Look at what I found in the trash: a working laptop

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The highlight of the Daily News moving from its huge, windowless box to a smaller office has been all the old equipment that has been flying out the doors.

Aside from the Power Macintosh G4/466 (not a 450, as I initially thought), I plucked a couple of trashed-looking old laptops from the junk heap.

Neither had batteries or power supplies. Luckily, the power brick for my Gateway worked in one, a Compaq Armada 1125.

The damn thing actually booted ... to a Windows 95 desktop.

It doesn't look like a great candidate for Linux or BSD, unless you're taking pure command line or the barest X desktop possible.

The specs:

Pentium 100 MHz processor
24 MB RAM (the machine's maximum)
640x480, 16-bit color display
3.5-inch floppy drive
1.2 GB hard drive
PCMCIA telephone modem card
Windows 95

What's missing? Enough memory to do much of anything with, a CD drive, easy networking (although I might have an Ethernet card that works).

So what should I do with this thing? Clean it up a bit and see what the intelligent masses on eBay give me for it? Hey, the damn thing boots, which is more than I could say for a lot of gear I come across.

Note: The photo above isn't this exact Compaq Armada 1125, just a representative image plucked from the Web.

Update: Since all I've got is a floppy drive, I pulled my Linux-on-floppy discs and loaded up the two-floppy Basic Linux.

The Compaq booted, and after the second floppy loaded, I was even able to use X.

Among the applications I used during my test were vi, another text editor called wp (with pico keybindings) and the Links text-only browser, all in an xterm window.

I don't yet have networking up, but I'm working on it.

More Basic Linux:

  • Miscellaneous contributions from BL3 users

    Other floppy-based live Linux distros:

  • Tomsrtbt
  • FD Linux

    Installing a modern Linux or BSD system from a boot floppy. It can be done. I know that OpenBSD and NetBSD will do this, and I have half a mind to load OpenBSD on this thing if I can get the networking to go.


  • Leave a comment

    Tech Talk column

    Steven Rosenberg's weekly Tech Talk column, which appeared Saturdays in the Los Angeles Daily News through about October 2009, is available on the Daily News Technology page.

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    Steven Rosenberg aims to learn what he does not know. He writes about it here.



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    This page contains a single entry by Steven Rosenberg published on September 4, 2008 3:00 AM.

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