Remember the computer I bought at the salvage yard for ten bucks?
I’m on it right now, running Puppy Linux on the 128 Megabyte Compact Flash card, which I plugged into one of these:

The computer’s BIOS is tricked into believing that the flash card is a primary Hitachi hard drive.
Once again, the simplicity of all of this is breathtaking, and there is no noise except the CPU fan.
The flash adapter cost 99 cents, and the flash card was just something I had lying around, leftover from an old digital camera I no longer use.
The bottom line is that for almost nothing, I have a super fast, solid state PC.
AFTERTHOUGHT: I hope the geekier readers will forgive my amazement, but I have long been accustomed to thinking of computers as expensive propositions involving machines with hard drives and operating systems that actually cost money, that have to be maintained with anti-virus, and worried over. This instant, on-the-fly, almost disposable computing is forcing me to go through a mental readjustment, and it is changing the way I think about computers.
More minimalist Puppy Love
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4 responses to “More minimalist Puppy Love”
Nice.
Skynet will wake up any day now.
I like hearing your computer tales. I use an old Dell with improved memory and hard drive. As my work using the machine is dependent on MS, MS is my OS. I have done some cursory ventures into Linux, but MS Access I use for my work is easier for me to use than fooling around w Linux.
It makes me wish I hadn’t dumped a lot of my old hardware in my recent moves. I want one! 🙂
Now I wish I could find a local source of junk computers. Most in my area have gone out of business!