So my wife has a 10 year old low end notbook. 500Gb of storage (HDD), 2GB of GDR3 RAM, and an intel Celeron Processor N2806. It originally came with Win 8, then she “upgraded” to win 10 and after that it was pretty much unusable. I am talking CPU and Ram about 80-90% in idle, opening a browser got everything down to a crawl. She mostly used it a storage and brwosing, watching youtube and occasionally to write. So I (also a Linux newbie) finally got the time to install a newbie friendly Os (Fedora) and it’s so much better! I am Talking 20%CPU usage and 50%(?) RAM in idle.

  • Square Singer
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    11 months ago

    If you have a little cash to spare, I’d recommend upgrading this thing a little bit.

    A 480GB SATA 2.5" SSD costs around €22.

    8GB of DDR3 can be had for ~€10.

    So with maybe €35 of investment (and probably much less if you buy used stuff from your local flea market app) you could make the laptop much faster and much more usable.

    If you don’t actually need ~500GB of storage, a 240GB SSD can be had for ~€12.

    • @Life_inst_badOP
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      1611 months ago

      That sounds quite intriguing, I’ll shop around and give you an update!

        • @Life_inst_badOP
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          411 months ago

          I ordered the parts now, a 8gb ram stick (gddr3) and a 520gb ssd for all in all 34€. The parts should arrive in about 2 weeks. Thank you!

          • Square Singer
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            211 months ago

            Nice! Good luck! To find out how to open it, just look for a video on Youtube if it turns out more complicated than expected.

            Btw, if you already have it open, cleaning the fans/fan grilles and potentially even repasting the CPU is usually pretty easy to do and on older laptops easily doubles your CPU performance.

            • @Life_inst_badOP
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              311 months ago

              I’ve looked up a video, took it apart, got it all together again. Tried booting it up, paniced for 2 seconds because it couldn’t detect the hard drive anymore, then realised that I had forgotten to plug the drive back in properly (silly me). Opened it up again, got the lill cable back where it belongs and screwed everything together (again). Works like a charm now.

              • Square Singer
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                311 months ago

                Nice! Well done! I do know this feeling of panicˆˆ

                Have fun with a now totally usable laptop!

                • @Life_inst_badOP
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                  111 months ago

                  Allright, my promised update: My Ram finally arrived and I happily put in the 8gb and… It went all south. Horrible boot time, bad performance the whole 9yards. Bios (thank you HP) didn’t even let me change the clockspeed of my ram. Anyways since I wanted to give my Wifes Laptop (her active one) an upgrade anyway I got the 8gb ram in her machine and that one works like a charm (-windows). So I had 4 gb left now (from her machine). Well, I stuck that one in this linux machine and they now play nicely.

                  So all in all a great success story! Thank you for encouraging me to upgrade it!

      • @dojoca
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        11 months ago

        Highly recommend installing windows 10 LTSC on it. It’s windows 10, but not fucking awful.

        Edit: never mind, I see you already have Ubuntu on it. Good job.

      • @[email protected]
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        411 months ago

        The SSD upgrade is almost critical, and when you install the OS, be sure to include a swap partition (2GB is enough) that functions as a system buffer/parallel & virtual RAM. A bigger RAM chip can’t hurt either. This is exactly what I’ve done for a very similar machine mentioned in another post of this thread.

      • I want to second this. 2 GB of ram is simply unusable and I’m honestly surprised Windows 8 ran passably well. A min of 8 GB of ram and a small SSD will give it a new lease on life.

      • @[email protected]
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        111 months ago

        The SSD upgrade is almost critical, and when you install the OS, be sure to include a swap partition (2GB is enough) that functions as a system buffer/parallel & virtual RAM. A bigger RAM chip can’t hurt either. This is exactly what I’ve done for a very similar machine mentioned in another post of this thread.