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Ask HN: How do I stop obsessing about taking care of my hardware (laptop)?

6 pointsby grover_hartmannover 10 years ago
It seems to get in the way of productivity, and it has become an obsession for me to extremely take care of it.<p>How do I beat this obsesssion? I have OCD.<p>It&#x27;s also my only laptop.

6 comments

lsiunsuexover 10 years ago
Change how you think about your laptop.<p>If you think about it as a luxury item or or something that is fragile, you&#x27;ll always be OCD about it. Perhaps because it is your only laptop, your more careful with it.<p>If tomorrow, it fell down a flight of stairs and you had to replace it, could you on the spot? How long would it take otherwise? How much work would you loose if it happened?<p>I was this way a long time ago and probably to a certain point, still am with my primary laptop &#x2F; phone. To me, they&#x27;re just tools now to get the job done. A couple months ago, my laptop died and fortunately, I was in a position where the only thing stopping me from getting a new one was a 20 minute drive to the Apple Store. That&#x27;s not to say that I&#x27;m careless with my laptop, but it&#x27;s just a tool, and tools break.<p>I remember breaking my fathers Snap On Ratchet once. Fortunately, they&#x27;re tools are warranted for life, but it was just a tool easily replaceable.<p>&quot;The things you own, end up owning you&quot;
totoroisaliveover 10 years ago
I always buy protective gear for my equipment and extend the warranty, for my laptop I bought a protector case, screen protector, keyboard cover and stickers I like (no protection just fun). After all of that I stop worrying about it, I clean once a week because I hate dirty equipment but if something happens that&#x27;s just life.<p>You have to keep tools in good shape, but tools are for work.
mrcoldover 10 years ago
I used to do this too. But after a couple laptops and smartphones just died on me, I realized that everything truly is designed to fail. Every product now has a limited life, no matter how well you care for it. So use it delicately or throw it on your desk every day. It&#x27;s still going to die when you least expect it. And you will still need to buy a new one again.<p>Hardware is now a consumable. Works for a while and then it breaks down. You don&#x27;t buy it. You just rent it for a couple of years. So there is no need to care for your laptop. You will have to get a new one anyway. It&#x27;s just the cost of doing business. You may not like it, but it&#x27;s how things are now.
therealidiotover 10 years ago
Once you have an accident and get a scratch somewhere you generally start feeling less protective, or at least that&#x27;s how I am with my tech. I don&#x27;t stop caring altogether, though - I&#x27;m just less bothered about the not-so-obvious cosmetics.<p>I&#x27;m not afraid to take my laptops apart these days. It&#x27;s my hardware and I&#x27;ve seen it naked.<p>Maybe it&#x27;s about seeing &quot;for yourself&quot; that your machine isn&#x27;t quite as delicate as you had led yourself to believe? I don&#x27;t even know :)
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modover 10 years ago
Maybe think about moving to a cloud-based machine. My actual work environment (I&#x27;m a developer) is up on a server. I ssh in and use the machine from virtually any machine.<p>I can be ready to work in about 5 minutes on a brand new machine.<p>It&#x27;s basically a screen and a keyboard for me, nothing more. Lessens its importance.
nlxover 10 years ago
Get something sharp and put ugly scratches all over it