Paul <nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:
On Sun, 3/8/2026 12:53 PM, Frank Slootweg wrote:
micky <NONONOmisc07@fmguy.com> wrote:
In alt.comp.os.windows-10, on Fri, 6 Mar 2026 22:10:25 -0500, Paul[...]
<nospam@needed.invalid> wrote:
Any time you go on a repair mission, you really need to collect
model information before you go. That helps reduce the
amount of electronic crap you have to pack for the trip.
He coudln't find the model on the outside. It's on the inside of course, >> >> but getting inside is the problem.
As I mentioned umpteen times (yes, also to you):
'System Information' (msinfo32) -> System Summary -> righthand pane -> >> > System Manufacturer, System Model *and* System SKU.
With that information you go to the System Manufacturer's website and
collect all the information about the System Model and hopefully the
System SKU and go fully prepared on your trip.
And *please*, save this method for future use!
[...]
But the customer machine has no working screen.
Oops! Sorry, I forgot about that! My apologies to Micky!
I guess that's kind of a hypocritical one: Complaining to somebody
else about him forgetting things, while forgetting something yourself.
So contrary to popular belief, that kind of proves I'm human.
Well, assuming the owner has a smartphone/tablet/etc., perhaps instead
Micky could let the owner make photos of the sides of the laptop and
send those to Micky.
[...]
On Sun, 3/8/2026 3:30 PM, Frank Slootweg wrote:
But the customer machine has no working screen.
Oops! Sorry, I forgot about that! My apologies to Micky!
I guess that's kind of a hypocritical one: Complaining to somebody
else about him forgetting things, while forgetting something yourself.
So contrary to popular belief, that kind of proves I'm human.
Well, assuming the owner has a smartphone/tablet/etc., perhaps instead
Micky could let the owner make photos of the sides of the laptop and
send those to Micky.
[...]
There must be *something* printed on it. Marketing, after all.
My laptop has a "plate" on the surface, with the details
of what it is (Aspire 1234-5678 or similar). And that is the
kind of plate they use in computer stores, on the computer table,
to make product more recognizable. On the bottom, is a sticker with the >serial number and the model number. Those stickers can
get scraped off, if the laptop is used on rough surfaces.
And my laptop has the usual VGA connector of the era,
for optional output. I have one monitor now, which is
HDMI only, that would make connecting the laptop to it
a particular nuisance. Going VGA to HDMI can't be cheap.
The problem at the computer store, is that was one of
the few LCD monitors where there was actual stock and
you would not have to buy the "demonstrator" unit.
Paul
Paul wrote:
There must be *something* printed on it. Marketing, after all.
Yes, 'something', but not neccessarily something useful.
Our past HP laptops had some scriblings/stickers, on the bottom or/and
in the compartiment of the (then still) user-removable battery.
But my current HP laptop has nothing useful on the outside (and no
battery compartiment), only 'hp' (Duh!) twice and 'PAVILION' (the
Series) at the bottom of the lid (only visible when closed, I didn't
even know it was there). That narrows it down to a few thousand possible >models! :-(
My laptop has a "plate" on the surface, with the details
of what it is (Aspire 1234-5678 or similar). And that is the
kind of plate they use in computer stores, on the computer table,
to make product more recognizable. On the bottom, is a sticker with the
serial number and the model number. Those stickers can
get scraped off, if the laptop is used on rough surfaces.
Yes, some manufacturers do a better job of labeling their products.
I just bought a small emergency radio and that has a nice sticker on
the back in a slightly recessed area, so less likely to be scraped or
peeled off. Even came with a real printed manual with readable size
fonts! :-)
And my laptop has the usual VGA connector of the era,
for optional output. I have one monitor now, which is
HDMI only, that would make connecting the laptop to it
a particular nuisance. Going VGA to HDMI can't be cheap
The problem at the computer store, is that was one of
the few LCD monitors where there was actual stock and
you would not have to buy the "demonstrator" unit.
Indeed, by making (good quality) photos of the sides (and rear if
applicable) of the laptop in question, one should be able to recognize
which ports it does (not) have. If the ports also have symbols/text next
to them, it's even easier.
I often quite like getting the "demonstration" unit - (a) I know it
works, (b) I can sometimes haggle a bit off the price. Sure, they may
not be able to find the manual, but if it's _fairly_ new I can usually
find that online (and - unless it's a scanned copy, unlikely for newish
- I then have something searchable).
(If they can't find the manual/box
that tells them, I may even be able to wangle extra cables that weren't >actually included!)
| Sysop: | Jacob Catayoc |
|---|---|
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