Hey Psivewri! By shear coincidence the laptop that I am using to comment and watch your video now is a Dell Inspiron 9400 with an Intel Centrino Duo processor that came out sometime in 2006. I use it as a college laptop and it runs Windows 10. Do you think that I should consider running Linux on it instead? And if so, which would you recommend?
One item to note is that the Pentium M CPU has 2 MB of L2 cache. That amount really helps these little CPUs hustle. Most contemporary Pentium M CPUs (from this time period) only came with 512KB or 1MB of L2 cache.
I found your channel today. it is amazing .. and I used this Laptop back in 2007 in my job until I sold it in London UK in 2010 to buy my first MacBook. I will definitely watch all the videos of this channel. Thanks .. and best regards. a new Fan from Tripoli, Libya.
I have one of these and used it in my workshop for playing music / watching DIY videos until a few years ago. A relative of mine picked it up in the swap shop at his local dump and ended up with me after collecting dust at my parents house for a couple years. I recall not having any trouble doing basic things. The screen was really nice! Can't remember if it had XP or some kind of Linuix variant. In the time it lived in my workshop got some scratches, paint splatters, and I'm sure pulled in a lot of dust. I think one of the keys is missing. Sorry to say, I didn't take very good care of it, but it's around so maybe I'll tidy it up one day and give it another life.
My wife came home one day from work and said she literally found it in a kerbside rubbish pile. It had a dead hard drive, however ddrescue salvaged the install and it's still working fine to this day (though not getting much use, like the D420 I mentioned elsewhere). I use it for playing older games because it's got a dvd drive and period correct cpu/performance wise.
Great vid! Try a Latitude D420. Those were solid and still have a few customers running them with Win10. Annoyingly they used a 1.8" ZIF IDE drive like what shipped in iPods so finding an appropriate mSATA adapter is fun.
I have one here in my closet. Liked that little boy when I used it back in the days. Too bad they went with ZIF connector, I could get it to work with my ssd even with a caddy
I have an old Dell laptop similar to this model, and it's great for 1990s games. VGA monitors are cheap and effective! I use several! Great video! I loved it.
A friend of mine once left me the same laptop for repairs! And to answer your question, well yes. My current setup is dual monitors which are both VGA but one of them is running through a DVI adapter.
"Critics were tired of this design". I wonder what the critics would think about Apple laptops and the Mac Mini that basically have the same design from 20 years ago (not that it would be something wrong with it). Also SSDs are not really necessary for such an old computer,especially since it's only limited to IDE speeds
thermal grizzly kryonite. It's quite expensive but has the best thermal conductivity by quite a large margin. I buy it because a 1g tube can re-paste all the PC's in my house.
My cousin had an old Acer laptop that he got in 2006. He was given the laptop from a family member and the laptop lasted for 15 years, what happened to it was the display broke, hard drive failed and the charger for it short out. It’s still here but doesn’t have a hard drive or charger now and the display is broken. It has a VGA port
First off, awesome video! And yes, I still use an old Dell Ultrasharp VGA monitor as my secondary monitor for Discord and other things. I love the 4:3 aspect ratio, as I often find two 16:9 monitors to be too much
8:20 I use Thermal Grizzly Aeronaut. Never had any problems and you can get it in sizes up to 26g / 10ml (I personally have it in 7.8g / 3ml) I would not recommend getting it in smaller size because the 7.8g is only a little bit more expensive than the 3.9g and the 1g version.
Hey Psivewri, I think the main reason Puppy Linux wasnt working the first time round is because you downloaded an image made for a 32 bit ARM Processor, seems to be the one made for the Pi haha, which is likely why you couldn't get past that black screen.
My first ever laptop was the Dell Inspiron 1525 in 2008, back when buying from Dell meant ordering from their website and getting it custom specced.. It served me well! I used to think it was so slim and portable and now when I look back it was massive in comparison to todays machines. I also remember the keyboard being the same easy removal since my keyboard went faulty on it and Dell sent me a new one and it was very easy to replace.
I had one of these. The battery you’ve got there is the optional larger capacity unit. The normal battery sat flush with the laptop instead of sticking further back. Believe it cost around $1300 USD in 2005/6.
Dell guy here. We do have the best service guides! In the 90s there were VRML virtual versions of every system you could tear down and build on the web screw by screw! Now it's just boring PDFs!
VGA is still in use for industrial workloads and it is usable for lower resolutions (ok, higher resolutions are supported but noisy and are not needed at all for such applications).
Oh damn! I have one of these thats mint and totally original; It even still works! Biggest issue is I have never been able to find all the drivers to make Windows XP work correctly
@@eduardoavila646 MX-4 is still alright, MX-5 if I remember correctly was that pumpout happens more than vs MX-4 and thermal transfer performance drops off too rapidly as it ages vs MX-4. They fixed it with MX-6.
Meanwhile I opened my lid on my 2021 Dell Laptop and the hinge cracked the plastic fixings used to attach the hinge to the screen. Never been dropped, never been roughly handled rarely ever got used when not on a desk.
Cool little retro machine! To answer your question, I do actually use a couple of VGA displays here on my main PC, but with some adapters so I can use my 6650 XT. One of them is a Dell ultrasharp that I use as a vertical display. The other is a Packard Bell CRT that I use for retro games and such.
For direct die i strongly suggest MX-2, its the same price, but will resist thermal push out much longer, spreading will be needed, moreso on an IHS but it will create a good long lasting bond vs MX-4/6 that will push outwards and cause a central hotspot on an IHS, or on a direct die application pretty much ends up around the die. For finnicky laptops and consoles, its the best cheap option, though personally if i do care enough i'll use tape around any resistors and ICs around a die and use a graphite thermal sheet from innovative cooling instead, though vs paste that can see a lot more uses, i save it for very finnicky devices or phat 360s that much prefer the consistent surface cooling over the die, especially the earlier models. I imagine this would be great for modern laptops, or TG if you need better thermal transfer and keep the cooling consistent as long as dust is kept on top of, saves time so only partial disassembly is needed/less time cleaning up old paste since they are reusable.
systems then: i can survive rpg explosions, bullets, house fires and still work fine systems now: *fries charging ic, cracks hinges and swells batteries if you look at them funny
Linux then: Was a good choice for developers. Linux now: Used by woke activists for: egos, p%%%philia, porn and the most NARCISSISTIC kind of behavior online! EVEN MORE NARCISSISTIC THAN MAC USERS WHO FLAUNT THEIR MONEY!!!
@Spatial Zebra yeah it looks like the max possible upgrade (cooling tdp notwithstanding) would be the 2.26GHz Pentium M 780. At least it has PAE support, which would enable modern 32 bit OSes.
yes i still use a VGA display 2 in fact, one has HDMI as well which I'm currently using to watch this video, and a 4:3 one for retro pc gaming which i pull out from time to time
Very good thermal paste choice best price to performance! Buy that again. I'd say an SSD is a bit of a waste for a such laptop, an HDD should provide sufficient speeds.
AFAIK your best bets for thermal paste rn are still MX-4 for bang-for-buck, and Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut for max performance. I've also heard Noctua's thermal paste is pretty good too.
Dells newest Notebooks still have great service manuals! They were always a no-bullshit pc company tbh, tho modern problems like soldered ram are starting to reach them, and you can only be sure about build quality when getting a Latitude or OptiPlex, still better than other brands.
I still own a 700m! Unfortunately its display was suffering vinegar syndrome so it needs to be replaced. Was a fun laptop to mess around with until the display started failing 2 or 3 years ago.
While it is the exact opposite of your little 710m, I have an Inspiron 1720 that I have upgraded over the years until it became 'top of the line' - except it only has a VGA port. While it isn't digital, it can produce a very high resolution display to a good monitor. I have an old ViewSonic with a VGA input and you really can't tell it's not DVI or HDMI. Technically obsolete, sure, but not unusable.
saw one of these in a autoshop recently, they were playing mp3's with winamp, it was covered in oil and grime and honestly i was amazed it still worked.
I do indeed use VGA with my main computer. In fact, the VGA cable I use is probably about 20 years old. I found it in a dumpster (along with the computer itself) and I have been using them for a year or so now. The monitor was a thrift store purchase, being a 1080p LCD monitor from 2010.
I bought a 5€ 1400x900 75Hz VGA 19" monitor. It is an LG FLATRON W1942S and it uses VGA. The adapter for my system that im using (VGA to DP) costed me 6€ (so the monitor was cheaper than the adapter istelf)
Hey Psivewri, your videos are so interesting and I just want an advise from you. I have an HP Pavillion DV3500 laptop ( Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU P8400 @ 2.26GHz 2.27GHz 4 GB Windows Vista 64 bit) that I obviously don't use right now but for a course that I'm gonna attend this july I just need a simple laptop to do some very basic stuff. Do you think that upgrading that old laptop, by changing the HDD with an SSD, increasing the RAM and installing Windows 8.1 or 10 or maybe Linux Mint, is a good choice and can be done?. Thank you.
got 2 vga screens on my desk right now. they aren't my primary display, but good enough to have youtube or stream chat on.Ive always been a fan of Atric silver
my oldest laptop that i have is a Fujitsu Siemens Esprimo Mobile V5535 and when I first got it well lets just say it was in really bad shape such as the motherboard had a broken CMOS battery clip (that I fixed), battery had to be replaced (could not hold any charge), display TFT film was cracking and peeling off (I fixed that with a brand new LCD), casing itself was dinged up and trim was broken in several places (this ultimately made me have to buy a gutted Laptop identical to the one to use as the donor to replace and repair all of the damage) finally I finished it up by giving it a nice inside and out clean and plenty of sweet sweet upgrades such as the weak 1ghz intel celeron is now an Intel Core 2 duo running at 2ghz, ram is from 512MB to now 3GB of DDR2 Memory (can take 4GB of RAM but takes forever to post) and it has a SATA 3 SSD plugged into a SATA 1 port (i know that's dumb but it is definitely far faster than the 12 year old mechanical HDD that was in there) also parts of the keyboard was broken so I even replaced that. I could've bought one of these in mint condition but I chose to revive it and I can't forget to mention that I added a PCIexpress card 32/54 Dual USB 3.0 that takes the total of usable usb ports from 3 all the way to a whopping 5 USB ports Do I kind of sound like Psivewri with how I explain these things. I know its not a bad thing but I surely do make sure to use a healthy dose of eucalyptus oil when cleaning my electronics! oh great I did it again!
I do still use VGA actually. I have a Dell 2007fp as a second monitor using both DVI and VGA. I also use a 1708fp as a third screen, though VGA is still open and available on it.
For future purchase of Thermal Paste you could get the Gelid Extreme (for high performance Computers) it has the same performance as the MX4 costing much less. Then you would have the GD900 (for Low Performance Computers) it has good performance and costs next to nothing. If you have doubts you can check these Thermal Pastes online.
My dad used to have an old windows xp system that I put puppy Linux on years ago because his windows installation was corrupt. He used it for a while, but ended up not liking the way it wasn't like windows and went out to get newer computer.
never did I ever think that a year after watching this video that I'd end up getting the same laptop model from a computer club at my school. it has no storage drive and I don't have 2.5" IDE drives so i'll consider getting that IDE to mSATA adapter too.
I was using VGA untill the beginning of this year, was largely sufficient for me as I was mostly on office and web browsing tasks. I will miss that blue port forever...
In terms of best Thermal Paste I use Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut and Cooler Master CryoFuze both are priced above average but it's the best silicone based paste we can get that doesn't short anything if spilled. Great video Psivewri hope to see more of these vintage beauties show up my old Dell Latitude E4310 from 2011 still holding up well with Windows 10 and 8GB of RAM, SSD and Core i7 within. But does get quite hot even watching 1080p TH-cam videos.
Have you ever tried WattOS? I have it on an old netbook with 1GB of RAM and a 1.6 Ghz Intel Atom CPU, along with the 250 GB Fujitsu SATA HDD that originally came with the laptop. It is blazing fast.
I had 2 of these and managed to get Windows 7 fully functional even with the display drivers, had to do some crazy configuring but was so awesome until they killed 7 support
Yes still use VGA thru a KVM switch for one older PC running Windows 2000 Pro Sp4. Also still use a Dell Precision 330 workstation with 2000 and SCSi HD's and VGA screen, this one for software that is reading out older diesel engines. For that reason there is a laptop with 2000 for the same software and VGA.
I use noctua NT-H1. Seems to be good one (cannot remember which benchmark i saw. May be LTT). I have changed thermal paste for many laptops over past 3 years and the tube is still good. Cooling wise, general use cases it is best. For extreme gaming i had to change it 1.5 years as a precaution and general cleaning. The difference between original, 1st change and 2nd change in thermal paste the GPU temps were 10°C (4 years gap) , 3°C (1.5 years gap). Thermal paste was still wet and didn‘t go crusty like original. All my friends who got clean up and thermal paste changed are happy with the cooling as well. 10-15°C difference was seen in those cases.
I like restoring old pcs like this unfortionatly i havent seen many old laptops and most are expensive. I found a dell e5410 for $2 at a yard sale and i did everything to help it but the plastic was brittle and kept snapping even though the parts were superglued and then the hinge broke and when i replaced the thermal paste with some from best buy i used before it became super laggy for no reason
i have this laptop, bought it brand new. quite affordable back then, barely under USD 1000. unfortunately, in 2014, my 3 year old son knocked it off the table, and it has been broken ever since.
Really cool computer. My first laptop, back in the day, was a 286 HP that cost $1,800 US. It drew a lot of attention when I used it at airports or other public places. No WIFI. Another great video. Thanks.
I have an HP pavilion VGA CRT display, sadly it has some white lines along the top of the screen, signaling capacitor or electron gun fatigue. I intend to get it fixed sometime. If I can’t, I’ll replace the CRT with an OLED display, reusing the casing.
it seems like this uses the same foil graphite thermal material as the other Pentium m dell laptops, you can actually remove that foil entirely and then fresh thermal paste would help a lot more!
Check out guard.io/Psivewri for a 7 day trial and 20% off your subscription + the ability to protect 5 family members from hackers and scammers!
Hey Psivewri! By shear coincidence the laptop that I am using to comment and watch your video now is a Dell Inspiron 9400 with an Intel Centrino Duo processor that came out sometime in 2006. I use it as a college laptop and it runs Windows 10. Do you think that I should consider running Linux on it instead? And if so, which would you recommend?
Hi
HO
Cool video
One item to note is that the Pentium M CPU has 2 MB of L2 cache. That amount really helps these little CPUs hustle. Most contemporary Pentium M CPUs (from this time period) only came with 512KB or 1MB of L2 cache.
Hey Psivewri, i actually saved a Dell 700m from going to E-waste from my work.
Nice! What did you do to it?
@@NatK2010 i still have it, i put new thermal paste and upgraded the drive to a sandisk extreme card
@@jayer898 Nice! Hope it stays alive for a while longer
@@jayer898 specs? Should take win 10, make sure you install all the drivers though
@@Zebra_Paw pentium M 1.8ghz, 2gb ram, 82855 gma graphics, 40gb IDE hard drive but will be used with a Sandisk extreme card.
I found your channel today. it is amazing .. and I used this Laptop back in 2007 in my job until I sold it in London UK in 2010 to buy my first MacBook. I will definitely watch all the videos of this channel. Thanks .. and best regards. a new Fan from Tripoli, Libya.
I have one of these and used it in my workshop for playing music / watching DIY videos until a few years ago. A relative of mine picked it up in the swap shop at his local dump and ended up with me after collecting dust at my parents house for a couple years. I recall not having any trouble doing basic things. The screen was really nice! Can't remember if it had XP or some kind of Linuix variant. In the time it lived in my workshop got some scratches, paint splatters, and I'm sure pulled in a lot of dust. I think one of the keys is missing. Sorry to say, I didn't take very good care of it, but it's around so maybe I'll tidy it up one day and give it another life.
My wife came home one day from work and said she literally found it in a kerbside rubbish pile. It had a dead hard drive, however ddrescue salvaged the install and it's still working fine to this day (though not getting much use, like the D420 I mentioned elsewhere). I use it for playing older games because it's got a dvd drive and period correct cpu/performance wise.
Great vid! Try a Latitude D420. Those were solid and still have a few customers running them with Win10. Annoyingly they used a 1.8" ZIF IDE drive like what shipped in iPods so finding an appropriate mSATA adapter is fun.
how is that working out for them? single-core amirite?
Nice!
An iFlash or dosdude1 SSD should work.
@@qui3041 32-bit Core Duo. Works fine for the tasks of the elderly.
I have one here in my closet. Liked that little boy when I used it back in the days. Too bad they went with ZIF connector, I could get it to work with my ssd even with a caddy
Dell Tiny Laptop: (survived a bomb blast)
Nokia 3310: "Finally a worthy opponent, our battle will be legendary"
I have an old Dell laptop similar to this model, and it's great for 1990s games. VGA monitors are cheap and effective! I use several! Great video! I loved it.
I still use a 17' crt
@@1.4M-ry8zx I use a 23-inch LCD monitor with VGA from 2010.
A friend of mine once left me the same laptop for repairs!
And to answer your question, well yes. My current setup is dual monitors which are both VGA but one of them is running through a DVI adapter.
9:09 youtube struggling to run is due to pale moon, not the computer itself. pale moon is poorly maintained and is based on ancient firefox code.
MY FIRST LAPTOP EVER!!! WOOOOO YEAH BABYYY!!! TIME FOR MEMORIES!!!
DAAAMN!!!
"Critics were tired of this design". I wonder what the critics would think about Apple laptops and the Mac Mini that basically have the same design from 20 years ago (not that it would be something wrong with it). Also SSDs are not really necessary for such an old computer,especially since it's only limited to IDE speeds
you could have used rufus to make the bootable drive, there is a version for windows xp
I don’t think that works anymore. Please tell me I’m wrong
@@Crashoverride1234 you are right, i was using a very outdated version. they stopped supporting xp after version 2.18
thermal grizzly kryonite. It's quite expensive but has the best thermal conductivity by quite a large margin. I buy it because a 1g tube can re-paste all the PC's in my house.
bro is a true veteran 💀
Amazing review love your work true legend never forgot 🥰
My cousin had an old Acer laptop that he got in 2006. He was given the laptop from a family member and the laptop lasted for 15 years, what happened to it was the display broke, hard drive failed and the charger for it short out. It’s still here but doesn’t have a hard drive or charger now and the display is broken. It has a VGA port
First off, awesome video! And yes, I still use an old Dell Ultrasharp VGA monitor as my secondary monitor for Discord and other things. I love the 4:3 aspect ratio, as I often find two 16:9 monitors to be too much
8:20 I use Thermal Grizzly Aeronaut. Never had any problems and you can get it in sizes up to 26g / 10ml (I personally have it in 7.8g / 3ml) I would not recommend getting it in smaller size because the 7.8g is only a little bit more expensive than the 3.9g and the 1g version.
Hey Psivewri, I think the main reason Puppy Linux wasnt working the first time round is because you downloaded an image made for a 32 bit ARM Processor, seems to be the one made for the Pi haha, which is likely why you couldn't get past that black screen.
My first ever laptop was the Dell Inspiron 1525 in 2008, back when buying from Dell meant ordering from their website and getting it custom specced.. It served me well! I used to think it was so slim and portable and now when I look back it was massive in comparison to todays machines.
I also remember the keyboard being the same easy removal since my keyboard went faulty on it and Dell sent me a new one and it was very easy to replace.
You should have installed Windows Thin PC on it. This is the official light version of Windows 7 just for such devices.
He should've put Windows Vista Home Basic 32-Bit with Service Pack 2.
I had one of these. The battery you’ve got there is the optional larger capacity unit. The normal battery sat flush with the laptop instead of sticking further back. Believe it cost around $1300 USD in 2005/6.
Dell guy here. We do have the best service guides! In the 90s there were VRML virtual versions of every system you could tear down and build on the web screw by screw! Now it's just boring PDFs!
VGA is still in use for industrial workloads and it is usable for lower resolutions (ok, higher resolutions are supported but noisy and are not needed at all for such applications).
Oh damn! I have one of these thats mint and totally original; It even still works! Biggest issue is I have never been able to find all the drivers to make Windows XP work correctly
The successor to this machine had a Core 2 Duo, NVidia dedicated graphics, and a rotating webcam. Badass!
What's its successor?
@@themuffincat XPS M1210
Tô be fair, Dell (and Lenovo Thinkpads) still have service manuals available even for new devices
Yeap , that is so.
Shame on you,Intel,for removing support for an old tech !!!
What a throwback! My mom had one of these brand new and I loved it’s compactness of it at that time
For thermal paste, Arctic MX-6 would be a good choice. They solved the issues with MX-5 and recommend people move onto the new MX-6 formula anyways.
I switched out Mx-4 with 6 and it seems to be working pretty well
Wich issues with mx5? Also how about mx4?
@@eduardoavila646 MX-4 is still alright, MX-5 if I remember correctly was that pumpout happens more than vs MX-4 and thermal transfer performance drops off too rapidly as it ages vs MX-4. They fixed it with MX-6.
One of my first laptops was a dell as well that i got on a payment plan from my local cable provider! loved that machine!
This laptop is older than most people watching TH-cam shorts. Let that sink in.
Meanwhile I opened my lid on my 2021 Dell Laptop and the hinge cracked the plastic fixings used to attach the hinge to the screen. Never been dropped, never been roughly handled rarely ever got used when not on a desk.
Cool little retro machine!
To answer your question, I do actually use a couple of VGA displays here on my main PC, but with some adapters so I can use my 6650 XT. One of them is a Dell ultrasharp that I use as a vertical display. The other is a Packard Bell CRT that I use for retro games and such.
I use VGA with my GeForce4 pc and other older system
For direct die i strongly suggest MX-2, its the same price, but will resist thermal push out much longer, spreading will be needed, moreso on an IHS but it will create a good long lasting bond vs MX-4/6 that will push outwards and cause a central hotspot on an IHS, or on a direct die application pretty much ends up around the die. For finnicky laptops and consoles, its the best cheap option, though personally if i do care enough i'll use tape around any resistors and ICs around a die and use a graphite thermal sheet from innovative cooling instead, though vs paste that can see a lot more uses, i save it for very finnicky devices or phat 360s that much prefer the consistent surface cooling over the die, especially the earlier models. I imagine this would be great for modern laptops, or TG if you need better thermal transfer and keep the cooling consistent as long as dust is kept on top of, saves time so only partial disassembly is needed/less time cleaning up old paste since they are reusable.
systems then: i can survive rpg explosions, bullets, house fires and still work fine
systems now: *fries charging ic, cracks hinges and swells batteries if you look at them funny
Linux then: Was a good choice for developers.
Linux now: Used by woke activists for: egos, p%%%philia, porn and the most NARCISSISTIC kind of behavior online! EVEN MORE NARCISSISTIC THAN MAC USERS WHO FLAUNT THEIR MONEY!!!
Definitely would've been curious to see what cpu upgrade options exist and how far it'd get you.
nowhere unfortunately, no 64 bits or dual core possible
@Spatial Zebra yeah it looks like the max possible upgrade (cooling tdp notwithstanding) would be the 2.26GHz Pentium M 780. At least it has PAE support, which would enable modern 32 bit OSes.
@@tristansewell5986 more basic ones also have PAE, however it needs to be forced.
I guess for thermal paste, I've heard the MX-4's successor MX-5 isn't that bad, ThermalGrizzly's stuff also is pretty good
yes i still use a VGA display 2 in fact, one has HDMI as well which I'm currently using to watch this video, and a 4:3 one for retro pc gaming which i pull out from time to time
Very good thermal paste choice best price to performance! Buy that again.
I'd say an SSD is a bit of a waste for a such laptop, an HDD should provide sufficient speeds.
AFAIK your best bets for thermal paste rn are still MX-4 for bang-for-buck, and Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut for max performance. I've also heard Noctua's thermal paste is pretty good too.
Dells newest Notebooks still have great service manuals! They were always a no-bullshit pc company tbh, tho modern problems like soldered ram are starting to reach them, and you can only be sure about build quality when getting a Latitude or OptiPlex, still better than other brands.
i kinda love these old computers , not for use but for collection
7:00 I have an old XP laptop that I HAVE to use VGA on as the Backlight doesn't work and I have to use an External Monitor just to get a Picture
I still own a 700m! Unfortunately its display was suffering vinegar syndrome so it needs to be replaced. Was a fun laptop to mess around with until the display started failing 2 or 3 years ago.
While it is the exact opposite of your little 710m, I have an Inspiron 1720 that I have upgraded over the years until it became 'top of the line' - except it only has a VGA port. While it isn't digital, it can produce a very high resolution display to a good monitor. I have an old ViewSonic with a VGA input and you really can't tell it's not DVI or HDMI.
Technically obsolete, sure, but not unusable.
I stuck around for the sponsor segment and even after hearing it said, Psivewri isn't rolling off my tongue.
I have a VGA Acer display that I still use on my main computer, picture looks fine but the monitor plastic creaks a bit.
saw one of these in a autoshop recently, they were playing mp3's with winamp, it was covered in oil and grime and honestly i was amazed it still worked.
Dell surprisingly still has very comprehensive service manuals for their current laptops! Props to that
And awesome Linux support too like 98% of thier stuff is Ubuntu certified and you can update the bios from Linux on most of thier newer stuff too
I do indeed use VGA with my main computer. In fact, the VGA cable I use is probably about 20 years old. I found it in a dumpster (along with the computer itself) and I have been using them for a year or so now. The monitor was a thrift store purchase, being a 1080p LCD monitor from 2010.
I've been using Noctua thermal paste for years. Great stuff it is.
I bought a 5€ 1400x900 75Hz VGA 19" monitor. It is an LG FLATRON W1942S and it uses VGA. The adapter for my system that im using (VGA to DP) costed me 6€ (so the monitor was cheaper than the adapter istelf)
I actually like it. I wish Dell made the same styled machines today. Simple yet rugged.
I dig it too
Hey Psivewri, your videos are so interesting and I just want an advise from you.
I have an HP Pavillion DV3500 laptop ( Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU P8400 @ 2.26GHz 2.27GHz 4 GB Windows Vista 64 bit) that I obviously don't use right now but for a course that I'm gonna attend this july I just need a simple laptop to do some very basic stuff. Do you think that upgrading that old laptop, by changing the HDD with an SSD, increasing the RAM and installing Windows 8.1 or 10 or maybe Linux Mint, is a good choice and can be done?.
Thank you.
It will definitely become more speedy if you that
Do the upgrades and you got yourself a good laptop for office use.
The background music is always relaxating ♥
got 2 vga screens on my desk right now. they aren't my primary display, but good enough to have youtube or stream chat on.Ive always been a fan of Atric silver
It's a clever option to save an underpowered device from e-waste and give him a second life as well.
my oldest laptop that i have is a Fujitsu Siemens Esprimo Mobile V5535 and when I first got it well lets just say it was in really bad shape such as the motherboard had a broken CMOS battery clip (that I fixed), battery had to be replaced (could not hold any charge), display TFT film was cracking and peeling off (I fixed that with a brand new LCD), casing itself was dinged up and trim was broken in several places (this ultimately made me have to buy a gutted Laptop identical to the one to use as the donor to replace and repair all of the damage) finally I finished it up by giving it a nice inside and out clean and plenty of sweet sweet upgrades such as the weak 1ghz intel celeron is now an Intel Core 2 duo running at 2ghz, ram is from 512MB to now 3GB of DDR2 Memory (can take 4GB of RAM but takes forever to post) and it has a SATA 3 SSD plugged into a SATA 1 port (i know that's dumb but it is definitely far faster than the 12 year old mechanical HDD that was in there) also parts of the keyboard was broken so I even replaced that.
I could've bought one of these in mint condition but I chose to revive it and I can't forget to mention that I added a PCIexpress card 32/54 Dual USB 3.0 that takes the total of usable usb ports from 3 all the way to a whopping 5 USB ports
Do I kind of sound like Psivewri with how I explain these things. I know its not a bad thing but I surely do make sure to use a healthy dose of eucalyptus oil when cleaning my electronics! oh great I did it again!
That is nuts dude that laptop went to war and back my dad fought in the "Project Iraqi freedom" War.
I once had a Dell Inspiron 700m for sale.
Getting Windows 7 to install on it was a hassle.
I used one white version for like 5 years. It was so good i exchange it for a 2nd hand silver version , and used it for another 5 years
I do still use VGA actually. I have a Dell 2007fp as a second monitor using both DVI and VGA. I also use a 1708fp as a third screen, though VGA is still open and available on it.
For future purchase of Thermal Paste you could get the Gelid Extreme (for high performance Computers) it has the same performance as the MX4 costing much less. Then you would have the GD900 (for Low Performance Computers) it has good performance and costs next to nothing. If you have doubts you can check these Thermal Pastes online.
Yes infact, i do use VGA. And not many small laptops had 2 ram slots. Good Job Dell!
7:00 I'm literally watching this on a Dell e773c CRT monitor. And yes, it's my main monitor lmfao
My dad used to have an old windows xp system that I put puppy Linux on years ago because his windows installation was corrupt. He used it for a while, but ended up not liking the way it wasn't like windows and went out to get newer computer.
If I were him, I would be ENRAGED if anyone put Linux on ANY of my machines! ESPECIALLY my main!
@@PurblePink8678 his windows operating system became corrupt and there wasn't a way to get a fresh windows xp on his system at that time.
same mount of screws in my dell d620 notebook
6:56 i still use VGA cable cus thats the only port has my monitor have
never did I ever think that a year after watching this video that I'd end up getting the same laptop model from a computer club at my school.
it has no storage drive and I don't have 2.5" IDE drives so i'll consider getting that IDE to mSATA adapter too.
I actually still use a vga display myself, because hey, my old lcd monitor still works. but I did have to get an adapter to get it running
you should do a bios update on all this old stuff.
I do have some 5:4 monitors with VGA and DVI - and with an IPS display. LG, Fujitsu and iiyama still sell such monitors as brand new.
I was using VGA untill the beginning of this year, was largely sufficient for me as I was mostly on office and web browsing tasks. I will miss that blue port forever...
In terms of best Thermal Paste I use Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut and Cooler Master CryoFuze both are priced above average but it's the best silicone based paste we can get that doesn't short anything if spilled. Great video Psivewri hope to see more of these vintage beauties show up my old Dell Latitude E4310 from 2011 still holding up well with Windows 10 and 8GB of RAM, SSD and Core i7 within. But does get quite hot even watching 1080p TH-cam videos.
What version of the i7 doe your laptop have? 1st gen?
Great Video, thanks for sharing
I still use a monitor with VGA at school. I connect it with a USB c hub from mokin, that has Ethernet, VGA, HDMI, USB a, and sd card reader.
Have you ever tried WattOS? I have it on an old netbook with 1GB of RAM and a 1.6 Ghz Intel Atom CPU, along with the 250 GB Fujitsu SATA HDD that originally came with the laptop. It is blazing fast.
I still use VGA and DVI for old monitors that I could use as a second and 3rd screen, they never fail me :D
I had 2 of these and managed to get Windows 7 fully functional even with the display drivers, had to do some crazy configuring but was so awesome until they killed 7 support
You can give it a second life by installing a lightweight Linux distro
@@sihamhamda47 Yeah, second life to be used for innapropriate activities online... Cuz that's normal in the Linux cult...
Yes still use VGA thru a KVM switch for one older PC running Windows 2000 Pro Sp4. Also still use a Dell Precision 330 workstation with 2000 and SCSi HD's and VGA screen, this one for software that is reading out older diesel engines. For that reason there is a laptop with 2000 for the same software and VGA.
I use two CRTs on my main PC so I do indeed still use VGA, albeit through DisplayPort adapters. A 19" Dell M992 and a 19" LaCie electron19blue IV
For the thermal paste, Artic silver 5!
I use noctua NT-H1. Seems to be good one (cannot remember which benchmark i saw. May be LTT). I have changed thermal paste for many laptops over past 3 years and the tube is still good. Cooling wise, general use cases it is best. For extreme gaming i had to change it 1.5 years as a precaution and general cleaning. The difference between original, 1st change and 2nd change in thermal paste the GPU temps were 10°C (4 years gap) , 3°C (1.5 years gap). Thermal paste was still wet and didn‘t go crusty like original. All my friends who got clean up and thermal paste changed are happy with the cooling as well. 10-15°C difference was seen in those cases.
My secondary Gaming PC monitor is an old Samsung Syncmaster with VGA, it’s literally falling apart and being held up by a small clock
Im suprised dell in the early to late 2000's kept a decent and durable design. I've got a old latitude and is taken apart practically the same.
I like restoring old pcs like this unfortionatly i havent seen many old laptops and most are expensive. I found a dell e5410 for $2 at a yard sale and i did everything to help it but the plastic was brittle and kept snapping even though the parts were superglued and then the hinge broke and when i replaced the thermal paste with some from best buy i used before it became super laggy for no reason
I absolutely love my XLS M1210, very similar in size to this one. It’s awesome to se me this working still!!
thanks for the product key
Also, I still have some Arctic MX4, as well as Arctic Silver 5. I'd still recommend Arctic MX4 as it is a good thermal compound.
The laptop Survived actual blast from the real gaming world in desert rather than those fragile high-end gaming laptop
That was the same laptop my dad used to work with
VGA is still popular in many places that have projectors
My family had one of these laptops. It was so nice at the time!
Oh man, so the webcam at the bottom is not a recent idea? that sucks
i have this laptop, bought it brand new. quite affordable back then, barely under USD 1000. unfortunately, in 2014, my 3 year old son knocked it off the table, and it has been broken ever since.
Really cool computer. My first laptop, back in the day, was a 286 HP that cost $1,800 US. It drew a lot of attention when I used it at airports or other public places. No WIFI. Another great video. Thanks.
I have an HP pavilion VGA CRT display, sadly it has some white lines along the top of the screen, signaling capacitor or electron gun fatigue. I intend to get it fixed sometime. If I can’t, I’ll replace the CRT with an OLED display, reusing the casing.
You could have used YUMI and it is very easy to use.
Also, Antix is more usable than Puppy linux.
it seems like this uses the same foil graphite thermal material as the other Pentium m dell laptops, you can actually remove that foil entirely and then fresh thermal paste would help a lot more!
gotta chanel my inner core for how old this is