Skip to content
  • Categories
  • Recent
  • Tags
  • Popular
  • World
  • Users
  • Groups
Skins
  • Light
  • Cerulean
  • Cosmo
  • Flatly
  • Journal
  • Litera
  • Lumen
  • Lux
  • Materia
  • Minty
  • Morph
  • Pulse
  • Sandstone
  • Simplex
  • Sketchy
  • Spacelab
  • United
  • Yeti
  • Zephyr
  • Dark
  • Cyborg
  • Darkly
  • Quartz
  • Slate
  • Solar
  • Superhero
  • Vapor

  • Default (No Skin)
  • No Skin
Collapse
Code Project
  1. Home
  2. The Lounge
  3. When do you cut your losses?

When do you cut your losses?

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
helpquestionlinuxhardwareannouncement
32 Posts 19 Posters 2 Views 1 Watching
  • Oldest to Newest
  • Newest to Oldest
  • Most Votes
Reply
  • Reply as topic
Log in to reply
This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
  • N Nelek

    I have had problems when installing Windows 7 last times too due to the high number of updates too. In my case it was due to a problem with the updater itself. It got solved downloading the KB3138612 and installing it manually. Clean install finish offline, get online, windows updater updates itself, install the local KB3138612, ask for updates, get a list of over 150, click ok, leave it over night... Next day, only one update had failed. Try again, got through

    M.D.V. ;) If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about? Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.

    D Offline
    D Offline
    dandy72
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    I installed Win7 x64 (with SP1 slipstreamed in it) from a CD that had been created from an ISO file. I have that file in a folder, with two subfolders, one containing KB3138612, and the other KB3145739. According to the readme I had left in the folder, the two patches help to avoid extra-long patch update times. So I installed the OS (including SP1), then the KB file you're referring to, then the other, *then* I let it go online and download/install everything. Pretty close to what you're describing. At this point, the laptop is stuck in a System Repair (no error found) / Reboot loop. As others have said, I've already spent way more time on this than any of it is worth.

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • L Lost User

      Hi, Before you scrap the machine try deleting this registry key and see if your problem goes away. HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\RebootPending

      D Offline
      D Offline
      dandy72
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      It sure would be nice to try, if I could even reach a state where I could do anything with the registry. Right now I can't get that far. I realize you can load and edit the registry from a command prompt (which I should be able to reach), but I'm past the point where I can be convinced to bother to try. And I'm curious: what does a "reboot pending" flag have to do with running the system repair tool?

      1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • J Jorgen Andersson

        Everything that's equally old.

        Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello Never stop dreaming - Freddie Kruger

        D Offline
        D Offline
        dandy72
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        True. But I suspect she's not the type who would've hung onto an installer so she can set it up again 10 years down the road. I'd expect her (and that'd be me being an optimist for her to go that far) to google for something, download it, and try to install it. And her googling would NOT be returning anything that has the same age as her laptop.

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • D dandy72

          Someone brought me an old laptop to "clean up" because she wants to give it to a 3-year old grandchild, to keep her away from her "good" laptop. It's old, it's slow, there was nothing I was asked to salvage, so I figured the quickest way to get there was to blow everything away and just let a clean install of Windows take over the entire disk after deleting it all. The first attempt to install went just fine. Then I let Windows 7 get and install any and all updates it could find. This is what the system came with, and even though I realize it's out of support, yada-yada, I figured it would probably be the best thing to reinstall on it. Anything newer would be even slower, not to mention no guarantee that any proprietary driver might not be available or work with 8/8.1/10/whatever else. At some point some update failed, and it spent countless hours rolling everything back. Next time around I told it to only install a subset of them, and do it all in smaller chunks (that generally seems to work better in my experience since, at this point in time, Win7 tries to get and install hundreds of updates...which might be just too much for it to try to handle all at once). At some point it decided to run System Repair (not System Restore) on every startup, even though it could never find/fix any problem. I figured I'd try a different hard drive - I have plenty of spares I don't mind giving away. Long story short, I'm back in the same situation; System Repair comes up on its own on every reboot and, if I *can* eventually reach the login screen, the subsequent reboot starts the whole thing all over again. While I'm ready to say the first hard drive's just gone way past its useful life (the manufacturing date printed on it says 2007), I have a harder time saying the same about the second, and I know I last used it to test various Linux distributions in another laptop and never had a problem with it. I'm not sure if some unrelated hardware problem could manifest itself in this way. But I'm running out of patience and not quite willing to try a third hard drive, if only for the sake of trying. Again, it's just an old laptop to be given to a 3-year old, so honestly, I've probably spent way more time on this than anyone ought to. I think this is gonna be one of those rare times I just tell her to trash it. I had no point and no question. Just a semi-rant, I guess...

          J Offline
          J Offline
          Joe Woodbury
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          I've seen several laptop hard drives do a slow fail. Years ago, my oldest daughter's laptop would sometimes not boot. I suspected marginal drive sectors were causing the problem, but getting around that was problematic. I finally ran Seagate's SeaTools and it solved the problem for a few months (long enough to save her pictures which, to my knowledge, she has yet to get from my Google drive.) One clue that SeaTools was working is that about two hours in, it spent several hours analyzing a few dozen sectors. I concluded that the problem is over aggresive firmware which "refuses" to retire marginal sectors. SSDs are simply mandatory on laptops.

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • D dandy72

            Someone brought me an old laptop to "clean up" because she wants to give it to a 3-year old grandchild, to keep her away from her "good" laptop. It's old, it's slow, there was nothing I was asked to salvage, so I figured the quickest way to get there was to blow everything away and just let a clean install of Windows take over the entire disk after deleting it all. The first attempt to install went just fine. Then I let Windows 7 get and install any and all updates it could find. This is what the system came with, and even though I realize it's out of support, yada-yada, I figured it would probably be the best thing to reinstall on it. Anything newer would be even slower, not to mention no guarantee that any proprietary driver might not be available or work with 8/8.1/10/whatever else. At some point some update failed, and it spent countless hours rolling everything back. Next time around I told it to only install a subset of them, and do it all in smaller chunks (that generally seems to work better in my experience since, at this point in time, Win7 tries to get and install hundreds of updates...which might be just too much for it to try to handle all at once). At some point it decided to run System Repair (not System Restore) on every startup, even though it could never find/fix any problem. I figured I'd try a different hard drive - I have plenty of spares I don't mind giving away. Long story short, I'm back in the same situation; System Repair comes up on its own on every reboot and, if I *can* eventually reach the login screen, the subsequent reboot starts the whole thing all over again. While I'm ready to say the first hard drive's just gone way past its useful life (the manufacturing date printed on it says 2007), I have a harder time saying the same about the second, and I know I last used it to test various Linux distributions in another laptop and never had a problem with it. I'm not sure if some unrelated hardware problem could manifest itself in this way. But I'm running out of patience and not quite willing to try a third hard drive, if only for the sake of trying. Again, it's just an old laptop to be given to a 3-year old, so honestly, I've probably spent way more time on this than anyone ought to. I think this is gonna be one of those rare times I just tell her to trash it. I had no point and no question. Just a semi-rant, I guess...

            J Offline
            J Offline
            Joop Eggen
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            Throw a Linux on it; say Ubuntu or a variant. Lubuntu is said to be fast.

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • D dandy72

              Someone brought me an old laptop to "clean up" because she wants to give it to a 3-year old grandchild, to keep her away from her "good" laptop. It's old, it's slow, there was nothing I was asked to salvage, so I figured the quickest way to get there was to blow everything away and just let a clean install of Windows take over the entire disk after deleting it all. The first attempt to install went just fine. Then I let Windows 7 get and install any and all updates it could find. This is what the system came with, and even though I realize it's out of support, yada-yada, I figured it would probably be the best thing to reinstall on it. Anything newer would be even slower, not to mention no guarantee that any proprietary driver might not be available or work with 8/8.1/10/whatever else. At some point some update failed, and it spent countless hours rolling everything back. Next time around I told it to only install a subset of them, and do it all in smaller chunks (that generally seems to work better in my experience since, at this point in time, Win7 tries to get and install hundreds of updates...which might be just too much for it to try to handle all at once). At some point it decided to run System Repair (not System Restore) on every startup, even though it could never find/fix any problem. I figured I'd try a different hard drive - I have plenty of spares I don't mind giving away. Long story short, I'm back in the same situation; System Repair comes up on its own on every reboot and, if I *can* eventually reach the login screen, the subsequent reboot starts the whole thing all over again. While I'm ready to say the first hard drive's just gone way past its useful life (the manufacturing date printed on it says 2007), I have a harder time saying the same about the second, and I know I last used it to test various Linux distributions in another laptop and never had a problem with it. I'm not sure if some unrelated hardware problem could manifest itself in this way. But I'm running out of patience and not quite willing to try a third hard drive, if only for the sake of trying. Again, it's just an old laptop to be given to a 3-year old, so honestly, I've probably spent way more time on this than anyone ought to. I think this is gonna be one of those rare times I just tell her to trash it. I had no point and no question. Just a semi-rant, I guess...

              O Offline
              O Offline
              obeobe
              wrote on last edited by
              #19

              It sounds like you ruled out Windows 10 without actually checking if it's compatible. I'd just try to install it and see what happens. IMO good chance it will just work.

              D D 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • D dandy72

                Someone brought me an old laptop to "clean up" because she wants to give it to a 3-year old grandchild, to keep her away from her "good" laptop. It's old, it's slow, there was nothing I was asked to salvage, so I figured the quickest way to get there was to blow everything away and just let a clean install of Windows take over the entire disk after deleting it all. The first attempt to install went just fine. Then I let Windows 7 get and install any and all updates it could find. This is what the system came with, and even though I realize it's out of support, yada-yada, I figured it would probably be the best thing to reinstall on it. Anything newer would be even slower, not to mention no guarantee that any proprietary driver might not be available or work with 8/8.1/10/whatever else. At some point some update failed, and it spent countless hours rolling everything back. Next time around I told it to only install a subset of them, and do it all in smaller chunks (that generally seems to work better in my experience since, at this point in time, Win7 tries to get and install hundreds of updates...which might be just too much for it to try to handle all at once). At some point it decided to run System Repair (not System Restore) on every startup, even though it could never find/fix any problem. I figured I'd try a different hard drive - I have plenty of spares I don't mind giving away. Long story short, I'm back in the same situation; System Repair comes up on its own on every reboot and, if I *can* eventually reach the login screen, the subsequent reboot starts the whole thing all over again. While I'm ready to say the first hard drive's just gone way past its useful life (the manufacturing date printed on it says 2007), I have a harder time saying the same about the second, and I know I last used it to test various Linux distributions in another laptop and never had a problem with it. I'm not sure if some unrelated hardware problem could manifest itself in this way. But I'm running out of patience and not quite willing to try a third hard drive, if only for the sake of trying. Again, it's just an old laptop to be given to a 3-year old, so honestly, I've probably spent way more time on this than anyone ought to. I think this is gonna be one of those rare times I just tell her to trash it. I had no point and no question. Just a semi-rant, I guess...

                M Offline
                M Offline
                MadGerbil
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                I've an aunt that insists on opening every virus infested virtual 'christmas card' that she receives. After the 3rd time I rebuilt her computer I just gave her a name of a local computer repair shop - I got tired wasting weekends fixing something that was going to be toast in 3 months. Maybe if it cost $100 every time these people opened an attachment they'd stop opening them. Get the kid an iPad.

                M 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • O obeobe

                  It sounds like you ruled out Windows 10 without actually checking if it's compatible. I'd just try to install it and see what happens. IMO good chance it will just work.

                  D Offline
                  D Offline
                  Dan Neely
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  I'd second this. I've got an ancient Core 1 duo laptop (originally Vista) upgraded all the way to W10. Vista-7 was a painful driver hunt; and I never did get the SD card slot working. W7-W10 just worked (tm). The laptop itself is available as an emergency loaner for close friends/family. Too old/slow to be a daily driver IMO; even ignoring the completely dead battery and loose charging port (which would probably kill it in short order due to lack of care by end users).

                  Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, weighing all things in the balance of reason? Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful? --Zachris Topelius Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies. -- Sarah Hoyt

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • D DerekT P

                    "Someone" asked you to do this... I'm guessing it's not someone especially close to you or you'd have said "my partner" etc. You've spent hours on this now. Assuming your professional rate is ~ $100/hour you could have gone out and bought a brand new 7" tablet for the cost your "someone" is asking you to stump up. I think an approach (now long past the point of no return) would have been to spend one hour, if all was well then OK, otherwise hand it back with the offer of continuing to try but at (say) half your professional rate. That would be a very fair offer. Personally, I would have declined at the outset, on principle, to provide a 3-year old with a laptop. It's likely to get broken / dropped / sicked on / thrown at the cat in less time than you've spent on it. A 3-year old should be playing with Lego, jumping in puddles, cutting up Dad's suit and scribbling on the wallpaper. When it needs a story it's parents should read to it or make one up. YMMV, IANACP etc (I am not a child psychologist - though I did get a distinction on a uni course on child development. :| )

                    M Offline
                    M Offline
                    MKJCP
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    Agree. 3 year olds (or less then 10 for that matter) should not be on computers/laptops/tablets more than is needed for education. I have seen kids so dependent on video satisfaction they are like little crack-addicts. I fear for their mental development. Someday they'll have to Google how to make toast.

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • M MadGerbil

                      I've an aunt that insists on opening every virus infested virtual 'christmas card' that she receives. After the 3rd time I rebuilt her computer I just gave her a name of a local computer repair shop - I got tired wasting weekends fixing something that was going to be toast in 3 months. Maybe if it cost $100 every time these people opened an attachment they'd stop opening them. Get the kid an iPad.

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      mngerhold
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      MadGerbil wrote:

                      After the 3rd time I rebuilt her computer

                      Imaging

                      M 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • M mngerhold

                        MadGerbil wrote:

                        After the 3rd time I rebuilt her computer

                        Imaging

                        M Offline
                        M Offline
                        MadGerbil
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #24

                        Exactly. I imagined someone else doing the work.

                        M 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • M MadGerbil

                          Exactly. I imagined someone else doing the work.

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          mngerhold
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #25

                          Works for me!

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • O obeobe

                            It sounds like you ruled out Windows 10 without actually checking if it's compatible. I'd just try to install it and see what happens. IMO good chance it will just work.

                            D Offline
                            D Offline
                            dandy72
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #26

                            Win7 is already slow as molasses left outdoors overnight in February on this machine. 10 won't miraculously be any faster, and I've seen plenty of failed experiments to demonstrate it. And getting a license for Win10 on a system that old isn't worth it.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • D DerekT P

                              "Someone" asked you to do this... I'm guessing it's not someone especially close to you or you'd have said "my partner" etc. You've spent hours on this now. Assuming your professional rate is ~ $100/hour you could have gone out and bought a brand new 7" tablet for the cost your "someone" is asking you to stump up. I think an approach (now long past the point of no return) would have been to spend one hour, if all was well then OK, otherwise hand it back with the offer of continuing to try but at (say) half your professional rate. That would be a very fair offer. Personally, I would have declined at the outset, on principle, to provide a 3-year old with a laptop. It's likely to get broken / dropped / sicked on / thrown at the cat in less time than you've spent on it. A 3-year old should be playing with Lego, jumping in puddles, cutting up Dad's suit and scribbling on the wallpaper. When it needs a story it's parents should read to it or make one up. YMMV, IANACP etc (I am not a child psychologist - though I did get a distinction on a uni course on child development. :| )

                              J Offline
                              J Offline
                              jlongo
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #27

                              I haven’t seen $100/hr since Bush/Obama flooded us with H1-B’s

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • L Lost User

                                F-ES Sitecore wrote:

                                I doubt they'll know the difference

                                My 3-year old grandson watches films and plays games on his tablet. He would definitely know the difference. His first question when he first brought it to our house: "Grandad, what's your wifi password?".

                                K Offline
                                K Offline
                                Kirk 10389821
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #28

                                Neat Trick for young kids. The passwords should be the phone numbers they should always know! Starting at 2, my daughter got her first computer (an old spare), I removed the WIN, ALT and other KEYS that cause problems. By 5 she was doing a little home key practice By 5th Grade she could type over 60 WPM! Another good idea we used: Practicing Touch Typing for 2-3 minutes (increasing over time), was the PENANCE she had to pay to PLAY! Everything she was given, had a condition attached to it, like study time, reading time, math time. She did her "WORK" first, and then had access to games, walks and drives... The little snot learned to complete EVERYTHING in the first 1hr of the day, all summer, so she could have the rest of her day. LOL...

                                V 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • 5 5teveH

                                  dandy72 wrote:

                                  I last used it to test various Linux distributions

                                  So why not go with an easy to use Linux distro. I wouldn't have thought a 3-year old is going to mind. :-)

                                  P Offline
                                  P Offline
                                  Peter Adam
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #29

                                  Linux low hardware requirement is a lie. Have you ever tried to install a current distro to an old computer? I was not able to install Linux Mint second newest to a 10 years old CPU/integrated GPU/RAM/Motherboard that ran Windows 10 before... I had to go back to the oldest supported Mint distro. Don't forget: Linus said binary compatibility is for userland software, not for drivers!

                                  5 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • P Peter Adam

                                    Linux low hardware requirement is a lie. Have you ever tried to install a current distro to an old computer? I was not able to install Linux Mint second newest to a 10 years old CPU/integrated GPU/RAM/Motherboard that ran Windows 10 before... I had to go back to the oldest supported Mint distro. Don't forget: Linus said binary compatibility is for userland software, not for drivers!

                                    5 Offline
                                    5 Offline
                                    5teveH
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #30

                                    Peter Adam wrote:

                                    Linux low hardware requirement is a lie. Have you ever tried to install a current distro to an old computer?

                                    Yep, most of the current, popular, distros assume you are installing on modern hardware - and won't do that well on an old PC. But there are still plenty of lightweight Linux distros, which will.

                                    P 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • 5 5teveH

                                      Peter Adam wrote:

                                      Linux low hardware requirement is a lie. Have you ever tried to install a current distro to an old computer?

                                      Yep, most of the current, popular, distros assume you are installing on modern hardware - and won't do that well on an old PC. But there are still plenty of lightweight Linux distros, which will.

                                      P Offline
                                      P Offline
                                      Peter Adam
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #31

                                      Linux Mint, as a lightweight distro with the simplest window manager did not on my MB. I could make it work, if I would update a magnitude of things from the kernel till the C compiler through the libc, and who knows where the ball would have been stopped. Face it, the os world assumes you are on the bleeding edge, and turns together with the bunch wherever the Good Guys lead them. May the const correctness be with you!

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • K Kirk 10389821

                                        Neat Trick for young kids. The passwords should be the phone numbers they should always know! Starting at 2, my daughter got her first computer (an old spare), I removed the WIN, ALT and other KEYS that cause problems. By 5 she was doing a little home key practice By 5th Grade she could type over 60 WPM! Another good idea we used: Practicing Touch Typing for 2-3 minutes (increasing over time), was the PENANCE she had to pay to PLAY! Everything she was given, had a condition attached to it, like study time, reading time, math time. She did her "WORK" first, and then had access to games, walks and drives... The little snot learned to complete EVERYTHING in the first 1hr of the day, all summer, so she could have the rest of her day. LOL...

                                        V Offline
                                        V Offline
                                        vaghelabhavesh
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #32

                                        Kirk 10389821 wrote:

                                        The passwords should be the phone numbers they should always know!

                                        I liked this idea!:thumbsup:

                                        If you are not criticized, you may not be doing much.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        Reply
                                        • Reply as topic
                                        Log in to reply
                                        • Oldest to Newest
                                        • Newest to Oldest
                                        • Most Votes


                                        • Login

                                        • Don't have an account? Register

                                        • Login or register to search.
                                        • First post
                                          Last post
                                        0
                                        • Categories
                                        • Recent
                                        • Tags
                                        • Popular
                                        • World
                                        • Users
                                        • Groups