64 and 32 Bit version and runs fine on almost any old hardware, e.g. on the small netbooks with Intel Atom CPU and 1 or 2 GB of RAM, which are otherwise almost useless today. Use it on my Lenovo Ideapad S10 with a 256GB SSD and it works perfect.
Tried Puppy on an old Asus EeePC, and while it worked from a USB, it didn't when I installed it for some reason. Had to find a lightweight homebrew XP for that one...
Upgrade storage to an SSD, my dad put one in his ancient dinosaur Macbook and it really gave it another lease on life. And my brother still has one of these, it was upgraded from windows 7 to 10 and has had its RAM upgraded, and its hard drive has also been swapped for an SSD.
I still use my Inspiron N4110 running windows 7 as my daily. I don't do much more than use it as a TV running you tube 90+% of the time, but it's still quicker than my wife's windows 10 laptop, and plays you tube videos over HDMI without skipping unlike my kids windows 11 laptop.
That thinkpad would be perfect for ethical hacking. The tools are lightweight, unless you're cracking passwords, but I can get the hashes on that and take them home to my desktop.
I still have my old Asus EeePC 904HD. It's slow asf but I put Xubuntu on it and it helps me wherever I go to fix other computers problems. It also serves me as a spare PC if I do something stupid with my main PC. I'm not a fan of Linux (way too complicated for me, I'm a Windows guy) but I have to admit it's very light and ultra stable. Perfect for what I do with it =)
I really wish people would stop saying increasing UA-cam resolution quality is pointless if your screen isn't as high as the resolution set. That would only be correct if the same bitrate was used for all resolution options.
Everyone needs to start somewhere also there is the factor of luck too. Years ago I use to be a partner and while YT promised me promotions I got nothing, matter of fact my subs didn't even got notifications of my activities and sometime even crashed the page when they clicked on my video or channel. It's like I was shadow-banned. Other friends reported the same things. To the point all smaller channels basically got erased out of existance. We use to actually make content and got nuked while some reaction bots and other nonsense people were spammed everywhere. YT spammed those more so as bots spammed them too. Most of the channels today that have millions of subs are all thanks to bots and not real people. Usually 100k or even bellow are people the other numbers are bots and or dead accounts. The view counts are also fake.
It depends on what aspects about the computer you like, but Framework makes a good laptop. You can swap the ports out on the side, it's very easy to repair and all replacement parts are available, and they released full board schematics as well as 3D prints so you could give the laptop mobo new life as a SFF desktop. They're coming out (or perhaps already released, I'm not up to date) with a new model that has 6 expansion ports, plus an additional large one on the back that could be used to install a GPU, more Battery, more Storage, or anything. There is also a third-party scene around making expansion cards for the laptop.
They do. Business laptops (like this one used to be) are very upgradable and use modern hardware. They're really expensive though just like this would have been when it came out.
@@youreyesarebleeding1368 only having 4 ports on the framework is very limiting, my old 12" ThinkPad has 3usb 3.0, Displayport, VGA (that can go), Ethernet (surprisingly useful when working with routers and old tech as I do occasionally) a card reader and charge port, plus another 3 usb ports thru an expresscard expansion module. If someone came up with a dual USB A or C expansion card I'd be a lot happier with the framework concept, but it seems they sized it just barely too small for that :(
I think mobile core 2 duos are socketed so it may be possible to upgrade it slightly. And it may have an express or pc card slot or maybe you could use the wifi card slot
The T7100 in it came on socket P and FCBGA6. The first is socketed and replacable, the latter is soldered. But the X61 has two miniPCI express slots and a CardBus slot. There are even official wifi cards for it. Two of them even offering 802.11n Looking at the thinkpad wiki, there are BIOS mods that allow SATA 2 speed (which is there hardware-wise, but disabled by software), a CPU pinmod that allows up to 3.6 GHz (by running 266 MHz/1066 MT instead of 200 MHz/800 MT FSB) and one person even soldered a T9500 into it.
The displays on these older laptops are also sometimes better looking than those of sub-$200 laptops. I have a Vaio from 2002 that I use for period correct photo editing using cameras from that era, and the built-in display, while only being 1024x768, looks far better than the cheap panels used on low-end Chromebooks and S-mode machines. In computer sales, I order refurbished business computers for customers over letting them walk out with ultra-cheap new laptops. They are just...bad. Really bad. I'll usually put them with 6th or 7th gen Intel machines, though you can comfortably go back to 2nd gen and be good to go in Win10 for most tasks (good rec on the X220).
The displays on business laptops are generally a letdown, especially for this vintage. Although nice high-res options exist, companies used to default to the cheapest TN garbage on offer. I have a X61s which is a nice machine, but I never use it for its awful, dim, 1024x768 screen.
These really were awesome machines and fun to mod too! My wife is still using my old X61s that I modded back in the day with a beautiful 1400x1050 IPS screen, a hidden dip switch under the battery to overclock the FSB from 200MHz to 266MHz when required, a modded BIOS to enable full SATA2 speed among other things and the usual upgrades like a SSD and 6GB of RAM (8GB would be the max). The most important upgrade (at least back then) IMHO was the screen because the original 1024x768 TN panel was an absolute deal breaker since I actually had to get some work done on it. The upgraded screen came from a X60 tablet and even to this day it looks just amazing :)
I installed Linux Mint 21 (2022 version) on a laptop made in 2006. Fortunately, the laptop had 4Gb Ram, SATA, and Gigabit LAN. The only upgrade required was a SSD. Linux Mint installed and updated like a dream. Job done 10/2022.
I am running Ubuntu 18 on a 2007 Dell Vostros 1500. Windows stopped working on it so I said this is the time to try Linux and now Linus is all I use.....
I've got an X61 Tablet that I absolutely refuse to part ways with. It's a slightly slower T7700 CPU, but getting it to 6GB of RAM and a 240GB SSD turned it into something that can, like you said, really easily beat the plague of N4020-based 11.6" members of the Future e-waste of America Society. I've used a debloated Windows 10 on it successfully, but settled on Mint XFCE for the reasons you described, although I am kind of tempted to dig it out and give Void a shot now. That bump to 6GB was pricey, around $25 for a 4GB DDR2 SODIMM, but the added headroom was worth every penny. That's really what made Windows 10 usable.
I’ve had an ASUs 11.6 N4020 laptop for about a year and a half now. It has some sort of Windows on a emmc but it is upgradable with NVME. I popped in some generic 256GB NVME and ran Kali Linux on it for over a year, but recently changed to Devuan and couldn’t be happier. Battery lasts for about 10h when I just browse internet and use it for programming and server maintenance via ssh. It is not my only computer, so for gaming or compiling I can use my i5-13600kf based PC. For the rest the N4020 is fine.
Windows 10 is not usable. An OS that requires you to check and possibly re-enter your settings every time a Microsoft update is forced upon you is not one you can trust. Instead of fighting against Windows to de-bloat it, your time would be much better spent learning more about Linux.
@@HappyBeezerStudios I've no idea what BattlEye is, I've never used it and therefore it's unimportant in my computer world to the point where I don't plan on spending time doing "homework" to find out what it is. If you want a better response to that part of the question then you'll need to provide more detail. The only "EAC" I know of is "Exact Audio Copy" which was a freeware tool that I used many years ago to rip CDs into FLAC format on Windows. I no longer use Windows and therefore don't use this tool either - there are perfectly good tools on Linux which do the same thing. Again, if that's not what you meant by "EAC" then you'll have to improve your communication skills and explain yourself better if you want more definitive and accurate responses from me. Over to you...
I really like this form factor, I wish laptop manufacturers made more like it. The closest things I can find on the market today are 3:2 ultrabooks but these always lack ports and are not upgradeable.
I'm actually very surprised at how well it performed, it is really beyond usable, not just like usable but mostly slow, this is usable and somewhat snappy.
I have one of these I use fairly frequently, personally im running mint on an ssd. The 4:3 aspect ratio makes it ideal for torrenting old anime and cable shows. It also proved a novel way of experiencing the SM64 PC Port. As you mentioned they work quite well for schoolwork. Glad to see some appreciation for these old machines
I also have an oldass thinkpad for watching vintage anime it's so cozy, I happened to give it an IPS screen and while my modern laptop's color destroys it, the thinkpad is still great even though it's ancient
I use rtorrent on one of my Thinkpads and basically use it as a seedbox in addition to just being a home server. I've never tried watching anything on it, because the display is quite bad, but is possible to upgrade. So, typically I just download stuff to it, seed for a while, and clone it to my main PC when I want to watch it. Do you have to worry about what torrents you download? I'm surprised that Thinkpad T-61 can handle the codec, will it work with h264 in standard def? What happens if you try to watch something like a 720p or a 1080p video in h264? I'm guessing h265 is likely out the window; although most of these old shows and DVD rips probably aren't in h265.
Old PCs like this are actually still pretty usable even on their original operating system. I've got a laptop lying around running XP service pack. 3. And found a chrome designed for windows XP and get me like a version 109 or something like that and it's actually pretty usable
I had good results with antiX Linux running IceWM on a similar old LG laptop - it feels a little bare but it works fine. I even added xfce4-power-manager to dim the screen :)
Until recently, I was daily driving this exact laptop at my work as a research assistant. i went for a used 128GB SSD, and a ghost-spectre Windows 10 install. It surprisingly does well to process documents, edit excel sheets, and even some slight multitasking (I used an external monitor for dual screen use.). it is still running, but the screen gave up, so will leave it on hand until I can repair it. (it has sentimental value.) just don't expect modeling and the like with it.
I did watch the video until the end, even though I do have a short attention span. My way of getting around that is watching most videos at x2 speed :D
I have a 15+ years old all-in-one pc with approximately the same specs. It uses manjaro kde with no problems. Plasma KDE uses up approx. 700 Mb. My mother used it for work and web browsing for more than 10 years. She even records audio with USB DaC and microphone. That's the magic of Linux. But Linux is not only for old pc revivals. Try it on newer hardware and it becomes a blast.
My Desktop PC with a Ryzen 5800x, a Radeon 5700XT, 32gigs of RAM, and 14TB in assorted SSDs and HDDs has been running Garuda Linux for well over a year and I absolutely love it, haven't bothered to open Windows 10 on the small old SSD it's still installed to for more than a few minutes just to convert a few files and swap back. Heck, I've enjoyed it so much I have Garuda XFCE running on my 2013 Laptop and even that old underpowered thing runs like a charm. I've had a handful of issues over my time as a new Linux user but nothing that I couldn't overcome with a little searching and patience, and were mostly brought on by user error, having backups accessible from the Grub bootloader has helped massively for this too as I can be back up and running to the point right before my mistake in less than 5 minutes which saves mountains of frustration I would have needed to deal with on Windows including but not limited to a full re-install
"Better keyboard " I quote this so much! I sadly moved to a Chromebook from a Thinkpad T430 so I felt really the difference. I definitely took the Chromebook as a daily drive just for it's weight and better battery life (and the usb-c charger, but someone told me you can find adapters for most of the barrel jacks)
Something I noticed with old laptops as well. Was setting up two old machines, a Dell Latitude from 2001 and an Inspiron from ca 2005, and the Latitude had the better keyboard and better display even after so many years of use. (Sadly it's other specs make it more than obsolete) Truly shows how well built those old business machines were.
1:28 pay close attention to the chips on these cheap no brand Chinese ram sticks. If the markings on the chip is not crystal clear(smudged or worn off), or if the numbers don't match between chips, then it means these chips are recycled and are from different batch. I would not buy these rams sticks. The Chinese people will not miss any opportunity to extract every last bit of value from junk. There is the business of harvesting old ram chips from junk and then use them to make "new" ram sticks.
SSD’s make a huge difference to old PC’s. My daily driver is an “old” 2013 i5 Thinkpad X240, and with upgrades to a 1GB SSD and Ubuntu Linux it’s pretty good. I’m mainly using it for Python in Jupyter Notebook (browser-based) in case anyone is wondering. I usually have multiple browser tabs open simultaneously. It’s responsive and the keyboard is nice to type on. The OS is current and gets software updates daily. What’s not to like? It’s certainly better than my daughter’s Chromebook from last year.
Always fun to bring some new life to an old machine. I often have some old laptops around - been using a C2D laptop for a while during the lockdowns. Lubuntu, libre office, 720p UA-cam and emulation up to the first PlayStation is plenty of activities! Worked with 1080p monitor without any problems. I also revieved 2nd gen i5 Sony VAIO with Mint XFCE not so long ago. Now it is a web browsing and writing machine for an aspiring poet. Obviously, most of these things are only worth it if you got the laptop for free, as 100$ can get you a postleasing Ryzen 2300U/3300U (so, 4 cores, pretty powerful Vega iGPU) ThinkPad with 8GB RAM. And there is no upgrade to an old C2D laptop that can beat that, no matter the budget :) Multiple generations of dual core i5 laptops are even cheaper. Dual booting an older Windows (for x86 retro gaming compatibility) and modern light Linux distro (for safe web experience) might be a fun use case for a C2D laptop like that.
@@nezatrebovan Sure! Core 2 Duo - an older type of Intel CPU, popular over a decade ago. Thinkpad from the video uses one as well, a C2D T8100. New CPUs are not only faster, but sometimes support different instructions sets or lack proper drivers for older operating systems. So some software is easier to run on older CPUs. For example Ryzen CPUs officially only support Windows 10 and newer (aside for Linux, obviously).
This is such a good video My parents actually gave me an old toshiba satellite from 2007 with the same cpu as this think pad. This video has given me the inspiration to upgrade it and run link on it to do some typing and som programming
Yeah great video and more testing than usual. I find collecting old ThinkPads is addictive and the most interesting ones, certainly the best keyboards, are on the older ones. They also have a fascinating design history throughout, even the later Lenovo ThinkPad products which continue high-quality design not always found on their other lines. After using SSDs for a few years I find mechanical drives more reliable if not too worn. Windows 10 is not too bad on some of the 2012-era ThinkPads. I have also tried the desktop ThinkCentres but they aren't as durable as the ThinkPads.
My two laptops use Ubuntu. They were originally purchased in 2011 and 2013. All original hardware until last week then I put an SSD in the 2013 computer. I dont game, but they both do everything I need.
Great video! My friend taught me to make sure these oldies but goodies have 2+ cores for decent performance and you mentioned that right off the bat. My first choice for an older computer is Bodhi Linux because of it's EFL (Enlightenment Foundation Libraries) pedigree. Max out the RAM+SSD and you're good to go!
The core 2 line is still highly usable. I have a desktop and a laptop that are of this line. I also have a core 2 quad that can give even 1st and second gen i5 systems a challenge. Till we hit the point that software needs something in the instruction set not found in this chip (like what happened to the Pentium 3 line several years ago), for basic single tasks they will be just fine.
The 1st gen Core i weren't really faster CPU wise, the changes were mostly in the frontend. I also have a Core 2 era machine, but with a Xeon and oc'ed to 4.1 GHz and that can even keep up with the smaller 2nd gen i5
i play team fortress too with low settings but high frame rate on a 2007 macbook pro core 2 duo with 4gb of ram. it was the top of the line computer in its day and cost me almost $4000 in 2007, it had the high res display as well. due to the graphics card, most modern distros, while are able to be installed, can't get the drivers installed, maybe if i was more competent, but i tried. finally what worked though was MX Linux, i was able to install proprietary nvida drivers, and play team fortress 2 on steam on a computer from 2007, in 2022! pretty impressive. the computer is still useful for web browsing, watching movies and videos, and many many things, and with the high res 17" display, it's still a nice big screen. i can almost think of it as a very smart portable tv and media center, with plenty of i/o and nice backlit keyboard and magsafe!
I just put Linux on an old 3rd gen CORE Pentium laptop with 8GB. It is doing great at college for the web based stuff he has to do.
Which Linux Distro are you running ??
I had one of these. Gave it away years ago to a buddy that needed a computer. Love the keycaps on that keyboard.
Void Linux is a solid choice. My T420 uses Void Linux and I've never had an issue with it. Ever. Once configured, it just works.
hows the battery life? im thinking about installing void on my x1 carbon
@@damien523 Well, this t420 came with an old, original battery and it still holds nearly a 2 hour charge under basic use; watching YT videos and such.
@@adibemaxwell6111 thats great
@@adibemaxwell6111 if you haven't already, try installing tlp. It might squeeze some more out of it
I had used an old Acer Travelmate from 2005 until early 2024, 150GB HDD, 2GB RAM, Celeron dual-core 1.67GHz CPU, as my mail mule, running MX Linux 32-bit without a problem. Until the keyboard malfunctioned.
Replacing the HDD with an SSD would do far more for performance than the 4GB of ram. That's by far the most important upgrade you can make.
I know that most later model Core 2 CPUs had a 8 GB RAM limit, but 8GB and an SSD ( it's a SATA interface, right?) would make it seem modern with the right Linux install.
The problem is that if you want to go online there is so much bloatware on the web that basically everything eats RAM.
I have 32 GB of RAM and with 10-20 tabs open it goes to 90% and sometimes crashes the entire PC on all browsers I tried it's the same. CPU is usually up to around 50% sometimes even 10% while RAM I am afraid that it will fry one day ...
Ever since 2019 I kept updating my RAM but what I learned it's useless. There is so much garbage with lots of apps and websites running in background that all act like datamining viruses. Every time I start my PC I waste my time end-tasking bunch of s--t 1st before I can do anything ...
Before 2019 I could run everything on a potato PC with just 8GB RAM and SSD. Today it's like I don't have any of that.
Even now writing this message stutters like a mofo ... can't keep up with my fast typing at all text on screen lagging behind like crazy.
@@minmogrovingstrongandhealthy I have like 50 tabs open in Chrome on my 32GB Win10 PC and only 31% of the RAM is consumed - what kind of pages do you keep open to reach 90%?
So this. Basically I stopped watching the video at the point when he mentioned that he used a traditional HDD although an SSD would have been dirt cheap. Rule #1 with old laptops: get an SSD.
@@minmogrovingstrongandhealthy Dude, something is wrong on your end. Yeah, the web is bloated AF, but what you described is an order of magnitude worse than the norm. 32 GB of RAM is plenty enough for most people. I run multiple browsers at the same time (I'm a web developer), each with dozens of tabs, and still most of the time I'm at 34 GB out of my 64 GB. And I have other programs opened too. And I'm on Windows 10 too!
I'm using windows 7 pro for my acer aspire 4920g from 2007 ,,, it still running web browsing very well and also old triple A games like max payne 2 , farcry , also fallout 3 but with way down settings ,, i'm in the third world country,, so electronics doesn't come cheap,, we get by with old electronics 😊
The old Thinkpads had several standout features that still, to this day don't seem to have been emulated by other laptop makers:
- Indestructible hinge design. Never breaks away from the base of the case. Screen stays in the position you adjust it to.
- Pointing stick. I hate touchpads, then because they were garbage and now because I have a hand tremor.
- Exterior of the case had a "rubberized" texture which made it easier to hang on to and less prone to skate off a surface to certain damage on impact.
- Reasonable keyboard design. My 2cents anyway.
The problem with rubberized texture is that after a decade or so it gets all sticky. Not sure about ThinkPads, though, I had a Dell with that problem. Awful.
Was a massive fan of the pointing stick on Thinkpads, but the trackpad on modern MacBooks is a winner, large surface and super accurate. Haven't seen anything come close on non-Apple laptops though. Even use the external trackpad on desktop over a traditional optical mouse now.
The texture on Thinkpads holds smells really easily, which can be an issue with the used market of Thinkpads, very easy to tell if a previous owner was a smoker.
@@sp0el I have an IBM Thinkpad from 1998, and two Lenovo T420s from 2012, and none of them suffer from the sticky coating syndrome.
I have plenty of other devices that _do_ suffer from it...
@@sarkybugger5009 Good to hear that IBM/Lenovo have some magic ingredient in their formula then. Some models still suffer from the stickness, as quick google search shows, though. And some people on YT use magic erasers and polish to restore their laptops. Didn't think about doing that for my Dell.
During the pandemic I upgraded a Dell Latitude 131L as a hobby. I put a 64-bit 2.1 GHZ dual core CPU , 150 GB SSD, and went from 512mb to 4GB of memory and replaced Windows XP with Mint 20.2, and it was all done very cheap. Performance? Well there was a definite improvement, but video streaming on it depends on a lot of factors. I personally did not find Chromium any better than Firefox. In fact Firefox did better with UA-cam. As far a movies it was coin toss on whether they were watchable. Letterbox wide-screeen format worked alright since it used less of the screen. The battery was pretty close to death. Why this would be an issue with a laptop that you would leave plugged in anyways, especially if your using an ethernet connection is beyond me. In summary, I enjoy using it either as a way to look up material for something I'm doing on my desktop pc without interupting it, or just to enjoy doing something on a device others may consider useless. Too much abandoned utility in this world.
Those old dell latitudes are meant to last!
@@liamjewell62 I just thought of something I checked with Bing's AI Copilot. There are cheap mini PCs and I asked it if in lieu of getting a keyboard and monitor if you could use a lite weight Linux distro on an old laptop with an app that would allow it to be a terminal for the mini PC. I wont go into the details, but basically it said yes. That would be a fantastic project to watch.
T61, 8gb, 128gb, win11, usb2x3, usb3x4, the usb3 speed is 150mbps via express card, T9500cpu. Working perfectly, task manager always on to monitor cpu usage, handles everything very very well.
Wow you maxed that thing out
@@liamjewell62 it's great for web browsing and playing movies etc, it's not very powerful compared to modern ThinkPads but it's really special in looks and in use, the SSD was the biggest upgrade, boots windows 11 in seconds.
So cool when Linux brings back decades old laptops/pcs, back to life, making them snappy fast again.. until you open the web browser 😅
I still use a T420 (with a SSD). Perfectly fine for all my mobile computing needs, for more demanding tasks I'd want to use a desktop PC anyway. It doesn't even feel slow, XFCE runs great.
I have a T420 and the keyboard is awesome. I wish Lenovo hadn't switched to the chicklet design.
@@johnmadison3472 That's true, the keyboard feels great, not nearly as fatiguing as modern style laptop keyboards. Sometimes I feel like modern laptops are too thin and elegant for their own good. Many have heat and battery issues.
Haha yeah. I have a t430s and its great. I even dock it to use as a desktop. Cinnamon is fine on it and its what I'm currently using but I may switch to xfce just out of preference.
thanks for picking the best linux distro
Its definitely one of my favorites!
The keyboards on these were amazing. You could type forever on them and they just felt great. A hidden benefit from older, less powerful hardware is since it's slower, you are limited in your multitasking and are basically forced to focus on what you're doing.
I still use a Thinkpad T22 from around 2003 with a Pentium III CPU running at 700 MHz with 512 MB RAM and an IDE SSD on which Gentoo Linux is installed with an i3 desktop.
A couple of times a month, I SSH into my home server to write BASH or Python code with a couple of terminal sessions open, I have my email open in mutt on a second desktop and a console music player going on the third desktop - with overhead left to run a few other things too.
It has a great keyboard and it is just a very peaceful and distraction-free way to enjoy my computing occasionally.
You can buy a desktop keyboard like the thinkpad, trackpoint and everything, lenovo sells them.
Best method is to just not install a graphical environment at all. I understand that's not always an option depending on what you're don't ng but if you can do it it's great for avoiding distractions. Second best option is xterm in full screen mode. Alt+Enter and it goes borderless full screen.
Tiling window manager or compositor helps alpt with multitasking 😊
I have a laptop that is 15 years old .... and still running Ok with Linux... did some Memory and HDD to SSD upgrades ... 👍👍👍
Thinkpads and linux. My fav duo!
Agreed.. mine too :)
6:39 isnt that this drone spot where Mr. Steele goes regularly?
One things is very crucial to understand regarding hardware. You absolutely cannot compare computers from different era. For instance if you say 15 years old top of the line processor X is on par as model entry level model Y from like two years ago. They can be comparable when measuring some direct calculation based with some benchmark program etc. HOWEVER things can turn completely around if comparing for instance playing UA-cam videos. Now that couple year old entry level model can do playback possibly with like 5% processor load on 4K 60hz where older X model could struggle to run even 1080p 30Hz video. This is where many processor features come in and if someone is wondering why that example I just mentioned is possible if processors are essentially same when comparing calculation vise. But this newer model can easily support hardware encoding. This is very critical to understand when wondering why some older hardware seems to struggle with seemingly trivial task. Like that Chromebook in video can easily playback pretty much every single media without issues, where the old X61 absolutely can't. Don't get me wrong, I use a lot of old and new hardware and in many cases old hardware can do all the necessary stuff. But you can easily run into seemingly odd performance issues.
They might have similar performance for some tests, but add tasks that make use of newer instructions and the things change quickly. Same with video decoding.
sometimes you can cheat a bit, eg with h264ify plugin for youtube videos, often helps with older video hardware
I love my mid 2011 Macbook Air, it is a perfectly usable with Linux despite being less than $100 on the used market these days. It is a genuinely portable laptop even by todays standards, it has a solid keyboard and touchpad, is made of metal and has exceptional build quality because it was quite an expensive computer back then, though as time went on you could really tell the MacBook Air became a budget model. I use it for gaming with Steam link pretty frequently and it is wild to see Cyberpunk 2077 on that 1440x900 display downsampled from 4K on my desktop, and I don't notice any lag either.
I gotta get my hands on an old mac one of these days
My mom absolutely hates it when I try to get these old laptops. She thinks that I have enough of them already. (I have a dell inspiron 1000, an acer nitro 5, and some old broken cromebook) they are super fun to mess with. Especially the inspiron, which was designed to run windows xp. I don't think enough people understand what it means to be a tech enthusiast. It's not all about the high end stuff.
As a game collector and enjoyer, i can kinda relate
Which Linux Distro are you running ??
Amen bro
Still using windows 7 with security update in 2024, everything is well integrated and usable for work and more. But I like the way you do.
Lots of good lightweight choices out there - Alpine, TinyCore, Slax and many more. It's been fun to watch computing evolve. I started in 1974. Yeah, I'm that old.
Same here, in fact I still have a C64, 1040ST and a 2600 hooked up and use. Main rig is my RHEL/Fedora dual boot workstation. But those oldies are great. And another fella here that keeps hardware until the magic smoke angel takes it to hardware heaven. Linux and BSD make that possible while still staying current (SSL on ancient OSes is painful to make happen --- looking at you SunOS and Workbench).
Then I hope you still have an old terminal and some punch cards!
Exactly what I dream of when I get old, be a tech veteran without losing his touches.
Pong doesn't count.
You're only a bit older than me - I programmed my first computer back in 1983 on a college day release course with my first job in the telecoms industry. It was assembly language programming on a Z80 CPU.
But I did maintain a very creaky DEC PDP-11 running RSX-11 in a customer's call centre for a while!
Running the smaller brother X61s upgraded to 4GB as my daily driver with Archlinux. 🙂
nice!
What made this video watchable to the end, for me, was the clear, slower talking, instead of the fast talking on most other channels. This is amazing for an older laptop to just use for linux, maybe an SSD would make it even more useful. Great video
I'm still using my 2013 HP laptop on Arch to this day. But it is considerably more powerful than those laptops you showed on the video. I love how Linux systems still support many cases of older hardware, keeping it relevant to the modern age. In fact, the only thing really keeping these machines "obsolete" is bloated modern web desig making even simple websites require lots of computing power unnecessarily.
Linux is beautiful both for old and new machines. I have a laptop w/ Ryzen 5 5600H and 16 GB of DDR4 and this bad guy was CHOKING in Windows bloat.
Have Arch on it now.
I'm beyond thankful for lightweight linux distros because they saved my old 2012 laptop from becoming landfill. I had to move a few years back and I didn't want to rely on my phone all the time for media so I dug up my old inspiron from a decade ago and put in an old cheapo SSD I had lying around. Given that my financial situation collapsed in the 2010s I now can use that laptop as my TV, music player, and even a secondary PC when my friends need tech support. I legit can't imagine life without it and had it not been for enthusiasts' hard work I would've never been able to have the life I have now.
My daily driver is a 2012 T430 3rd gen i7 working perfectly at the same speed as my last company notebook with 8th gen i5 (both 4 cores / 8 Threads), the only benefit of the newer laptop was a better power efficiency. Even the 2nd gen i7 was equally fast, but has worse build in GPU. also the coreduo is working good with enough performance. The biggest problem you have with the old laptops is with the accu (no problem if used with the powerbrick anyway) and perhaps a weak bios battery. Push the RAM to the limit and if possible use a SSD and you will never understand why you needed a "modern" laptop. for 100 to 200$ (including all upgrades like RAM, SSD and 3rd party battery) you will have a powerful notebook with Win7, win 10, Linux or as a hackintosh.
Don't forget to update your thermal paste which will be dryed out for sure.
@purplegill10 hopefully your financial situation is better now!
It’s amazing what an ssd can do
My daily driver is a 2012 T430s 3rd Gen i5 running Windows 10. I also play some games on it too (3d AAA games up until early 2010s), I cap them at 30 fps because it only has integrated Intel HD 4000 graphics.
Back in two oh one two?
I really enjoyed the video. Keep going Liam. Btw, what package is the one you're using here: 10:13 i'd like to monitor mi linux laptop specs as well. Thanks!
I love how Void is slowly becoming the new Arch.
For my software engineering peeps… yes VSCode, Neovim, and Terminator are available on Void Linux. I checked the repo list on their site.
I just bought the X220 for the price of $15. It's in the rough shape but it's still functional and just needed a keyboard replacement. I put whatever SSD and RAM I have at my disposal and with $30 I have a very functional laptop that I can use whenever I need a Windows/Linux machine (I use Mac as my daily driver). These old computers really don't deserve to be on the e-waste, they just need a better software to keep on chugging.
I just bought a t480 untested for $60. fingers crossed it works. even if it doesn't work it was still worth it, the ram and ssd alone are worth 60
The X220 is basically in a perfect spot. in 2011 it already had very modern hardware, supporting modern OSes, but is still a proper business machine that can be user serviced.
This thing is the ideal low end programming needed for IOT or any sort of Arduino programming, I was thinking of getting something like a t420 or X220, but this video convinced me that even a good old X61 can get the work done, this one goes to my electronics bench, all for the 4:3.
I have a zero % attention span, but I always watch good content to the end to give the channel an analytics boost.
I have a 25 year old HP/Compaq "laptop" with a "Made for Windows Vista" sticker. (The sticker no longer matches the OS). I autoboot into an Atari ST emulator, and use it as a16 bit gaming computer. It's a Core 2 Duo with 4GB of memory (DDR2, so going to 8bg is out of my snack bracket - at $200 to $500 for an 8GB kit.) but it works fine for emulating a 68000 based system. I never throw out old tech, India already has enough of our tech-waste (and the associated health issues effect us all). I always find good reasons to keep stuff.
Hell, I still have my very first computer (a TI-99/4A purchased in 1982!) Gets booted up at least a couple times a week.
Thrusting obsolescence on things that no longer suit their original build purpose, is a deficit of the imagination. (Pushing 70 myself, so that has particular personal relevance)
Fav on the TI was space invader & parsec.
@@weewaapharmacy Today, thanks to a prolific Homebrew community we have a Zaxxon that is absolutely indistinguishable from the arcade, a platable Super Mario Brothers demo that matches level one of the Nintendo original, and an Alex Kidd clone that could be playing on a Sega. A couple weeks ago Ghostbusters was released rivaling the C64 and Atari versions.
Yup, TI Invaders and Pasec were amazing, but the story continues...
nice
I upgraded my old Samsung "NP-RC-S03DE" step by step.
1. Replace the old HDD with an SSD and installed Linux Mint, Cinnamon Edition
2. Upgraded the RAM from 6GB (4+2) to 16 GB RAM
3. (Maybe replace the GT 540 by something faster but still low TDP, since the GPU can be replaced)
I think the i7 2630HQ is already the best CPU I can get on that one and I am uncertain if the CPU is on a socket or soldered.
I forgot Samsung even makes laptops. Sounds like a pretty beffy machine for 2012 standards.
@@liamjewell62 Indeed it is. I bought this one 2011. Wasn`t cheap but well made. It even has two ports for 2,5'' mass storage.
Its my backup system.
In 2013 I got an Acer C710 Chrome book. I flashed the bios with seabios. Installed a 500 gigabyte Samsung Evo 960 Sata SSD, 6 gigs of ram. I use Bodhi Linux, with the Moksha desktop environment. Still using it in 2023. ♥️😊
Last time I checked systemd boots faster than runit. I used to use Void and I like it, but I highly doubt there is a huge performance difference to other distros. Even DE doesn't make a huge difference. RAM usage of KDE Plasma vs a window manager is in the realm of 1-200MB probably less. If you don't use it for web browsing, this laptop can be fine for word processing, programming that doesn't need heavy resources, and lofi music and art. M1 Macbooks are looking pretty great with how Asahi Linux development is going and the battery life is great. Idk about the longevity of the hardware though.
Thanks for doing this. It’s nice to see getting more use of older hardware and keeping it out of landfills.
I have finally found a use for my Lenovo ThinkPad X200
I still using my old PC with a i3 3220, 8gbs of ram and a intel hd 2500. On windows the performance is not that good, so I've been using linux exclusively for few years now. Today I use Window Managers(Wayland compositors) and the experience and performance are amazing for such an old hardware. I recently installed cachyos and it made watching videos on youtube a lot better with less cpu usage, something that I could never figure it out how to make it work under vanilla arch even though I follow carefully the wiki. About gaming, I been recently doing a lot of retro gaming with retroarch and the performance its good on the majority of cores available, except PS2 core, but some games do work using the PCSX2 emulator.
Weird, a computer with any i3 should run great on Windows 10. Have you tried an SSD?
Just realized the license is open source. Nice
I upgraded a 16 or 17-year-old Dell. I replaced the hard drive with an SSD and upgraded the RAM to 4G. It's running the standard Linux Mint, and it runs quite well.
Thanks for the video.
Absolutely. If you can pick up and old Core 2 Duo machine from 2006-2007-ish with a 64-bit CPU with 4GB RAM and an SSD containing Linux, it can be a perfectly viable daily driver machine.
can you tell me how to upgrade my 2007 Dell Vostros 1500 with an SSD?
@@lauriroberts322 you take out the old drive and put in the new one. Obviously assuming it uses SATA, which is most likely.
Crunchbang Linux was my go to on the X60S
idk why but since 2023 youtube started recommend me small youtuber and im glad of that, there is lot of good little youtuber like you, also im watching you on a linux mint, 13years old laptop (originally 2gb ram upgraded to 4) with intel pentium t4500 x), well thanks for this quality video, i hope you get a lot of subscriber, you already get me with this video ;)
I'm watching this video on a 2011 mac book air running kubuntu and honestly, its the greatest experience you get for 40€
I would also like to mention Puppy Linux. It is available as 64 and 32 Bit version and runs fine on almost any old hardware, e.g. on the small netbooks with Intel Atom CPU and 1 or 2 GB of RAM, which are otherwise almost useless today. Use it on my Lenovo Ideapad S10 with a 256GB SSD and it works perfect.
Agree, Puppy Linux runs on lots of older hardware
Tried Puppy on an old Asus EeePC, and while it worked from a USB, it didn't when I installed it for some reason. Had to find a lightweight homebrew XP for that one...
Upgrade storage to an SSD, my dad put one in his ancient dinosaur Macbook and it really gave it another lease on life.
And my brother still has one of these, it was upgraded from windows 7 to 10 and has had its RAM upgraded, and its hard drive has also been swapped for an SSD.
I still use my Inspiron N4110 running windows 7 as my daily. I don't do much more than use it as a TV running you tube 90+% of the time, but it's still quicker than my wife's windows 10 laptop, and plays you tube videos over HDMI without skipping unlike my kids windows 11 laptop.
That thinkpad would be perfect for ethical hacking. The tools are lightweight, unless you're cracking passwords, but I can get the hashes on that and take them home to my desktop.
I still have my old Asus EeePC 904HD. It's slow asf but I put Xubuntu on it and it helps me wherever I go to fix other computers problems. It also serves me as a spare PC if I do something stupid with my main PC. I'm not a fan of Linux (way too complicated for me, I'm a Windows guy) but I have to admit it's very light and ultra stable. Perfect for what I do with it =)
I really wish people would stop saying increasing UA-cam resolution quality is pointless if your screen isn't as high as the resolution set.
That would only be correct if the same bitrate was used for all resolution options.
I watched this video and expected to see 500k - 1mil subscribers. Very high quality video and editing. Great job!
Thnaks!
This year UA-cam startet to recommend me small channels like these more often and I love it because there are a lot of gems
Everyone needs to start somewhere also there is the factor of luck too. Years ago I use to be a partner and while YT promised me promotions I got nothing, matter of fact my subs didn't even got notifications of my activities and sometime even crashed the page when they clicked on my video or channel. It's like I was shadow-banned.
Other friends reported the same things. To the point all smaller channels basically got erased out of existance. We use to actually make content and got nuked while some reaction bots and other nonsense people were spammed everywhere.
YT spammed those more so as bots spammed them too. Most of the channels today that have millions of subs are all thanks to bots and not real people. Usually 100k or even bellow are people the other numbers are bots and or dead accounts. The view counts are also fake.
Computers like this are often more powerful than chromebooks of prices on an order of magnitude higher
bro is the definition of underated
you have earnt a sub and watcher
I'm on board with the SSD upgrade. I have two old HP's and one Acer that now have SSD'd, with 4GB DDR2, and Linux Mint; what a positive difference.
yup!
My ten year old notebook PC runs better now with Debian 12.1 ---and KDE than it did ten years ago with Windows. It is a joy to use.
I wish that Lenovo (or anyone) would make new computers just like this.
It depends on what aspects about the computer you like, but Framework makes a good laptop. You can swap the ports out on the side, it's very easy to repair and all replacement parts are available, and they released full board schematics as well as 3D prints so you could give the laptop mobo new life as a SFF desktop. They're coming out (or perhaps already released, I'm not up to date) with a new model that has 6 expansion ports, plus an additional large one on the back that could be used to install a GPU, more Battery, more Storage, or anything. There is also a third-party scene around making expansion cards for the laptop.
They do. Business laptops (like this one used to be) are very upgradable and use modern hardware. They're really expensive though just like this would have been when it came out.
You really don't value a portable laptop being thin and light? Or the 16:9 aspect ratio?
@@youreyesarebleeding1368 only having 4 ports on the framework is very limiting, my old 12" ThinkPad has 3usb 3.0, Displayport, VGA (that can go), Ethernet (surprisingly useful when working with routers and old tech as I do occasionally) a card reader and charge port, plus another 3 usb ports thru an expresscard expansion module. If someone came up with a dual USB A or C expansion card I'd be a lot happier with the framework concept, but it seems they sized it just barely too small for that :(
@@MJ_M There are other things besides watching movies on it.
nice to see Void Linux do the net. could try it sometime.
There is something so satisfying about these very simple and casual videos that is just so bingeable!
My man really hit up the Three Mile Incident as a test 🤯🤯🤯
I think mobile core 2 duos are socketed so it may be possible to upgrade it slightly. And it may have an express or pc card slot or maybe you could use the wifi card slot
They’re socketed on thicker machines like the T61, but the X series has always had soldered CPUs.
@@SebisRandomTech yo even sebi is here! nice!
The T7100 in it came on socket P and FCBGA6. The first is socketed and replacable, the latter is soldered.
But the X61 has two miniPCI express slots and a CardBus slot. There are even official wifi cards for it. Two of them even offering 802.11n
Looking at the thinkpad wiki, there are BIOS mods that allow SATA 2 speed (which is there hardware-wise, but disabled by software), a CPU pinmod that allows up to 3.6 GHz (by running 266 MHz/1066 MT instead of 200 MHz/800 MT FSB) and one person even soldered a T9500 into it.
Tossed a ssd in my hp-2000, 1.6ghz dual core, 3gb ram. Tossed Linux mint on it, and Ubuntu. Works fine for web browsing and office stuff.
The displays on these older laptops are also sometimes better looking than those of sub-$200 laptops. I have a Vaio from 2002 that I use for period correct photo editing using cameras from that era, and the built-in display, while only being 1024x768, looks far better than the cheap panels used on low-end Chromebooks and S-mode machines.
In computer sales, I order refurbished business computers for customers over letting them walk out with ultra-cheap new laptops. They are just...bad. Really bad. I'll usually put them with 6th or 7th gen Intel machines, though you can comfortably go back to 2nd gen and be good to go in Win10 for most tasks (good rec on the X220).
The displays on business laptops are generally a letdown, especially for this vintage. Although nice high-res options exist, companies used to default to the cheapest TN garbage on offer. I have a X61s which is a nice machine, but I never use it for its awful, dim, 1024x768 screen.
I don't why putting life back in the old hardware gives me so much satisfaction.
These really were awesome machines and fun to mod too! My wife is still using my old X61s that I modded back in the day with a beautiful 1400x1050 IPS screen, a hidden dip switch under the battery to overclock the FSB from 200MHz to 266MHz when required, a modded BIOS to enable full SATA2 speed among other things and the usual upgrades like a SSD and 6GB of RAM (8GB would be the max). The most important upgrade (at least back then) IMHO was the screen because the original 1024x768 TN panel was an absolute deal breaker since I actually had to get some work done on it. The upgraded screen came from a X60 tablet and even to this day it looks just amazing :)
Man! I knew VOID but did not see that they also still have a 32 Bit branch. I will give this a go.
I installed Linux Mint 21 (2022 version) on a laptop made in 2006. Fortunately, the laptop had 4Gb Ram, SATA, and Gigabit LAN. The only upgrade required was a SSD. Linux Mint installed and updated like a dream. Job done 10/2022.
I am running Ubuntu 18 on a 2007 Dell Vostros 1500. Windows stopped working on it so I said this is the time to try Linux and now Linus is all I use.....
Nice!
lol linus XD
I've got an X61 Tablet that I absolutely refuse to part ways with. It's a slightly slower T7700 CPU, but getting it to 6GB of RAM and a 240GB SSD turned it into something that can, like you said, really easily beat the plague of N4020-based 11.6" members of the Future e-waste of America Society. I've used a debloated Windows 10 on it successfully, but settled on Mint XFCE for the reasons you described, although I am kind of tempted to dig it out and give Void a shot now. That bump to 6GB was pricey, around $25 for a 4GB DDR2 SODIMM, but the added headroom was worth every penny. That's really what made Windows 10 usable.
I’ve had an ASUs 11.6 N4020 laptop for about a year and a half now. It has some sort of Windows on a emmc but it is upgradable with NVME. I popped in some generic 256GB NVME and ran Kali Linux on it for over a year, but recently changed to Devuan and couldn’t be happier. Battery lasts for about 10h when I just browse internet and use it for programming and server maintenance via ssh. It is not my only computer, so for gaming or compiling I can use my i5-13600kf based PC. For the rest the N4020 is fine.
Obsolete after 16 years? I'm sorry, I thought this was America.
Windows 10 is not usable. An OS that requires you to check and possibly re-enter your settings every time a Microsoft update is forced upon you is not one you can trust.
Instead of fighting against Windows to de-bloat it, your time would be much better spent learning more about Linux.
@@terrydaktyllus1320 How well is support for BattlEye and EAC nowadays?
@@HappyBeezerStudios I've no idea what BattlEye is, I've never used it and therefore it's unimportant in my computer world to the point where I don't plan on spending time doing "homework" to find out what it is. If you want a better response to that part of the question then you'll need to provide more detail.
The only "EAC" I know of is "Exact Audio Copy" which was a freeware tool that I used many years ago to rip CDs into FLAC format on Windows. I no longer use Windows and therefore don't use this tool either - there are perfectly good tools on Linux which do the same thing.
Again, if that's not what you meant by "EAC" then you'll have to improve your communication skills and explain yourself better if you want more definitive and accurate responses from me.
Over to you...
My laptop of choice is a Dell Precision M4700 from 2013. Still a very fast laptop.
Void is one of my all time favorite distros, love that sudo xbps-install. Great video!
Linux is really a Necromancer.
I really like this form factor, I wish laptop manufacturers made more like it. The closest things I can find on the market today are 3:2 ultrabooks but these always lack ports and are not upgradeable.
I'm actually very surprised at how well it performed, it is really beyond usable, not just like usable but mostly slow, this is usable and somewhat snappy.
yeha me too
I have one of these I use fairly frequently, personally im running mint on an ssd. The 4:3 aspect ratio makes it ideal for torrenting old anime and cable shows. It also proved a novel way of experiencing the SM64 PC Port. As you mentioned they work quite well for schoolwork. Glad to see some appreciation for these old machines
I also have an oldass thinkpad for watching vintage anime
it's so cozy, I happened to give it an IPS screen and while my modern laptop's color destroys it, the thinkpad is still great even though it's ancient
I use rtorrent on one of my Thinkpads and basically use it as a seedbox in addition to just being a home server. I've never tried watching anything on it, because the display is quite bad, but is possible to upgrade. So, typically I just download stuff to it, seed for a while, and clone it to my main PC when I want to watch it. Do you have to worry about what torrents you download? I'm surprised that Thinkpad T-61 can handle the codec, will it work with h264 in standard def? What happens if you try to watch something like a 720p or a 1080p video in h264? I'm guessing h265 is likely out the window; although most of these old shows and DVD rips probably aren't in h265.
@@youreyesarebleeding1368 idk man mines a 220, plenty of power to render 1080p video
Old PCs like this are actually still pretty usable even on their original operating system. I've got a laptop lying around running XP service pack. 3. And found a chrome designed for windows XP and get me like a version 109 or something like that and it's actually pretty usable
Neat!
I had good results with antiX Linux running IceWM on a similar old LG laptop - it feels a little bare but it works fine. I even added xfce4-power-manager to dim the screen :)
AntiX is awesome, it's just about the only thing capable of making old Atom powered netbooks somewhat responsive.
The most interesting part for me is that the removable battery...😃😃
Until recently, I was daily driving this exact laptop at my work as a research assistant. i went for a used 128GB SSD, and a ghost-spectre Windows 10 install.
It surprisingly does well to process documents, edit excel sheets, and even some slight multitasking (I used an external monitor for dual screen use.). it is still running, but the screen gave up, so will leave it on hand until I can repair it. (it has sentimental value.) just don't expect modeling and the like with it.
I did watch the video until the end, even though I do have a short attention span. My way of getting around that is watching most videos at x2 speed :D
I have a 15+ years old all-in-one pc with approximately the same specs. It uses manjaro kde with no problems. Plasma KDE uses up approx. 700 Mb. My mother used it for work and web browsing for more than 10 years. She even records audio with USB DaC and microphone. That's the magic of Linux.
But Linux is not only for old pc revivals. Try it on newer hardware and it becomes a blast.
How can you watch UA-cam😅.
@@myfranci560 ??
@@rawmaterials3909 ur so is lighter than youtube lol
@@myfranci560 ... and?
My Desktop PC with a Ryzen 5800x, a Radeon 5700XT, 32gigs of RAM, and 14TB in assorted SSDs and HDDs has been running Garuda Linux for well over a year and I absolutely love it, haven't bothered to open Windows 10 on the small old SSD it's still installed to for more than a few minutes just to convert a few files and swap back.
Heck, I've enjoyed it so much I have Garuda XFCE running on my 2013 Laptop and even that old underpowered thing runs like a charm.
I've had a handful of issues over my time as a new Linux user but nothing that I couldn't overcome with a little searching and patience, and were mostly brought on by user error, having backups accessible from the Grub bootloader has helped massively for this too as I can be back up and running to the point right before my mistake in less than 5 minutes which saves mountains of frustration I would have needed to deal with on Windows including but not limited to a full re-install
i was using a librebooted x60 with void in 2019. it's got its use!
"Better keyboard " I quote this so much! I sadly moved to a Chromebook from a Thinkpad T430 so I felt really the difference.
I definitely took the Chromebook as a daily drive just for it's weight and better battery life (and the usb-c charger, but someone told me you can find adapters for most of the barrel jacks)
Chrome OS, like Google Android, just turns a portable computing device into a surveillance tool for Google.
Something I noticed with old laptops as well. Was setting up two old machines, a Dell Latitude from 2001 and an Inspiron from ca 2005, and the Latitude had the better keyboard and better display even after so many years of use. (Sadly it's other specs make it more than obsolete)
Truly shows how well built those old business machines were.
it looks way better and cooler than most if not all crap they do these days, including Lenovo itself
1:28 pay close attention to the chips on these cheap no brand Chinese ram sticks. If the markings on the chip is not crystal clear(smudged or worn off), or if the numbers don't match between chips, then it means these chips are recycled and are from different batch. I would not buy these rams sticks. The Chinese people will not miss any opportunity to extract every last bit of value from junk. There is the business of harvesting old ram chips from junk and then use them to make "new" ram sticks.
Interesting. The ram seems to be working fine so far but I'll keep that in mind.
What an excellent distro Void is, Alpine too. I would have loved for you to showcase OpenBSD too
I gotta try bsd one of these days for sure!
Helps a lot that this is 64-bit. You can run Debian on something older, but browsers etc. ore limited for 32-bit.
Toshiba Philippines. Proudly made in Philippines
I used to use a laptop like that for a while, and it only had one GB of ram the three adtional GBs really helped it
SSD’s make a huge difference to old PC’s. My daily driver is an “old” 2013 i5 Thinkpad X240, and with upgrades to a 1GB SSD and Ubuntu Linux it’s pretty good. I’m mainly using it for Python in Jupyter Notebook (browser-based) in case anyone is wondering. I usually have multiple browser tabs open simultaneously. It’s responsive and the keyboard is nice to type on. The OS is current and gets software updates daily. What’s not to like? It’s certainly better than my daughter’s Chromebook from last year.
Always fun to bring some new life to an old machine. I often have some old laptops around - been using a C2D laptop for a while during the lockdowns. Lubuntu, libre office, 720p UA-cam and emulation up to the first PlayStation is plenty of activities! Worked with 1080p monitor without any problems. I also revieved 2nd gen i5 Sony VAIO with Mint XFCE not so long ago. Now it is a web browsing and writing machine for an aspiring poet.
Obviously, most of these things are only worth it if you got the laptop for free, as 100$ can get you a postleasing Ryzen 2300U/3300U (so, 4 cores, pretty powerful Vega iGPU) ThinkPad with 8GB RAM. And there is no upgrade to an old C2D laptop that can beat that, no matter the budget :) Multiple generations of dual core i5 laptops are even cheaper.
Dual booting an older Windows (for x86 retro gaming compatibility) and modern light Linux distro (for safe web experience) might be a fun use case for a C2D laptop like that.
Can you clarify what C2D means?
@@nezatrebovan Sure! Core 2 Duo - an older type of Intel CPU, popular over a decade ago. Thinkpad from the video uses one as well, a C2D T8100.
New CPUs are not only faster, but sometimes support different instructions sets or lack proper drivers for older operating systems. So some software is easier to run on older CPUs. For example Ryzen CPUs officially only support Windows 10 and newer (aside for Linux, obviously).
This is such a good video
My parents actually gave me an old toshiba satellite from 2007 with the same cpu as this think pad. This video has given me the inspiration to upgrade it and run link on it to do some typing and som programming
Awesome!
Great video of a valuable project. Old Lenovo ThinkPad bricks just can't be beat!
It’s insane how back in 2007 4GB of ram was way more than enough to surf the web and watch UA-cam videos.
fun fact: watched that vid while changing termal paste in my maptop (2019) that also runs on linux :)
Modifying the bios with Middleton's BIOS. It enables SATA-II, disables the MiniPCIe whitelist.
Yeah great video and more testing than usual. I find collecting old ThinkPads is addictive and the most interesting ones, certainly the best keyboards, are on the older ones. They also have a fascinating design history throughout, even the later Lenovo ThinkPad products which continue high-quality design not always found on their other lines. After using SSDs for a few years I find mechanical drives more reliable if not too worn. Windows 10 is not too bad on some of the 2012-era ThinkPads. I have also tried the desktop ThinkCentres but they aren't as durable as the ThinkPads.
My two laptops use Ubuntu. They were originally purchased in 2011 and 2013.
All original hardware until last week then I put an SSD in the 2013 computer.
I dont game, but they both do everything I need.
Great video! My friend taught me to make sure these oldies but goodies have 2+ cores for decent performance and you mentioned that right off the bat. My first choice for an older computer is Bodhi Linux because of it's EFL (Enlightenment Foundation Libraries) pedigree. Max out the RAM+SSD and you're good to go!
I'm still using a x200 with Win8 and an SSD. Perfectly fine for browsing and PCB design.
The core 2 line is still highly usable. I have a desktop and a laptop that are of this line. I also have a core 2 quad that can give even 1st and second gen i5 systems a challenge. Till we hit the point that software needs something in the instruction set not found in this chip (like what happened to the Pentium 3 line several years ago), for basic single tasks they will be just fine.
The 1st gen Core i weren't really faster CPU wise, the changes were mostly in the frontend.
I also have a Core 2 era machine, but with a Xeon and oc'ed to 4.1 GHz and that can even keep up with the smaller 2nd gen i5
i play team fortress too with low settings but high frame rate on a 2007 macbook pro core 2 duo with 4gb of ram. it was the top of the line computer in its day and cost me almost $4000 in 2007, it had the high res display as well.
due to the graphics card, most modern distros, while are able to be installed, can't get the drivers installed, maybe if i was more competent, but i tried. finally what worked though was MX Linux, i was able to install proprietary nvida drivers, and play team fortress 2 on steam on a computer from 2007, in 2022! pretty impressive.
the computer is still useful for web browsing, watching movies and videos, and many many things, and with the high res 17" display, it's still a nice big screen. i can almost think of it as a very smart portable tv and media center, with plenty of i/o and nice backlit keyboard and magsafe!