The Very Basics of Not Killing Your Computer
AVOID HEAT STRESS
If you have a laptop DO NOT use it on a soft surface like a pillow or on a blanket, itβll block the vents on your computer and make it get really fucking hot inside.
If you have a desktop you gotta open it up and blow out the dust sometimes.
If you are moving your laptop in a bag turn the laptop off. Donβt put it to sleep, donβt just shut the screen, turn it off, because otherwise itβs in the bag generating heat and thereβs nowhere for the heat to go in the bag. OFF. Not sleep. OFF.
DO NOT DROP
Okay I know that should be obvious but drop damage to your hard drive is bad bad news. Be as careful as you can to set your computer gently on flat surfaces; donβt leave it hanging out on a bed where it can get knocked off, donβt set it on the roof of your car. And yes, just dropping it a couple inches can kill your hard drive or totally shatter your screen.
DONβT PUT SHIT ON YOUR KEYBOARD
Look Iβve seen four people ruin their laptops because they had a pen on the keyboard and closed the laptop and it fucked up the screen and the keyboard and it sucks so much and you feel awful after it happens because itβs so avoidable just donβt put things on your keyboard and always check that your laptop is clear before you close it.
PROTECT YOUR PORTS ON YOUR LAPTOP
Youβve only got one power jack and a limited number of other inputs on your computer and if they detach from the motherboard youβre fucked. USB ports get damaged because people use them a lot and eventually it weakens the connection and then they just stop working and it sucks. You can get around this with USB ports by using a USB hub to connect things like your keyboard and mouse.
For your power plug you just gotta be careful. Avoid tripping over the cord at all costs, donβt yank the plug out of the computer. It will SUCK VERY MUCH A LOT if you have to buy a new computer because the power port lost contact with the motherboard.
Donβt move your computer with things plugged into it. Take the power cord off before you put your laptop in the bag, take out the USB mouse dongle, do not travel with little nubby bits sticking out of your computer that can easily get caught or get tweaked or snap off inside of the thing.
(I really canβt emphasize enough that most of the βit will cost more than itβs worth to fix thisβ laptops I see are because of USB ports and power jacks. People donβt seem to know that this isnβt something that can be fixed easily; a broken power jack is a βremove the motherboard and resoldier componentsβ job, not a βplug a new one in in fifteen minutesβ job and most computer repair shops arenβt going to solder things for you and if they DO itβs going to be very expensive)
RESTART YOUR SHIT AT LEAST ONCE A MONTH AND JUST LET THE FUCKING UPDATES RUN
You should probably restart more than once a month but whatever. This is actually something that I consider part of reducing heat stress because when your processor is straining to keep up with all the background bullshit thatβs running from a program you opened three weeks ago itβs going to use up resources and get hot and look just restart it once in a while.
Also the updates are almost always okay and safe and generally running updates is a good and secure thing to do (though maybe follow a blog dedicated to the OS you run because if there IS a problem with the updates that blog will probably talk about it before the update gets forced on your computer)
ANTIVIRUS BULLSHIT
Yes you should probably be running an antivirus.
Sophos is free and itβs fine. But donβt pay for it - if youβre using Sophos use the free version.
If youβre looking for something paid and a little more comprehensive I recommend ESET - get the cheap version, renewals cost less than the initial purchase, and feel free to get a multi-year version, the credentials follow your email not the computer so if your computer dies before your license expires you can install the license on a new computer.
DO NOT INSTALL NORTON OR MCAFEE THEY ARE EXPENSIVE BULLSHIT. Kaspersky is whatever. Itβs less bullshit than Norton or McAfee but not as good as ESET for about the same cost.
If you think youβve got a virus run the free version of Malwarebytes and get your shit cleaned.
KEEP LIQUIDS THE FUCK AWAY FROM YOUR COMPUTER
Again this should be obvious and yet. But seriously, just make a rule for yourself that drinks arenβt allowed on the same table as your computer and youβll save yourself a lot of headaches.
PLUG YOUR COMPUTER INTO A UPS
Okay I fucking hate amazon but hereβs a thing you should be using, just search the rest of the internet for βsurge protector/UPSβ and youβll find something that isnβt from amazon - APC is a solid brand for this.
Basically you want a fat surge protector that has a little bit of a battery backup and you want to plug your computer (desktop OR laptop) into that instead of into the wall. The benefit of this is twofold:
1) if thereβs a power surge the UPS will prevent your computerβs power supply from getting fried and possibly frying parts of your motherboard
2) if thereβs a power outage and youβre *at* your computer youβll have enough time to save what youβre working on before your computer loses power (like, youβll maybe only have a minute or two on a small UPS but thatβs still time to hit CTRL+S and keep from losing work)
At a bare, bare minimum your computer should be plugged into a surge protector but NOT directly into the wall.
BACK YOUR SHIT UP
[we interrupt this yelling for me to tell you that Western Digital has apparently released their new My Passport line and Iβm obligated to inform you that you can get a 2.5β³ USB 3.0 backup drive with FIVE FUCKING TERABYTES OF STORAGE for $130. Or you can get 4TB for $93. Or you can get 1TB for $53. basically what Iβm saying is that it is not only cheap computer season it is also cheap hard drive season.]
[also if youβre getting a backup drive get western digital not seagate seagate fucking sucks and has a much higher failure rate]
Uh, okay, anyway - Do an image backup of your computer every once in a while so that if you get infected or your hard drive dies or whatever you can just restore from backup and move on like nothing happened.
HEREβS HOW TO DO AN IMAGE BACKUP.
SAVE YOURSELF THE WEAR AND TEAR
You know what is cheap? USB Keyboards and USB mice. You know what is not cheap? Fixing the touchpad on a laptop or replacing a laptop keyboard.
Get yourself a USB hub, a USB Keyboard and a USB Mouse (wired or wireless, doesnβt matter) and if youβre using your laptop at home plug *that* into your computer.
Also if your keyboard on your laptop breaks itβs fine just to use a USB keyboard instead I promise; if the screen breaks itβs also usually cheaper and easier to get a used or inexpensive monitor than it is to replace the screen. Your laptop is basically just a very small version of whatever bullshit is going on inside a desktop, if the peripherals break but the core components are fine you can just use it like a desktop.
Unless itβs a piece of shit that doesnβt have any USB ports or video out in which case you got ripped off, friend, demand functionality in your devices Iβm sorry.
/rant
Some things I wanna add (maybe others have but oh well):
-please don't keep your laptop plugged in 24/7. I am serious, this is how I messed up my first laptop bevause I constantly kept it plugged it to be charged. Thinking that is better then having it lose battery, logically kinda makes sense. Wrong. Allow your laptop battery to rest. Doing this, what will happen is your laptop won't run unless you are plugged in. Unplug it, it will drop to 10% and pretty much not work. That is bad, really bad. What I do is allow my battery to drop down to 47-35% and then I plug it in. Wait until 100% and as quickly as I can, unplug it. Your laptop needs a break from charging
- have an antivirus. Please I cannot stress this. They save your bum (personally don't trust built in one's, sorry dnajsja) and they are not fun to get, viruses I mean. I personally use norton so yes judge me away dnakska but it's better than NOT having one.
- if you have screen problems, get an old tv instead! Tv's should have an HMDI port and your computer/laptop should have that port as well, plug that in and VIOLA! Problem solved so if you have an old tv laying around, it might be useful to save it just in case (im talking about a fairly small tv cx)
- do updates yes BUT be always aware that not all computers are compatible. I say this with Windows, trust me there are some updates that eff things up it's nuts and it varies! My dad will have an update work fine for him but for me it won't and vice versa. Good example is 3ish years ago, I got an update but this update messed things up with my graphics card if I am correct. I have amd instead on Intel and because the update wasn't compatible with my amd, it made me get a blue screen when watching videos. Oddly it was only when I watched videos and it could be from anywhere, YouTube, Netflix, you name it. To this day I am not sure what the cause was nor tech support knew but thankfully an update (it was one of the bigger software ones) fixed the issue. So yes I am all for doing updates but be prepared for an update to not work, best keep things backed up!
- if you are someone who is old school and loves physical cds or video games. I'm like 90% sure you need to now get an external disk reader bevause apparently nowadays they don't always build them (why? I will not know) so buy that. This applies for laptop and pc.





















