Installing XP on a Lenovo Laptop

G

Gene E. Bloch

On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 01:03:00 +0000 (UTC), Doum wrote:



> Bruce Chambers écrivait

> news:eoeie6O4KHA.1016@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl:

>

>>

>> LD55ZRA wrote:

>>>

>>>

>>>

>>>

>>> Good idea but the only snag I can see is that on some laptops,

>>> changing a HD is no simple job. You need to perform a complete

>>> open-heart surgery!


>>

>>

>> Any particular brands/models where the hard drive is difficult to

>> remove?


>

> Asus EeePC 1005, I've replaced the 160GB stock HD with a 7200 RPM 320GB HD

> and it was quite a job, the drive is located under the keyboard and you

> almost have to take the netbook apart.

>

> But is a netbook really a laptop? (Personally, I would think so)




We'd have to look at various laptops and netbooks to find out how many are

set up for easy drive removal and how many aren't. A sample of one isn't

much, statistically.



Of course, in this thread, I'm citing my experience on maybe 20 laptops,

which, statistically speaking, isn't all that much better :)



As for whether a netbook is a laptop: Yes. Or maybe No.



--

Gene E. Bloch
 
K

Ken Blake, MVP

On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 01:03:00 +0000 (UTC), Doum wrote:





> But is a netbook really a laptop? (Personally, I would think so)








Sure. People use the word "netbook" simply to describe a small,

light-weight laptop. Other than size and weight, there's really no

difference between them.



--

Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003

Please Reply to the Newsgroup
 
S

Seth

"Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message

news:k9avs5pbum741td6veglhgkrq7gdbiv3f9@4ax.com...

> On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 01:03:00 +0000 (UTC), Doum wrote:

>

>> But is a netbook really a laptop? (Personally, I would think so)


>

> Sure. People use the word "netbook" simply to describe a small,

> light-weight laptop. Other than size and weight, there's really no

> difference between them.






Microsoft says there is a difference and has certain criteria to define it.



Netbook is certainly not just a "small, lightweight notebook". There are

size, processor and power criteria. A "small, lightweight laptop" is a

specific calls of laptop, still above what a netbook is. IBM X-Series is

small and lightweight but doesn't qualify as a netbook.
 
L

LD55ZRA

Bruce Chambers wrote:

>




>

> Post back when you've finished high school, moved out of your parents

> house, and garnered a few years experience working in the real world.




I have finished high school and now I am in my second year of

Physics BSc degree at London University. I have moved out of my

parents house (I am 19 which you may not know) and am currently

living in College Halls of Residence in Central London. I have

two years experience of Supporting PC and Laptop systems at my

university where I also work part-time in Central Computing

Services Department. We have about 1,000 systems on out network

running all kinds of software applications and operating systems

including Windows XP Professional, Windows Vista, Windows 7 {and

Linux and Unix systems which I have nothing to do with}. I am

fortunate to get both Windows XP and Windows 7 for my exclusive

use though I can't install or uninstall anything on Windows 7

system (but with XP I can do almost anything I want to do) because

it is for a specialist purpose to test Office 2010 beta, and

Visual Studio 2010 which I am using to write Instruction material

for next academic year. I consider this to be a real world

because I see about 1000 systems on a regular basis.



Of course I have my own Dell 2600 system and RM desktop system in

my room on which I can test almost everything before I post

anything here. So my solutions are thtoughly researched and

tested and that is exactly what people can see here.



hth







--

THE INFORMATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY

KIND. LD55ZRA DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EITHER EXPRESSED OR

IMPLIED, INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND

FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT SHALL LD55ZRA

OR ITS ASSOCIATES BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER

INCLUDING DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, LOSS OF

BUSINESS PROFITS OR SPECIAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF LD55ZRA OR ITS

ASSOCIATES HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH

DAMAGES. SOME STATES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR

LIMITATION OF LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL

DAMAGES SO THE FOREGOING LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY.



Copyright LD55ZRA 2010.
 
U

Unknown

2nd year of college and you've never been taught manners?

"LD55ZRA" wrote in message

news:4BCFBA84.E2F771B3@discussions.microsoft.com...

>

>

> Bruce Chambers wrote:

>>


>

>>

>> Post back when you've finished high school, moved out of your parents

>> house, and garnered a few years experience working in the real world.


>

> I have finished high school and now I am in my second year of

> Physics BSc degree at London University. I have moved out of my

> parents house (I am 19 which you may not know) and am currently

> living in College Halls of Residence in Central London. I have

> two years experience of Supporting PC and Laptop systems at my

> university where I also work part-time in Central Computing

> Services Department. We have about 1,000 systems on out network

> running all kinds of software applications and operating systems

> including Windows XP Professional, Windows Vista, Windows 7 {and

> Linux and Unix systems which I have nothing to do with}. I am

> fortunate to get both Windows XP and Windows 7 for my exclusive

> use though I can't install or uninstall anything on Windows 7

> system (but with XP I can do almost anything I want to do) because

> it is for a specialist purpose to test Office 2010 beta, and

> Visual Studio 2010 which I am using to write Instruction material

> for next academic year. I consider this to be a real world

> because I see about 1000 systems on a regular basis.

>

> Of course I have my own Dell 2600 system and RM desktop system in

> my room on which I can test almost everything before I post

> anything here. So my solutions are thtoughly researched and

> tested and that is exactly what people can see here.

>

> hth

>

>

>

> --

> THE INFORMATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY

> KIND. LD55ZRA DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EITHER EXPRESSED OR

> IMPLIED, INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND

> FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT SHALL LD55ZRA

> OR ITS ASSOCIATES BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER

> INCLUDING DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, LOSS OF

> BUSINESS PROFITS OR SPECIAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF LD55ZRA OR ITS

> ASSOCIATES HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH

> DAMAGES. SOME STATES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR

> LIMITATION OF LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL

> DAMAGES SO THE FOREGOING LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY.

>

> Copyright LD55ZRA 2010.
 
J

John B. Slocomb

On Wed, 21 Apr 2010 18:40:38 -0600, Bruce Chambers

wrote:



>LD55ZRA wrote:

>> Bruce Chambers wrote:

>>


>

>>

>> Now your 15+ years of supporting laptops in enterprise environments,

>> have you come across the model I gave you and have you tried changing

>> its HD?

>>


>

>

>Actually, no. Dell's Inspirion line was, if I remember correctly, part

>of their low-end consumer-grade offerings. Corporations, in my

>experience, have generally purchased from the Latitude product line.

>

>It may be that that particular model stymied your attempts to change the

>hard drive, but that one limited experience certainly doesn't entitle

>you to broadly condemn all Dell laptops, much less those of other

>manufacturers.

>

>Post back when you've finished high school, moved out of your parents

>house, and garnered a few years experience working in the real world.






Hate to horn in but I've got a scrap Inspiron laying in the corner.

Requires two screws be removed and the H.D. slides out.



If I can find my screwdriver maybe 2 minutes :)



John B. Slocomb

(johnbslocombatgmaildotcom)
 
M

MJMIII

Manners? Most of his posts suggest he's posting from the womb.



--





"Don't pick a fight with an old man.

If he is too old to fight, he'll just kill you."





"Unknown" wrote in message

news:#ZL#Fhi4KHA.6132@TK2MSFTNGP05.phx.gbl...

> 2nd year of college and you've never been taught manners?

> "LD55ZRA" wrote in message

> news:4BCFBA84.E2F771B3@discussions.microsoft.com...

>>

>>

>> Bruce Chambers wrote:

>>>


>>

>>>

>>> Post back when you've finished high school, moved out of your parents

>>> house, and garnered a few years experience working in the real world.


>>

>> I have finished high school and now I am in my second year of

>> Physics BSc degree at London University. I have moved out of my

>> parents house (I am 19 which you may not know) and am currently

>> living in College Halls of Residence in Central London. I have

>> two years experience of Supporting PC and Laptop systems at my

>> university where I also work part-time in Central Computing

>> Services Department. We have about 1,000 systems on out network

>> running all kinds of software applications and operating systems

>> including Windows XP Professional, Windows Vista, Windows 7 {and

>> Linux and Unix systems which I have nothing to do with}. I am

>> fortunate to get both Windows XP and Windows 7 for my exclusive

>> use though I can't install or uninstall anything on Windows 7

>> system (but with XP I can do almost anything I want to do) because

>> it is for a specialist purpose to test Office 2010 beta, and

>> Visual Studio 2010 which I am using to write Instruction material

>> for next academic year. I consider this to be a real world

>> because I see about 1000 systems on a regular basis.

>>

>> Of course I have my own Dell 2600 system and RM desktop system in

>> my room on which I can test almost everything before I post

>> anything here. So my solutions are thtoughly researched and

>> tested and that is exactly what people can see here.

>>

>> hth

>>

>>

>>

>> --

>> THE INFORMATION IS PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY

>> KIND. LD55ZRA DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EITHER EXPRESSED OR

>> IMPLIED, INCLUDING THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND

>> FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. IN NO EVENT SHALL LD55ZRA

>> OR ITS ASSOCIATES BE LIABLE FOR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER

>> INCLUDING DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, CONSEQUENTIAL, LOSS OF

>> BUSINESS PROFITS OR SPECIAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF LD55ZRA OR ITS

>> ASSOCIATES HAVE BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH

>> DAMAGES. SOME STATES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OR

>> LIMITATION OF LIABILITY FOR CONSEQUENTIAL OR INCIDENTAL

>> DAMAGES SO THE FOREGOING LIMITATION MAY NOT APPLY.

>>

>> Copyright LD55ZRA 2010.


>

>
 
K

Ken Blake, MVP

On Wed, 21 Apr 2010 21:58:25 -0400, "Seth"

wrote:



> "Ken Blake, MVP" wrote in message

> news:k9avs5pbum741td6veglhgkrq7gdbiv3f9@4ax.com...

> > On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 01:03:00 +0000 (UTC), Doum wrote:

> >

> >> But is a netbook really a laptop? (Personally, I would think so)


> >

> > Sure. People use the word "netbook" simply to describe a small,

> > light-weight laptop. Other than size and weight, there's really no

> > difference between them.


>

>

> Microsoft says there is a difference and has certain criteria to define it.

>

> Netbook is certainly not just a "small, lightweight notebook". There are

> size, processor and power criteria.






Then your views are different from mine.







> A "small, lightweight laptop" is a

> specific calls of laptop, still above what a netbook is. IBM X-Series is

> small and lightweight but doesn't qualify as a netbook.




--

Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP (Windows Desktop Experience) since 2003

Please Reply to the Newsgroup
 
Back
Top Bottom