Well, I was too late for the $118 laptop. I figured it would have cost me about $50 to add a CDROM and hard drive to it.
After a few unsuccessful bids on Ebay, I bought a more expensive laptop from the same company.
Dell Inspiron 8100
CPU: Intel Pentium III-M 1.13GHz Processor
Hard Drive: 48GB Hard Drive
Memory: 256MB RAM
Display: 15" Color LCD
Networking: 10/100Mbps NIC
Audio: ES1980 Maestro-3 PCI Audio
Video: 32MB nVidia GeForce 2 Go/MX Ultra
Ports:
* 1 PS/2
* 1 Serial
* 1 Parallel
* 2x 2.0 USB
* 1 10/100Mbps NIC
* 1 56K V.90 Mini PCI Modem
* 2 PCMCIA Slots
* Sound
Drives:
* 48GB Hard Drive
* 24x CD-ROM Drive
* Standard 3.5" 1.44MB Floppy Drive (hotswap)
Includes:
* AC Adapter
* Power Cord
* Battery
With sales tax the total came to $261. Shipping was free, and most of the laptops on Ebay cost $35-40 to ship. So I got this at the same cost as if I had paid $225 on Ebay.
Since the place is in PA, I paid sales tax. However, this does mean that it will be delivered tomorrow.
And now my dilemma. I didn't expect to be buying a PC with this much power and a dedicated graphics card. In theory this PC will run many of my game programs if I install Windows XP on it, and it has a COA (certificate of authenticity) sticker on it, so I can legally install XP on it if I can get my hands on a disk.
However, I really wanted to get off of the Windows merry-go-round and move to Linux to simplify security and not have to worry about dropped support for XP when Vista starts to mature. Right now my Virus scanner is a huge drain on my CPU. While I will install some kind of firewall for Linux, it's not going to be anywhere near as intensive as what I use to protect my Windows PC.
Still, I am so tempted to carry my some games with me on vacation. I really don't want to play around with dual boot. So I will stick with my original plan and go with Ubuntu or KUbuntu (any opinions on which is better?) and try to stay away from the dark side of the force.:vader1::typing:
I am concerned with getting the Maestro-3 sound card and NVidia card working on Linux. It looks like there are issues with
Ubuntu and Maestro. I was hoping that one benefit of an older system would be that the drivers would be worked out for most of the popular hardware.
I found the
ALSA project page for the ESS1988 (mine is 1980). I'm hoping I don't have to go to that much trouble.
BTW, there is some damage on the PC. The PC is under warranty and the first thing I will test is the NIC card, so I will know quickly if it's cosmetic or not. If it's not, the PC goes back. If it is just cosmetic, out comes the duct tape.:bandaid:
BTW, the ports are USB 2.0, so no worries there. Wish me luck.