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What To Do With Old Laptops?

An anonymous reader writes "I've recently acquired a few old P2/P3 laptops. Most either work properly but are slow, or have various problems with power supplies and/or batteries. Attempting to sell them would probably earn less than the cost of shipping, so that's out of the question. I was hoping the Slashdot crowd could give me some ideas on what to do with these old computers. As somebody who already has ~10 computers lying around the house there is certainly no need for an additional computer to 'experiment' with, so I was hoping for some more creative suggestions."

11 of 620 comments (clear)

  1. Donate by libertynow · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Donate to a charity - there are many developing 3rd world countries that I am sure would love to get their hands on something like that.

  2. Send them to me. by morgan_greywolf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Send them to me. I'll find a use for them. Hell, I'll pay your shipping.

  3. Give 'em away? by bsDaemon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since OLPC seems to be voiding its own warranty, after a manner of speaking, why not stick an older Linux distro on them, like RH 7 or so, and give 'em away to some local kids who are into sci/tech but maybe don't have a lot of money?

    I'm sure that relevant teachers at the local high school or something might be able to hook you up with the right kind of kids, and you maybe could get a tax deduction out of it, even if they required a tad bit of work on the power supplies or batteries I'm sure you'd still come out ahead, even if only morally.

  4. Use them by masdog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I realize that you have already have a number of computers to play around with, but why not use these? Even if they are old and slow, they will still run Linux (or Windows 2000/XP/2003 if you prefer, just not as well). It will also save you a little on your monthly power bill.

    Or you could ship a good one to me. I'll give it a very good home.

  5. Myth Frontend by tomz16 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Front end for a myth box... most laptops have one or more video outputs, are quiet, small, and energy efficient!

  6. Re:Picture Frame by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You could meet the needs of a small library by throwing a wireless card into each of them, then pick up one new desktop machine and set the laptops up as thin clients.

    Find some small computer shop and get them to donate the desktop machine in exchange for a plaque on the wall at the library (cheap advertising and tax deductible donation for them), set it up over a weekend, and claim the cost of the laptops and your time as a charitable donation when you do your own taxes.

    Or, of course, you could make a bunch of ugly digital picture frames that consume way too much electricity.

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  7. Terminals by IGnatius+T+Foobar · · Score: 3, Insightful

    They'll make great terminals. All you need is a simple boot image to get each one to attach to the network and connect to an Linux Terminal Server.

    At that point you've got a nice farm of small terminals with a big powerful server behind them. If you don't need this for yourself, consider donating the whole setup to a local school, church, or other organization that could use a low-maintenance multiuser computing environment.

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  8. Re:Kids by AceJohnny · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Turned all into poor mans xo laptops. That is so ironic, considering the goal of the XO laptop...
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  9. Re:Picture Frame by thanatos_x · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm glad someone thought that the picture frame idea was somewhat lacking.

    Unfortunately (or fortunately) we've gotten to the point where technology, even free, is completely obsolete in 10-15 years. In a few years the cost of maintaining those systems as well as the extra electricity will probably make them more costly than a replacement. Still, if it's a few more good years, that's not bad.

    What should be focused on more is safe disposal of computer equipment. We are very fast approaching the point of PC saturation. Almost everyone has a PC that wants one (in industrialized nations) and new models are very cheap. Very few people want the hassle of a PC after it's been handed down twice. (assume 5-7 years old.) Past that it's almost useless; the price, performance, size and features almost always win out for "buy new". You're going to likely be looking at 40+ million old PC/laptops disposed each year in the US alone, excluding businesses. (5 year lifespan, 2 in 3 people with a computer.)

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  10. Re:Bonfire by Clete2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about turning them into a Folding @ Home farm?

  11. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion