Okay. Please help me as I ask COMPUTER BABBY QUESTIONS.
I have a Thinkpad T14 Gen 3 (AMD).
It has a 256 GB HD. That's too small. I want to buy a new, bigger one. I have a sense the good hard drives these days are "M.2".
Lenovo's specs page
doesn't say anything about "M.2". It says the hd is "PCIe".
I run "lshw" to see what's on the computer. It says "NVMe".
How do I find out the bestest fastest aftermarket drive Canada Computers carries that my computer will support
I only understand computation as the MANIPULATION OF ABSTRACT PLATONIC FORMS. I do not understand this realm where computers are "physical objects" you manipulate with "screwdrivers". I would prefer to use Math to translate my thoughts directly into action, as if I am casting magic spells
Okay thank you all for explaining. I have one more question: Is there actually, like, a difference between drive vendors. Like if I pick WD vs Samsung vs Lexar (vs… "crucial"?!) will it ever make any difference
Okay. So I think I have my plans for the hard drive complete. Now here's the shedpainty question:
The old drive has Ubuntu 24.04 on it. I hate it.
Should I trade down to Debian?
Or should I trade up to Pop!_OS?
Will I regret either of these? Will either one, if I just go get a standard usb key installation, cause driver problems with my AMD chipset or secure boot or whatever other junk Lenovo has on board?
Okay I have more computer build babby questions
I got a hard drive
But I've been warned it's one that runs hot
So I think I want a thermal "strip", which is apparently a heatsink that fits into smol spaces like a laptop
I google
https://www.amazon.ca/Deal4GO-Heatsink-5B40Z68852-Replacement-Thinkpad/dp/B0CDSBKD1X
This looks good! Oh, they're out of stock. Except wait, why doesit say "replacement"?
I watch installation instructions
https://youtu.be/8sm1ScVUHqY?t=108
Is there a hd heatsink strip in my friggin laptop already?? (1/2)
I only want to open up the laptop once. Trying to decide if I should
(a) just open it and assume there's already a heatstrip
(b) I poke around and there's lots of weird blue polymer strips that seem to do the same thing? It wouldn't be that expensive to just buy one and have it around if it turns out there's not one in there already…
(c) set the computer preemptively on fire, so that the hard drive can't be the one to overheat it
(2/2)
Alright one last shedpainting question. Should I install Debian Stable or Debian Testing. Text replies welcome
Okay so I just got the YouTube video up, aligned all the pieces I need to move my SSD into an enclosure and a new blank enclosure into the laptop, convinced myself I easily have time to do the entire operation and even get started on a Debian install before going out for NYE, and then immediately realized that it would be better to put this off until Thursday so I'm not thinking about setting up Debian all evening and then pulling out my laptop to tinker with Debian when I'm w/friends tomorrow.
Putting on a big fluffy sweater and an anti-static band and then realizing these two probably cancel each other out and placing the big fluffy sweater a minimum safe distance away
OK I actually have a kinda dumb question. I've set up a nice clean space on a desk to do my minor laptop surgery. And I've put on my anti-static strip. And I don't know what to attach the strip *to*. My computer is a ways away and this table has metal feet.
My UPS, in reach, has an convenient exposed screw on the back labeled "TVSS GRND". Is this a good thing to ground or a thing that will specifically electrocute me if I electrically couple it to my body
EDIT: I went with the radiator
As a piece of utterly unhelpful context, the power in our building is EXTREMELY dirty and although the wall socket has a hole for a ground pin, I'm not certain it's actually connected to anything
In every type of modern electronics repair there is a step that's like "Yeah, just force it" and it's like I AM AFRAID TO JUST FORCE IT
The back of the laptop will not come off :( :( :( no matter what I do :(
There is a diagram on the Lenovo site. They didn't seem to think this was important to include int he video, the video was just like "use caution". It's also baffling. There are "latches" that have to be "pried up". How do you "pry" a "latch". What does that mean. Does it mean apply force. Latch 3D simply will not unlatch and I can see new little-but-distinct creases forming in the aluminum back of the unit
EVENTUALLY IT MADE A SNAPPY SOUND AND A TINY PIECE OF PLASTIC FLEW OFF AND IT OPENED. FUCK YOU LENOVO, I LITERALLY ONLY CHOSE YOU BECAUSE YOU WERE SUPPOSED TO BE THE BRAND GOOD FOR THIS KIND OF THING. Hopefully the back will go on again later! :(
*Opening the M.2 packaging* Ooh, that's so nice of them! They included a free stick of gum!
"So this here is called a 'Zero Insertion Force' socket" "Okay, how do I use it?" "Apply moderate force"
I can't :( it won't :( it won't go in :( a critical part of this plan was transferring my old M.2 to a USB enclosure. The instructions say only to insert it at 30 degrees and push it down. I can't figure out how it's supposed to go in. I can lightly lay it on top, but then it doesn't expose the screw hole to lock it in, and then I don't know if I did it wrong or if my drive is too tall somehow
Wait HECK I just realized. There wasn't a heatsink on the original M.2 like there was in the Lenovo video! And I already used my one "gum" heat strip on the USB enclosure!!!! :(
There were "replacement" Tinkpad HD heatsink strips on Amazon, I almost bought one. I guess I should have!! Crap what do I do now. I don't think Canada Computers had the "chewing gum" heatstrips.
The new M.2 has like, a long sticker on it. I think the stickers are supposed to be thermally active. Maybe good enough? :(
I guess what happens is my new HD doesn't spread out heat quite as well as it could have and either it gets hot inside my laptop or my HD doesn't run as fast as it could because it notices it's getting warm and autothrottles. Or I order the heatstrip after and go back in later to add one? Crap. I don't want to have to open this thing up again, like, am I gonna lose another little plastic bracket every time I open it? :(
Everyone I talked to was ambivalent about whether I needed the heatsink…
Booted without an OS. As expected the Thinkpad firmware was just like "lol wat?". It can see the drive which is a good sign.
…What happens if I select "Lenovo Cloud"?
Debian installer just looks so charmingly goofy. All trying to be graphical but it never bothered asking the monitor its aspect ratio. "2025 is the year of Linux on this laptop"!!
Debian disk setup is asking if I want "LVM". I have never heard of that in my life. Will "LVM" make it harder or easier later to resize the partitions and maybe slap Windows 10 at the end?
@mcc harder.
It’s useful if you have multiple drives, or partitions spread all over, and wish you didn’t
But “shrink my main partition to make space on the drive” is particularly troublesome
@mcc let’s say you’re on a cloud server, and need more storage. You add a drive to the VM, you add the drive to your LVM volume, and you extend your partition onto it. Rinse and repeat. Easier than trying to spread your data around, or migrate onto larger drives
@directhex Hmmm actually this is a problem I have very specifically had on my cloud server (they upgrade my storage for free every few years…)