Take a look at our
ThinkPads.com HOME PAGE
For those who might want to contribute to the blog, start here: Editors Alley Topic
Then contact Bill with a Private Message
ThinkPads.com HOME PAGE
For those who might want to contribute to the blog, start here: Editors Alley Topic
Then contact Bill with a Private Message
Throw me Distro suggestions!
-
- Senior ThinkPadder
- Posts: 2670
- Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 9:25 am
- Location: N. Bellmore, ny
Throw me Distro suggestions!
I have an X61s sitting on a shelf. I pulled it out today to take it for a spin. Don't really want W10 on it and W7 is just too ordinary.
Was going to install Ubuntu but thought it would be good to try something new.
Things I want to do:
Light browsing
Little document processing
And maybe some programming
Things I'd like:
Better battery life out of the computer.
Throw me anything you got. I was going to start with Mint and Lubuntu but anything is a possibility. It's a L7500 and maybe 2GB RAM.
Was going to install Ubuntu but thought it would be good to try something new.
Things I want to do:
Light browsing
Little document processing
And maybe some programming
Things I'd like:
Better battery life out of the computer.
Throw me anything you got. I was going to start with Mint and Lubuntu but anything is a possibility. It's a L7500 and maybe 2GB RAM.
Thinkpad4by3's Law of the Universe.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
-
- Senior ThinkPadder
- Posts: 2670
- Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 9:25 am
- Location: N. Bellmore, ny
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Ive tried those two plus Puppy Linux. Eh....not too happy about all 3.
Battery life out of a 4 cell slim is abysmal even with 70% org. capacity.
Lubuntu - Feels like I can't get to any program I need to. Like ChromeOS in a way.
Mint - Like it better...but still like I can't get places and it locks up randomly on old hardware without responsiveness for minutes on end.
Puppy - Very smooth on old hardware but feels like a Where's Waldo book. Also the wierd clunky feel of the "saving sessions" vs plain just loading and logging in. To me it feels like it belongs on a library computer or something.
Battery life out of a 4 cell slim is abysmal even with 70% org. capacity.
Lubuntu - Feels like I can't get to any program I need to. Like ChromeOS in a way.
Mint - Like it better...but still like I can't get places and it locks up randomly on old hardware without responsiveness for minutes on end.
Puppy - Very smooth on old hardware but feels like a Where's Waldo book. Also the wierd clunky feel of the "saving sessions" vs plain just loading and logging in. To me it feels like it belongs on a library computer or something.
Thinkpad4by3's Law of the Universe.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
-
- ThinkPadder
- Posts: 1756
- Joined: Thu Aug 09, 2012 3:08 pm
- Location: Calgary, Alberta, Canada
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
I wouldn't say Linux Mint "locks up randomly on old hardware". I have no doubt that it did do this on your 1 particular machine with your particular install. I've install mint on about 12 different older machines and have had no problem whatsoever.
-
- Senior ThinkPadder
- Posts: 2670
- Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 9:25 am
- Location: N. Bellmore, ny
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Yeah my X61s has always been a funny machine. It has a mind of its own and does as it pleases.
I need to upgrade the drive from a 60GB spin-n-crunch drive from a X60s though. Probably is part of the abysmal performance.
Thinkpad4by3's Law of the Universe.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Get a different computer.Thinkpad4by3 wrote: ↑Sun Dec 16, 2018 5:36 pmThings I'd like:
Better battery life out of the computer.
Thinkpad 25 (20K7), T490 (20N3), Yoga 14 (20FY), T430s (IPS FHD + Classic Keyboard), X220 4291-4BG
X61 7673-V2V, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G, X32 (IPS Screen), A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
X61 7673-V2V, T60 2007-QPG, T42 2373-F7G, X32 (IPS Screen), A31p w/ Ultrabay Numpad
-
- Moderator
- Posts: 2156
- Joined: Mon Aug 17, 2009 8:38 am
- Location: Zurich, Switzerland
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
I'm using LXDE in a X41 with an SSD and 2GB RAM, runs actually surprisingly snappy, but I don't know how it will look like with a conventional HDD
I'm also using Bunsen Labs in an an X30 and X24 with <1GB RAM...
I'm also using Bunsen Labs in an an X30 and X24 with <1GB RAM...
IBM Convertible 5140/L40SX/220/240/240X/2*340CSE/360PE/365XD/380D/380E/380XD/380Z/390/560E/560X/2*570/2*600/600E/750Cs/755C/760CD/760EL/760XD/770E
A20p/A22p/A31/i1600/G40/R50p/R61i/S30/SL510/2*T22/4*T4x/11*T6x/6*T40x/6*T5x0/3*W5x0/W700/3*X2x/4*X3x/3*X4x/5*X6x/3*X6xT/12*X2xx/4*X30x/Z60m/3*Z61x
A20p/A22p/A31/i1600/G40/R50p/R61i/S30/SL510/2*T22/4*T4x/11*T6x/6*T40x/6*T5x0/3*W5x0/W700/3*X2x/4*X3x/3*X4x/5*X6x/3*X6xT/12*X2xx/4*X30x/Z60m/3*Z61x
-
- Senior ThinkPadder
- Posts: 2670
- Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 9:25 am
- Location: N. Bellmore, ny
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Your definitely right on that but a 4 cell slim gives a pathetic 45min - 1hr battery life. Atleast I have an 8 cell which gives a respectable 4 hrs though.
But this machine is no more than a bedside machine when my T450 and T520 are on the charger.
And this X61s is just so stupidly light.
Thinkpad4by3's Law of the Universe.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Debian... you can make it as light and minimal as you want. It's the mother of all distros which count
ThinkPad X220: i5-2520M CPU 2.5GHz - 8GB RAM 1333 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 250GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
-
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Sun Dec 23, 2018 10:44 am
- Location: Urbana, Illinois, USA
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Is there a specific need that Ubuntu can't fulfill or are you looking for a different distro for the sake of being different? If you want something that looks and feels different I'd suggest playing around with window managers instead. https://www.reddit.com/r/unixporn has a wealth of information about making any distro look and feel different, even without having to suffer the pain of limited packages and a much smaller bug-fixing community.
If you goal is to learn about how a Linux system is constructed I'd recommend installing Arch or Gentoo. The process of getting them running and configured, then fixing all the little problems that pop up, will teach you a considerable amount about Linux.
If you goal is to learn about how a Linux system is constructed I'd recommend installing Arch or Gentoo. The process of getting them running and configured, then fixing all the little problems that pop up, will teach you a considerable amount about Linux.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Manjaro
X230 / 3320m / 16Gb / IPS / 240+64Gb SanDisk ssd / Ultrabase 3
-
- Sophomore Member
- Posts: 215
- Joined: Fri Aug 10, 2012 9:40 pm
- Location: British Columbia, Canada
Throw me Distro suggestions!
Debian with LXDE makes for a responsive experience on my R500 (with SSD). It's been my daily use laptop since about 2013.
Home: L440 | R500 | X120e Server
Work: ThinkPad Yoga 260 | Dell Latitude 5320
Work: ThinkPad Yoga 260 | Dell Latitude 5320
-
- Freshman Member
- Posts: 113
- Joined: Fri Jul 04, 2014 12:06 am
- Location: Victoria, BC, Canada
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
MX-18 Linux (Debian 9.6 with the XFCE DE and 4.19 LTS Kernel) is now final :
- https://sourceforge.net/projects/mx-lin ... nal/MX-18/ .
I've been running it on many Thinkpads since MX14.4 -- great distro!
- https://sourceforge.net/projects/mx-lin ... nal/MX-18/ .
I've been running it on many Thinkpads since MX14.4 -- great distro!
Toshiba (93-98): t3400(ct), 3600ct, 610ct, 620ct, 660cdt, 490xcdt, 780cdm/dvd
IBM (95-06): 701c*(s) Butterfly, 600(e,x*), A31p*, T43(S*, p,+pS*)
Lenovo (07-12): t60h, T601pF*, x60t+, x61t+*,
W500, W700, W700ds, W701, W701ds, x301*, x200t, x220t, x220*, W520*.
IBM (95-06): 701c*(s) Butterfly, 600(e,x*), A31p*, T43(S*, p,+pS*)
Lenovo (07-12): t60h, T601pF*, x60t+, x61t+*,
W500, W700, W700ds, W701, W701ds, x301*, x200t, x220t, x220*, W520*.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
The problem is the ancient spinning rust HD. No distro will solve that problem, but small SSDs are plentiful around $20 or less new.
Longer battery life will be a bonus.
Longer battery life will be a bonus.
-
- Senior ThinkPadder
- Posts: 2670
- Joined: Sun Aug 09, 2015 9:25 am
- Location: N. Bellmore, ny
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Yeah I know...I'm saving my cheap 20$ drives for more worthful machines.
Thinkpad4by3's Law of the Universe.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
The efficiency of two screens equally sized with equal numbers if pixels are equal. The time spent by a 4:3 user complaining about 16:9 is proportional to the inefficiency working with a 16:9 display, therefore the amount of useful work extracted is equal.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Linux mint - been running it now for over two years. Recently upgraded to LM19. Tried the other major distros when I moved from the dark side. Mint was the one I liked the most.
T430 i7-3632QM Mint 19.0 Cinnamon, T430 Mint 19.0 Cinnamon, T420 Mint 18.3 Cinnamon, T410 dual boot win7/mint 17.3, T60 Mint 19 Mate
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
I run MX Linux on my x61 with a small SSD and 4GB or ram. It is very snappy and it is also the first distro which made me migrate from Windows.
Daily drivers: x225 FrankenPad and t430. Thinkpad x301 overhaul+FSB mod.
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Fri Jan 11, 2019 1:44 pm
- Location: Pittsburgh, PA USA
- Contact:
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Pentium Ms and X61 (Core 2 Duo) are all very snappy -- as long as you aren't using a mechanical HDD
Xubuntu rocked my system, installing alongside my legacy OS without issue
Xubuntu rocked my system, installing alongside my legacy OS without issue
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
BunsenLabs is good for working OOTB (out of the box)
I prefer doing Debian Net Install without the GUI installed from the installer, and installing something like OpenBox or IceWM once the system is up and running.
I prefer doing Debian Net Install without the GUI installed from the installer, and installing something like OpenBox or IceWM once the system is up and running.
X200s 1440x900, 64GB SSD, 6GB RAM - main laptop - X200s 1440x900, 128GB SSD, 4GB RAM - school laptop
T60p 1600x1200 IPS - undecided - W500 1920x1200, FireGL V5700 - fixing the frame...
T43p 1600x1200 IPS - needs work - 240X might try FreeDOS from a floppy...
T60p 1600x1200 IPS - undecided - W500 1920x1200, FireGL V5700 - fixing the frame...
T43p 1600x1200 IPS - needs work - 240X might try FreeDOS from a floppy...
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Yes, the Debian way is so nice, should fit everyone's needs honestly
ThinkPad X220: i5-2520M CPU 2.5GHz - 8GB RAM 1333 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 250GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Anything on a Linux kernel will likely give you better battery life than Windows so +1 hallelujah to you, already for making that change.Thinkpad4by3 wrote: ↑Sun Dec 16, 2018 5:36 pmI have an X61s sitting on a shelf. I pulled it out today to take it for a spin. Don't really want W10 on it and W7 is just too ordinary.
Was going to install Ubuntu but thought it would be good to try something new.
Things I want to do:
Light browsing
Little document processing
And maybe some programming
Things I'd like:
Better battery life out of the computer.
Throw me anything you got. I was going to start with Mint and Lubuntu but anything is a possibility. It's a L7500 and maybe 2GB RAM.
Everyone here is saying Linux Mint or Debian (regular). I find those both good alternatives, and I dabbled around both for a while.
My preference these days has been with Fedora though, as its a good community spin of the Red Hat Enterprise Linux and CentOS infrastructures that a lot of businesses use. They also have a promising project called SilverBlue (a reboot of their 'atomic workstation' series) which is particularly cloud computing/docker-image friendly. Might be worth a try if you like that kind of thing.
MadIceTea, Thinkpad Enthusiast
Daily: X250 FHD
Museum: PC110 20MB, X61 T9300 SXGA+ LED
Donated: x2001 AFFS i5-530 (to my alma matter)
Past: 701Cs German, 535/X, 760E/XL, i-series 12/14xx, piano s30, R60e, X60, X61, T60, T61, X200 P8700, X121e
That chicken sure looks funny.
Daily: X250 FHD
Museum: PC110 20MB, X61 T9300 SXGA+ LED
Donated: x2001 AFFS i5-530 (to my alma matter)
Past: 701Cs German, 535/X, 760E/XL, i-series 12/14xx, piano s30, R60e, X60, X61, T60, T61, X200 P8700, X121e
That chicken sure looks funny.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Puppy Linux. XenialPup64 7.5 works superbly on a T61. Very helpful user community. http://puppylinux.com
And so does Haiku. This is a modern version of BeOS. Still in beta, but much simpler and slicker than Linux (0r Windows!). It's what an operating system ought to be. https://www.haiku-os.org
Both can run LibreOffice, and any number of other programs. What more do you need for casual use?
If coming from Win 10, the speed and boot times of both will astonish you.
And so does Haiku. This is a modern version of BeOS. Still in beta, but much simpler and slicker than Linux (0r Windows!). It's what an operating system ought to be. https://www.haiku-os.org
Both can run LibreOffice, and any number of other programs. What more do you need for casual use?
If coming from Win 10, the speed and boot times of both will astonish you.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
I've been hearing a lot about Haiku. I think I'll give it a spin in a VM and try it out.olddog wrote: ↑Mon Feb 25, 2019 6:17 pmPuppy Linux. XenialPup64 7.5 works superbly on a T61. Very helpful user community. http://puppylinux.com
And so does Haiku. This is a modern version of BeOS. Still in beta, but much simpler and slicker than Linux (0r Windows!). It's what an operating system ought to be. https://www.haiku-os.org
Both can run LibreOffice, and any number of other programs. What more do you need for casual use?
If coming from Win 10, the speed and boot times of both will astonish you.
MadIceTea, Thinkpad Enthusiast
Daily: X250 FHD
Museum: PC110 20MB, X61 T9300 SXGA+ LED
Donated: x2001 AFFS i5-530 (to my alma matter)
Past: 701Cs German, 535/X, 760E/XL, i-series 12/14xx, piano s30, R60e, X60, X61, T60, T61, X200 P8700, X121e
That chicken sure looks funny.
Daily: X250 FHD
Museum: PC110 20MB, X61 T9300 SXGA+ LED
Donated: x2001 AFFS i5-530 (to my alma matter)
Past: 701Cs German, 535/X, 760E/XL, i-series 12/14xx, piano s30, R60e, X60, X61, T60, T61, X200 P8700, X121e
That chicken sure looks funny.
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Thu Feb 28, 2019 7:12 am
- Location: Carrollton, Texas
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Hello,
I know this was asked a while ago but just wanted to give an FYI. I am currently using Manjaro KDE on a T61p. I have not had any problems with install and once an SSD and 6gigs of ram were added, the laptop has worked flawless and did not have to load any special drivers, outside the Nvidia driver.
The only Linux distro I had issues with was Fedora, outside of that I think you will have fun.
I'm sure if you use a lighter WM, it would even be faster.
Sincerely,
Yawanathan
I know this was asked a while ago but just wanted to give an FYI. I am currently using Manjaro KDE on a T61p. I have not had any problems with install and once an SSD and 6gigs of ram were added, the laptop has worked flawless and did not have to load any special drivers, outside the Nvidia driver.
The only Linux distro I had issues with was Fedora, outside of that I think you will have fun.
I'm sure if you use a lighter WM, it would even be faster.
Sincerely,
Yawanathan
Sincerely,
Yawanathan
Yawanathan
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Consider cross compiling Gentoo and put that on there. It's very lean, so the performance will be as good as it can get on that machine - and you'll learn a lot in the process.
You could also consider FreeBSD. http://trihexagonal.org/tutorial.html
You could also consider FreeBSD. http://trihexagonal.org/tutorial.html
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Couldn't agree more. I use Haiku on both my X220 and X61s as their only OS. Haiku is actually my main OS and what I primarily use on a day to day basis.olddog wrote: ↑Mon Feb 25, 2019 6:17 pmAnd so does Haiku. This is a modern version of BeOS. Still in beta, but much simpler and slicker than Linux (0r Windows!). It's what an operating system ought to be. https://www.haiku-os.org
Everything hardware wise on the X61s is supported including sound. No problem watching 1080p YouTube movies on it. Boots to a full desktop in less than 10 seconds and is over all wonderful to use. The X220 is even better since it's so much faster, but sound is yet to be supported on it.
Speed wise the X61s *feels* faster with Haiku than my new i7 powered HP laptop I have at work running Windows 10.
The X220 and Haiku is just insanity in regard to GUI responsiveness and overall feel.
Give it a go, it's very much worth it
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
If anyone is interested in trying Haiku, it is best to use one of the "nightlies" rather than the official Beta. The nightlies are the latest version, and since the OS is undergoing active development the Beta can now be considered to be obsolete.
So far I have only been successful with running it on 64 bit machines, but probably I just need to spend more time on it. Theoretically it should run on quite old hardware, and of course that is where its superior architecture (and absence of Microsoft crud) shine through.
Like Puppy, it is designed as a single user system, which is one reason why, like Puppy, it doesn't need a lot of hard disk space or RAM.
Somebody mentioned that Puppy looked old-fashioned. In its basic form that may be true (the dog motif doesn't help) but it's easily customisable, and you can shoot the dog.
Also, the save file is optional, but I retain it because there is less to do if the system crashes (a rare occurrence and usually the fault of application software).
I've tried a number of varieties of Linux, and for me Puppy is quite easily the most usable and the best supported.
So far I have only been successful with running it on 64 bit machines, but probably I just need to spend more time on it. Theoretically it should run on quite old hardware, and of course that is where its superior architecture (and absence of Microsoft crud) shine through.
Like Puppy, it is designed as a single user system, which is one reason why, like Puppy, it doesn't need a lot of hard disk space or RAM.
Somebody mentioned that Puppy looked old-fashioned. In its basic form that may be true (the dog motif doesn't help) but it's easily customisable, and you can shoot the dog.
Also, the save file is optional, but I retain it because there is less to do if the system crashes (a rare occurrence and usually the fault of application software).
I've tried a number of varieties of Linux, and for me Puppy is quite easily the most usable and the best supported.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
I don't know, puppy linux for me is not at all like a daily driver OS. I will always see it as a distro which all new Linux users play with for a while during the distro hopping baptise phaseolddog wrote: ↑Sun May 05, 2019 6:10 amLike Puppy, it is designed as a single user system, which is one reason why, like Puppy, it doesn't need a lot of hard disk space or RAM.
Somebody mentioned that Puppy looked old-fashioned. In its basic form that may be true (the dog motif doesn't help) but it's easily customisable, and you can shoot the dog.
ThinkPad X220: i5-2520M CPU 2.5GHz - 8GB RAM 1333 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 250GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
Well, I think you are missing something.
It is very easy to use, very configurable, and able to run virtually any Linux software.
But it's ALSO good for checking out non-working Windows machines. Just boot it with a USB disk and sort out your problems. That's assuming the PC will actually boot of course.
And, by being wholly in RAM, it's fast.
It is very easy to use, very configurable, and able to run virtually any Linux software.
But it's ALSO good for checking out non-working Windows machines. Just boot it with a USB disk and sort out your problems. That's assuming the PC will actually boot of course.
And, by being wholly in RAM, it's fast.
Re: Throw me Distro suggestions!
This is basically the case for all Linux Live CD/DVDs. But I agree Puppy Linux as a small distro will be probably be more efficient on older hardware with limited RAM.
ThinkPad X220: i5-2520M CPU 2.5GHz - 8GB RAM 1333 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 250GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
ThinkPad X230: i5-3320M CPU 3.3GHz - 8GB RAM 1600 MHz - SSD 860 EVO 500GB - Debian - ME_cleaned
-
- Similar Topics
- Replies
- Views
- Last post
-
-
Lazy jumping cursors on X220 with Debian 11 distro
by N4b00 » Mon Dec 25, 2023 8:01 am » in Linux Questions - 0 Replies
- 6807 Views
-
Last post by N4b00
Mon Dec 25, 2023 8:01 am
-
-
-
X1 Carbon 5th gen upgrade suggestions to recent model carbon/yoga/nano
by meeotch » Sun Oct 15, 2023 4:32 pm » in ThinkPad X1 / X1-Carbon / X1-Extreme and later Series - 8 Replies
- 13839 Views
-
Last post by RealBlackStuff
Sun Dec 17, 2023 1:32 am
-
-
-
Wifi Card upgrade suggestions?
by babysheegoth » Thu Jan 11, 2024 1:32 pm » in ThinkPad T60/T61 Series - 11 Replies
- 3915 Views
-
Last post by axur-delmeria
Sun Feb 11, 2024 11:47 pm
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 36 guests