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Options For a Laptop With a Broken Screen?

DefenseSupportParty writes "I recently traveled via an unnamed airline, and stupidly checked my laptop. Unfortunately, the screen broke in transit and they refuse to take responsibility for it, claiming that it could have been broken before the flight. I'm not really in the mood to replace the screen if I have to pay for it, as I have other laptops that I can use. At the same time, I don't want to waste computing power that could be put to good use. I've thought about the common stuff: file server, SETI@Home, but I'd like to do something a little more creative. Does anyone have good ideas for a relatively powerful laptop without a display?"

7 of 544 comments (clear)

  1. Set-top-box by Swizec · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1) plug it into a television
    2) add IR
    3) add connection to file server with videos 4) ???
    5) entertainment

  2. You can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Buy a cheap external monitor.

  3. Donate it? by Z80xxc! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you don't need the laptop, and the screen is relatively easy and inexpensive to replace, and the laptop has decent specs, why not fix the screen and sell it to someone who needs a laptop for just the cost of the screen replacement? You don't need it, they do, it's a (presumably) decent laptop. Everybody wins, and they might bake you a pie or something someday in return.

  4. Server by sheetzam · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Built in UPS, plenty of computing power as you say.
    Best use I can think of is as a server - web, mail, mysql, whathaveyou. Wear and tear on the hard drive not an issue if you're using something set up correctly - the hard drive will be spun down most of the time.

    --
    "Actually, I enjoyed this in the same vague, horrible way I enjoyed the A-Team" P. Opus
  5. Make it into a desktop by grege1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Buy a usb keyboard and mouse and a 19" external monitor. Set the power saving to just turn off the screen when you shut the lid, not go into standby. Instant energy efficient desktop computer. What you do with that is the same questin of what you do with any surplus computer.

  6. Re:External display by Brian+Gordon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Who even needs a display? Run X over SSH.

  7. NO. Sue them. by commodore64_love · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Nobody's given the correct answer:

    - Small Claims Court.

    "It was probably broke before you checked it," is not a valid excuse for an airline to refuse baggage insurance (or any other company for that matter). It is THEIR responsibility to check the luggage/item and verify it is not broken prior to accepting it under their liability insurance, and since they failed to do that, the legal presumption is that the laptop was 100% okay when received and damaged during transit. In fact in many cases the mere threat of court action is enough to make the airline cough up the cash.

    This is somewhat similar to how the law presumes a mail-order package is 100% the seller's responsibility, even if said package was lost by the post office, or stolen by the neighborhood teenager. It's the seller's fault and requirement to issue a refund. The law is designed to protect the *customer* not the airline or seller.

    One other option:

    - Call your credit card company. Many of them provide protection, such that if an airline damages your luggage, you can get a refund of all your ticket money and/or replacement of the damaged good.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it." - historian Evelyn Beatrice Hall