sovay: (Psholtii: in a bad mood)
sovay ([personal profile] sovay) wrote2018-05-02 11:30 am

I'm banking on the fables of the far, far better things we do

I am posting from Bertie Owen. He aten't dead. Thank you for all the candles. Keys Q through O, however, have packed it in. A popular row. This post was composed with the majority assistance of copy-paste. I guess today I spend looking for a new new keyboard. Everything hurts.

[edit] ALL HAIL THE VERY OLD AND VERY TANGERINE KEYBOARD THAT BELONGED TO MY MOTHER'S iMAC G3 IN 1998. IT IS A TERRIBLE-LOOKING OBJECT BUT UNLIKE MORE RECENT APPLE TECHNOLOGY IT WORKS JUST FINE HAVING LIVED IN A FILE CABINET FOR THE LAST DECADE OR MORE. I FEEL SURPRISINGLY TRIUMPHANT AND ALSO DISORIENTED BY HAVING A DESKTOP KEYBOARD BUT NO MOUSE.

I mean it also works without the caplock held down, but you see where I'm coming from. My mother is a hero of the revolution.
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

[personal profile] davidgillon 2018-05-03 08:35 pm (UTC)(link)
It's an HP Pavilion - the Pavilion brand is on at least it's 7th generation and I'm not sure what generation this one is, but the buying process included a bizzare email chain that went in quick succession 'We don't make these any more' and then 'We'll deliver it tomorrow'.

It's powerful enough, but I'm seriously not impressed by the build quality. It isn't three years old yet and has already needed a new power supply and keyboard. One of the hinges has recently given way, that's partly my fault, I fell asleep, and it slid off my chest from sofa height to floor - I woke as it slid and caught it, so it didn't get the full impact, but a crack in the plastic backing to the screen has slowly spread and just recently snapped the hinge. If I can't patch it with superglue and some decent plastic then I may start looking for a replacement. Considering my previous Toshiba lasted me a decade, HP has failed to impress.