Good to see you back k3lt01.
Glad to hear about your experience in regard to old tech. I wish I could do more.
Second hand does not sell in Indoensia so no fears of a secind hand retailer taking over. In Indonesia "If it is old it is junk."
There is a different attitude to goods here in Indonesia. Services are cheap but good, compared to income, are massively expensive. So no-one throws anything away or sells anything second hand unless it is bust. I bought a second hand P4 for educatoinal purposes. Dead in three days.
I found out that people sell their computers second hand only when they have broken, get them fixed by a dodgy repairman who uses components that they KNOW will fry within a month and sell the machine on and do a runner!
People live in empty houses and save and save to bed - new, and then a table - new, and cushions, new and furnish over many years. With that system, second hand is a non-starter.
Which means the poor cannot get anything. So this old gear will be of great benefit to people. Just a machine to show basic wordprocessing and spreadsheets on means the difference between a life as a maid on $5 a day or an office worker for $8-15 a day. But it is so hard to get the tech.
It also means that if/when an Indonesian buys a new laptop, they want COOL! they want the BEST for their money and they want eye-candy! Retailers are used to having to spend an hour showing the customer the machine and having to fetch lots of boxes as the customer scrutinises the laptop for the tiniest scratch or blemish.
[BTW, trying to use WIndows 7 on an old AMD atop. U-N-U-S-A-B-L-E.
Class. Gotta go!
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