Jan 05, 2008 00:01
By NemesisVex
Filed: Technophilia
People sometimes perceive as me some sort of technical whiz, and perhaps that's true if you compare me to, say, my mom, who had trouble with the concept of double-clicking when forced to use a computer at her job. (She's been retired for a number of years now.) And my co-workers certainly think I'm a miracle worker when it comes to writing scripts that cut a three-day manual job down to 30 seconds.
But when hardware breaks down, I'm dumb. I own my dumbness. I am not an electrical engineer, and after years of working with computers, I couldn't begin to tell you what the hell happens inside the damn thing.
So this morning, I turn my computer on only to hear the fan whir like it's about to take off the runway. I cut the power and plug it back in. Same thing. I conclude it's a bum hard drive, although I have this nagging suspicion it might be something on the motherboard itself.
The drive was purchased nearly a month ago, so I took the old one and put it back in the computer. Luckily, I hadn't wiped anything off of it. The computer started up with no problem -- no fan sounding like it's about to fly out of the room. Conclusion: hard drive.
I brought the drive to work to format it before I took it back to Fry's for a refund. It did seem odd to me that the drive would have no issue running from an enclosure. But I didn't pursue that line of thought. (Perhaps because I knew it would lead to the idea of something more serious than a bum hard drive.)
I was a few days shy of missing to cut-off date for a refund, and I looked around the shelves to see if anything was on sale. Nope. I knew Best Buy had 500GB drives for sale, so I got one there. The drive I returned was $108.24 (also on sale). The one I bought cost $130.50.
When I got home, I re-cloned the drive, which took a number of hours, and put it back in the machine.
Whirrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr.
Shit. It's been the heatsink all this time. But I didn't have the vocabulary to articulate as such. There's 42 days left on the computer's warranty, so I called technical support. After describing the situation, the guy told me what I kind of suspected -- need new heatsink.
So what did my lack of hardware savvy cost me? An addition $22 for a new hard drive, when the previous one probably wasn't broken in the first place. And $27 for a new heatsink.
Being dumb can cost you money.
「作譜」 is pronounced "sakufu", and it means "log" or "work file" in Japanese. It's not the correct translation of "weblog", but it seems appropriate for this site.
This site started as a general dumping ground for external links, but these days, it's where I think about things related to the various technologies with which I work -- digital audio, web software engineering.
eponymous 4
ep4 projects
a loss for words
the closet
duran-duran.net
filmwhore.org
archive.musicwhore.org
tvwhore.org