At Canada Computers in Toronto, circa 2009.

  • Thorry@feddit.org
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    53 minutes ago

    This computer was old and shit even for 2009 standards. Floppy drive, IDE HDD and CD-ROM, a PCI modem, CPU looks to be a P4 socket 478. I’d say this PC was new somewhere around 2002, so well worn by the time 2009 rolled around.

    I like how not only has the heatsink fallen off (which happened often with those early P4 plastic push pins). The little fan on the videocard is also disconnected. Not that a fan and such a tiny crappy heatsink would do much anyways.

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.caOP
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      1 hour ago

      The little fan on the videocard is also disconnected.

      That’s how you turn on the quiet mode of the GPU.

    • Itdidnttrickledown@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      Its a old photo. Really old. This is the second post I’ve seen like this today. At least the other one was new enough to not have pci slot and a parallel port. Just some slop post.

        • Itdidnttrickledown@lemmy.world
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          2 hours ago

          I haven’t looked that close but for a computer its too old for anything other than retro gaming and it looks like it may be too cheap for that.

          Edit: Now that I’ve bothered to ‘enhance’ its older than 2009. It doesn’t look like a AM2 or AM3 socket to me. The processor has pins and the computer has a socket. Its a Pentium 4 socket 478 at best. With the plastic locking lever it may be socket 423 which dates it at around 2000. I would keep it just to fuck around with.

  • CatZoomies@lemmy.worldM
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    4 hours ago

    Good grief, that’s a fun one to see! How did the conversation go with the customer if you remember?

    Now I wonder what catastrophic damage my Noctua D15 would do. An unstoppable force cooler would hit my big ass GPU immovable object. That collision would trigger a big bang ray traced singularity localised entirely within my PC case.

    • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.caOP
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      3 hours ago

      I think they were a clueless computer user so I just told them what the problem was and how we fixed it went over their head. But we laughed good with my colleague. Falling coolers were common on Intel boards at the time when the retention brackets used to be hooked with push-pins. Note this is the factory installed bracket on the board that’s fallen. 😄 It’s not a poorly installed cooler. This is prior to the user-installed push-pin design that came with the Core processors on the LGA sockets.

          • Itdidnttrickledown@lemmy.world
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            1 hour ago

            Nah it was 98 or ME. That thing is pre XP. It looks like a socket 423. They were the only boards that had a plastic locking lever that I can remember.

            • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.caOP
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              1 hour ago

              Pretty sure it’s a P4 on a 478. 423 is significantly larger and the cooler retenrion clip goes directly on the socket. This socket has no retention protrusions. Instead there’s a plastic bracket that the cooler is attached to, but the plastic bracket itself has fallen off the board. You can see it on the cooler itself in the other photo. 😄

  • Leah@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    5 hours ago

    Never lost a cpu cooler. But I had a 6800GT shit itself because the fan died and got all melty. Was able to get a good enough replacement at a comp USA and it still worked.