My biggest gripe with second hand computers...
@beautyqueen26 (16030)
United States
May 11, 2008 1:09pm CST
For the past five years, all my computers have been ancient. Literally! For some reason, we bought all the computers second hand at the pawn shop. The last used computer that I bought cost $150 and the one before that cost $495. It wasn't a real deal, though. It lasted for less than a year.
So, when Walmart put a computer on sale for less than $500, I snapped it up. It's not the fastest computer in the world, but ten times faster than a second hand computer (circa 2000). And, it has a huge flat screen computer that's great for watching movies and free online tv shows.
My biggest gripe with second hand computers is that you end up with other people's stuff to deal with. For instance, my last computer was named, Karen! That's not my name. So, everytime I logged in, it would say, "Hi Karen". Guess I should have changed that. And, there were tons of old files, spyware junk and family photos that had not been deleted before we bought it at the pawn shop.
Anyway, guess my question is this: How do you deal with all the junk you find on a used computer? Do you simply erase it? Or, leave it there?
1 person likes this
11 responses
@Asylum (47893)
• Manchester, England
11 May 08
I would totally reformat a second computer before using it. I realise that this could be a problem if you do not possess a copy of Windows to install onto it, in which case you would need to sort out all the junk.
Deleting a surplus files such as documents and images would be a good start, followed by tidying up the start menu etcetera. You should also remove any unwanted programs to release space and reduce the demand on resources.
If you find it hard to sort out the junk from the system, then I would suggest creating a new user account and then deleting the old one.
1 person likes this
@beautyqueen26 (16030)
• United States
11 May 08
Thank you! You are very knowledgeable about the subject. Do you have a Squidoo page for this kind of thing? They would love you over there. People are always looking for expert computer care answers on Squidoo.
@Asylum (47893)
• Manchester, England
12 May 08
I do not consider myself to be an expert, just someone who is very familiar with the hardware and software environments. I use my computer for a myriad of tasks and often get friends approaching me with problems on their computers, so it is quite easy to learn as time goes by.
@pooh08 (671)
• Vietnam
12 May 08
My father likes the second-hand very much. But I don't like much. I alway say with him that if he buy the second-hand thing, he'll use it around one or two months then he has to repair it. The money for repair, he'll spend it for the new things. But he don't accept and he angry with me. In the future, I don't say him about that problem.
1 person likes this
@cutepenguin (6430)
• Canada
12 May 08
We've gotten second hand computers - one from a friend of mine and one from one of Dh's friends. We just reformat the hard drive and delete everything so that we start fresh.
@beautyqueen26 (16030)
• United States
11 May 08
That's totally sweet! I keep all the pics my friends send me too. Especially, the baby pictures. I put them next to my own child's photos on my computer scrapbook folder
@williamjisir (22819)
• China
11 May 08
Hello beauty queen. Speaking of computer or second-hand computer, I have to say that I am very happy with my IBM laptop. I have been using it for more than seven years by now and it is still in good use. In most cases, I use my laptop to surf on the Internet and prepare some paperwork. I seldom play computer games. But it is very annoying once it gets infected with evil viruses. The last time when my laptop got infected with viruses, I was forced to take it to the computer guy in the town and the only way to completely get rid of the viruses off my laptop, my computer guy told me is to reformat it and so he did. Now my laptop is as good as it was new.
Thus it made me think that if you want to remove the stuff left in the computer, the best way is to either reformat or reinstall it without leaving any stuff in the computer, leaving no space for the survival of the previous stuff, including viruses. Thank you very much for your topic. I enjoy it. Happy mylotting and good day.
@williamjisir (22819)
• China
11 May 08
Hello again, beauty queen. I forgot to say that mine is not a used one. It was completely a new one when bought. hehe.
@beautyqueen26 (16030)
• United States
20 Jun 08
Thank you for your ideas.
I had not considered that.
Since then, I've gotten a new computer
and it is so much nicer.
I can imagine that my new computer
will run very well, too, even years from now.
@DarkDancer (1011)
• Dayton, Ohio
20 Jun 08
My very first IBM computer was second hand, bought it from a friend, so I knew it's history..... ;)
If I were to buy a second hand computer from a shop I would poke around on it to see what I found, then pull the partitions off the drives, repartition, reformat and install Ubuntu (Linux) on it.
Though more than likelyt I would just build my own.
@golfproo (1839)
• Canada
11 May 08
Hi,
I too have bought used computers in the past. Typically I try to erase as much stuff as I can for it makes the computer run faster. However, there are always hidden files that are totally difficult to find. That is one of the reasons I tend to always buy my computers new now. Too many pitfalls the other way.
cheers,
@egdcltd (12059)
•
11 May 08
I bought a second hand computer once. Also from a pawn shop I think. Anyway, before I purchased it, it had been completely cleaned out, so no second-hand junk on it. If I sell my old PC (depends on how broken it is), I'm going to clean everything off it first, maybe paying to have it done properly.
@mikeysmom (2088)
• United States
12 May 08
i have never bought a used computer but may need to if this economy stays the way it is and something happens to my computer. i would prefer not to buy a used one but you make do with what you can afford at the time, right?
@blackmantra_x (2732)
• Philippines
12 May 08
My first taste of the digital world was baptized with an XT model that goes with a monochrome screen, I was a college student then. I was on a budjet so I have to plow the second hand shops l looking for cheap secondhand mid models. It cost around 200 us dollars back then but it was a bargain considering the newly released model AT was costing about 500 us dollars up. I instantly like computers being one of the few who uses it at that time feels like being a pioneer or something. Since the age was young and the OS starts with 3.11 with booting MS dos and a limited broadsheet software like wordstar and wordpro poeople seemed reluctant to give up their cost-effective, ever-reliable, power independent type writer. As hardware and programs evolved with the advent of multi-media and printing enchancement, the typewriter became history and been archived so to speak. I literally followed the evolution of the digital world. From XT up to now. Taking note of the improvement both on the hardware and software. From 5.5 inch 360k floppy disk to 8g flashdisk amomg others and I enjoyed it endlessly. The investment was worth the knowledge I gain. I think I am hook to this evolution as long as I live.












