Fixing Up an Old Dell Inspiron 2600 Laptop

Recently, I had a couple Dell Inspiron laptops donated to me to refurbish and use in my classroom. One of the machines gave me no trouble, and within a couple hours I had a fresh install of Xubuntu on the machine and it was ready to go to school.

The Dell Inspiron 2600, on the other hand, was troublesome. I finally have it working now, and I’ve written a couple articles on my other blog about the process. These aren’t in depth tutorials, but they’re meant to help point people in the right direction if they have similar problems.

Installing Ubuntu on a Dell Inspiron 2600. This seemingly simple task was complicated by the fact that the integrated graphics card doesn’t seem to work with most Ubuntu installations. I found some suggestions that Ubuntu 8.04 worked, and eventually it did after I modified the settings and specified the correct graphics driver. Read more about this in the full article.

Adding RAM to a Dell Inspiron 2600. This should have been simple, but it wasn’t. The machine reported 320mb of installed RAM, but I could only find one memory module – a 256mb memory module located underneath the mother board. After skimming through the documentation a couple times, I found that there was a second location to install a memory module located on the other side of the motherboard (underneath the keyboard). I followed the Dell documentation to disassemble the laptop and install another 256mb chip (which replaced the presumably original 64mb RAM chip).

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One Comment to “Fixing Up an Old Dell Inspiron 2600 Laptop”

  1. Christian Maio said this on

    Cool piece of writing, thanks. Can you explain the second section in more detail please?

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