Fun with hard drives
Dec. 28th, 2009 10:47 amMy parents have an old lowish-spec computer, that runs XP but is rather temperamental due to various Windows bugs I haven't been able to sort out. (Basically it won't print or run 16-bit software, except as an administrator, and since one of the main things they want it for is playing our old Patience/Tetris games, that were many cases written for Windows 3.x...)
So I decided that it might be worth installing the Ubuntu Netbook Remix on it and that way they could play a whole range of Patience style games securely and with no irritating error messages. I went with NBR because not only is it designed to run on lower spec hardware but its menu system is very simple and straightforward to use - not as powerful or flexible as ordinary Gnome or KDE but that isn't what my parents need. (Mum sat down in front of it as soon as I installed it and worked out how to use it with pretty much no prompting from me.)
I started with a Wubi install, but the main hard drive in this computer was only 40Gb and I was hoping to be able to give the Ubuntu install a reasonable amount of space. So I remembered that we had a couple of hard drives knocking around that had been in older computers that no longer worked and thought it would be worth trying to put one of them into the computer in question. Since I don't do hardware, that involved waiting for my brother who does to be home for Christmas.
It wasn't a straightforward process for us - finding the right size screwdrivers, working out how to slide the drive in, and then trying to connect it, and then we booted to find that the computer refused to acknowledge the presence of either of the hard drives...
After a couple more attempts we were nearly ready to give up and call in professional help, when I spotted something rather significant in my brother's build a computer book. It really isn't a very good idea to try and connect a hard drive with a floppy drive data cable.
After that things went a little more smoothly, and once we'd worked out how to set the jumpers on the back of the drives, so that you had one master and one slave, we had a working system with an additional hard drive. Go us! Of course, at this point we realised we had used the smaller of the two extra hard drives in the machine, and really we'd be better off with the larger one. ;-)
So, open the case up again, but this time the whole thing took about 10 mins rather than the four or five hours the first time. So hopefully, if we have to do it again, the whole thing should be rather easier.
I haven't installed NBR yet - we finished the hardware tinkering at around 11pm - but hopefully that should be rather more straightforward. I'll let you know.
So I decided that it might be worth installing the Ubuntu Netbook Remix on it and that way they could play a whole range of Patience style games securely and with no irritating error messages. I went with NBR because not only is it designed to run on lower spec hardware but its menu system is very simple and straightforward to use - not as powerful or flexible as ordinary Gnome or KDE but that isn't what my parents need. (Mum sat down in front of it as soon as I installed it and worked out how to use it with pretty much no prompting from me.)
I started with a Wubi install, but the main hard drive in this computer was only 40Gb and I was hoping to be able to give the Ubuntu install a reasonable amount of space. So I remembered that we had a couple of hard drives knocking around that had been in older computers that no longer worked and thought it would be worth trying to put one of them into the computer in question. Since I don't do hardware, that involved waiting for my brother who does to be home for Christmas.
It wasn't a straightforward process for us - finding the right size screwdrivers, working out how to slide the drive in, and then trying to connect it, and then we booted to find that the computer refused to acknowledge the presence of either of the hard drives...
After a couple more attempts we were nearly ready to give up and call in professional help, when I spotted something rather significant in my brother's build a computer book. It really isn't a very good idea to try and connect a hard drive with a floppy drive data cable.
After that things went a little more smoothly, and once we'd worked out how to set the jumpers on the back of the drives, so that you had one master and one slave, we had a working system with an additional hard drive. Go us! Of course, at this point we realised we had used the smaller of the two extra hard drives in the machine, and really we'd be better off with the larger one. ;-)
So, open the case up again, but this time the whole thing took about 10 mins rather than the four or five hours the first time. So hopefully, if we have to do it again, the whole thing should be rather easier.
I haven't installed NBR yet - we finished the hardware tinkering at around 11pm - but hopefully that should be rather more straightforward. I'll let you know.