Equipment Failure


My aging desktop PC is starting to come apart: today is the first time I have ever heard the click of death.  I had always imagined it would sound like the disengaging of the head whenever I shut down the computer.  In the middle of reading a research paper, I was interrupted by a violent, pounding racket that came screaming from the case.  It was so loud that for a few seconds, I was actually afraid my computer would explode or catch fire.

Fortunately, the drive was mostly unused and had nothing really useful in it, while most everything remained safe on the primary WD Raptor.  The really important stuff is already backed up on my network drive or on my department disk space, so if anything else blows up I’ll still be okay.  When I removed the offending drive and tried to boot, only the power supply and CPU fans started spinning, leaving me with only a blank screen.  Somehow I managed to have unseated the video card from its connection to the motherboard and after I reseated it, everything returned to normal.

Quite a few people try to salvage failing computer components, but I don’t think it’s worth it.  The main idea is to patch stuff up just enough to transfer off any important data.  There’s the legend of  sticking the drive in the freezer overnight to get it working again.  Someone even got their video card working by baking it in the oven.  The fear of losing data is so great to some that there even exists a sound library of hard drive failures.

I don’t think my computer has much life left in it.  I don’t want to switch to my laptop for everything since it only has a VGA output and no digital connection, rendering my monitor useless.  I suppose I could get a docking station, but I can’t believe that Lenovo still makes laptops without digital outputs for external monitors.  Despite buying it last year, it even came with a pile of serial ports, a dial-up modem, and a PCMCIA slot that nobody would ever use.  A new desktop would be good for games but that was the purpose of buying an Xbox, and besides, high end desktops are still pretty expensive.  Of course something beefy would also be good for my schoolwork, since the last two projects had implementations that were extremely CPU intensive.

Regardless, I think I’m running on borrowed time.

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