86 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
86 lines
7.0 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 2280
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Title: HPR2280: Lenovo X61s Part 2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr2280/hpr2280.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-19 00:46:16
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---
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This is an HBR episode 2,280 entitled Lenovo X61 Part 2 and is part of the series Hardware Upgrades.
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It is hosted by Tony Humeca Tony H1,212 and is about 9 minutes long and carrying a clean flag.
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The summer is a description of living with the X61 for almost two weeks.
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This episode of HBR is brought to you by AnanasThost.com.
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Get 15% discount on all shared hosting with the offer code HBR15. That's HBR15.
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Better web hosting that's honest and fair at AnanasThost.com.
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Hello HBR. This is Tony Hunez again from Leppol in the UK.
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Ok, a couple of episodes ago I was talking about Lenovo X61S's and particularly running
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water-s on these machines and how this might bring them back to life.
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At during that episode I talked about possibly upgrading the X61S's SSD, so after that
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episode I went online, had a search around and found a Drevo 120 gig SSD. Initially I
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looked on Amazon but it was cheaper to order it from eBay. I managed to pick one up
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for £40. I'll put a link in the show notes to this particular SSD. Basically this
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is a very nice little cheap SSD but you wouldn't know it. I got hold of the SSD, installed
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it into the Lenovo, and Julie installed water-s onto it. Well, what OS did everything you'd
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need of it as an OS. It was absolutely fine on the X61. I was a bit disillusioned with
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the amount of configuration needed to get all the software I wanted to use working. And
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it was definitely not new friendly. So I had a look around for other Linux distributions
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and I came across Linux Lite and again I'll put a link to the show notes to their web
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page. I had a look at this and I thought it might be a better choice as it says it's
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aimed at new users and being based on Ubuntu the same as what OS. It's a familiar beast.
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So I Julie downloaded the ISO and installed it onto the X61 and as soon as the updates
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were completed I looked at the installed software and it's definitely a lot more comprehensive
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but not at the expensive being lightweight. You get LibreOffice, Writer, the PowerPoint
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replacement and the spreadsheet out of the box which you didn't with what OS and you
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get a few of the codecs that you didn't with what OS as well. When I had a look around
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of course so the Dacity wasn't installed which it wasn't on what OS either. So I installed
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a Dacity but that's all I did I just picked a Dacity and installed that and when I went
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to start it up it actually fired up and worked out to the box which when I tried out on
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what OS I had to go back in and configure a load of stuff and download some more audio stuff
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for Alsa and I can't remember what it is now but anyway take it it didn't work straight
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away. So that was refreshing to find out that Audacity worked. At first boot Linux Lite
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takes about 300 mega RAM and even after opening a word processor and using Firefox at the
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same time RAM usage is only around about 700 megabyte which is a bonus on a machine that's
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only got two gig installed on it. So I had to play around with it and since I installed
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it and the SSD the battery life on the machine has gone up to well in excess of four hours
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and probably in excess of five hours. I'm currently on battery at the moment and I haven't
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charged the battery up and I've been using it all day today and I've still got one hour
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29 minutes left so I've probably used it pretty consistently for about two and a half
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three hours today so that would suggest a battery time of around four and a half five hours.
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That's using the extended battery which is an 8 cell 63 watt battery which came with the
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machine and considering it's 10 years old it's actually not got too bad a battery life on it.
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So I've been playing around with the machine now for about two weeks doing HBR episodes recording
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HBR episodes uploading them to the internet and writing the show notes in the word processor and
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everything is working fine. I've also practiced processing a photo, a JPEG photo image that was around
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about 10 gig and that was fine as well. So it's a very very capable little
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PC. Very happy with its performance even when it had the 8 gig spinner but now with the
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addition of the SSD it's improved the performance and the battery life. To the extent that I'd be
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happy to take it on the road as me only PC and for the purpose of writing the review like I say I've
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actually been living with the X61S for nearly two weeks now and although I have it's bigger brother
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the X230i with an i3 processor and 8 gig around. I've not really missed that. I've not felt well I've
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got to go and hunt that out because I can't do what I need to do on the X61. In fact at one stage
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I was going to record a show using that machine and found out that the audio jack in it is a
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composite audio jack and my headset which requires separate mic and headphone sockets wouldn't work
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with it so I had to use the X61 there anyway so that's a that's a tick for the X61. So in conclusion
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I would suggest you could use it as your own machine for taking on the road and not worrying about
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too much about if it got dropped or lost or stolen or whatever for the for the kind of cost
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in the show notes at the top of the page I've actually put what they've actually cost me
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and what you might have to pay if you were going to buy it off the internet on the ebay or something
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but for a machine that you could pick up even if you haven't got an option near you for 100 quid
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it's a crack in that machine and even more if you've got a family with a couple of kids and
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you're looking for a laptop for them to do their homework and you know surf the internet watch
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a bit of YouTube obviously having enabled parental controls to stop them going where they shouldn't
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then I wouldn't look any further really and then like I said if the kids break it you've not lost
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a bundle of dosh so if you're looking for an older laptop you don't want to go out and spend
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you know a few hundred dollars or a few hundred quid in in the UK I would look for a setting
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dundler now right 61s and stick an SSD in it or try and get one that's already got an SSD installed
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anyway that's my review of the x61s and you know using it as a real-time computer for everyday use
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thanks I can public radio listeners I'll be back soon with another episode bye for now
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you've been listening to hecka public radio at hecka public radio dot org
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we are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday Monday through Friday
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today's show like all our shows was contributed by an hbr listener like yourself
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if you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contributing to find out how easy it
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really is hecka public radio was founded by the digital dot org pound and the infonomicum
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computer club and it's part of the binary revolution at binrev.com if you have comments on
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today's show please email the host directly leave a comment on the website or record a follow-up
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episode yourself unless otherwise stated today's show is released under creative comments
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attribution share a light 3.0 license
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