AMD Hates Laptop Stickers As Much As You Do
pickens writes "David Pogue writes in the NY Times that when you buy a new Windows PC, it comes festooned with stickers on the palm rests: one for Windows, one for Skype, one for Intel, one for the laptop company, maybe an Energy Star sticker and so on. 'It's like buying a new, luxury car — and discovering that it comes with non-removable bumper stickers that promote the motor oil, the floor mat maker, the windshield-fluid company and the pine tree air freshener you have no intention of ever using,' writes Pogue. But the worst thing is that when you peel them off, they shred, leaving adhesive crud behind. 'When you've just spent big bucks on a laptop, should you really be obligated to spend the first 20 minutes trying to dissolve away the sticker goop with WD40?' But AMD has a solution. Starting next year, AMD will switch to new stickers that peel off easily, leaving no residue; after that, it's considering eliminating the sticker program altogether."
Try to remove that huge apple that says "I overpay my hardware" with WD40...
They have them on desktops too, even some monitors have obtrusive logos. One of the things that Apple got right with their computer products.
-- these are only opinions and they might not be mine.
My MacBook had nothing of the like. It just didn't.
"I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
That's why I buy Apple, I hate branding so much that I am happy to report it came out of the package without stickers marking my allegiance to one company or another. It also comes with this cool light on the back in a funny shape that's not really useful, but I'm sure I'll figure it out its purpose someday. It's really cool, you guys should try it.
Qxe4
The only downside for pure citrus orange oil is that your laptop may smell like oranges for days.
That's a downside?
I peel them off and put them on other things. My Atari 2600 has Intel inside.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
Perhaps you could look at business laptops, generally they only come with 1 or 2 stickers
1 for the Chipset/Processor
other for the OS(If it was included)
and, removing the stickers on thinkpads is extremely easy, run Prime 95 + Furmark for 15-20 minutes, use TPFC to disable the fan. Soon the sticker area heats up enough that you can just peel it off with minimal residue..
And, its unlikely that a short burst of high temp's will damage the processor in any way
My kitchen garbage has been adorned with this sticker for over a decade.
We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
-- Anais Nin
I prefer to use C4. I prefer the smell of almonds to oranges.
left turn! left turn! left turn!
"Going to war without the French is like going deer hunting without your accordion." ~General Norman Schwarzkopf
It smells like victory.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Of course not! Try it in someone else's home, your shit is flammable.
When the "Designed for Windows" sticker came off by itself after two years of using my ThinkPad, I put that sticker on my wall, next to the window.
These days most of the babies used to make baby oil are kept in cages and fed a genetically-engineered diet which is designed to greatly boost the production of the fats which most of the oil is squeezed from. So it's not really "natural" anymore; as they saying goes: garbage in, garbage out.
If you can, try to find baby oil which is squeezed from organic free range babies. It has a much higher quality due to the more varied diets and additional nutrients they get from natural foraging behaviour; however it's a fair bit more expensive and many stores don't carry it at all. I think the average free range baby yields about 3 litres of baby oil when squeezed; you get around 10L from a battery-farm baby.