My laptop bit the dust this week. 9 months after the 1yr warranty expired. Bloody hell.
It had been acting very peculiar as of recently, so I naturally assumed it was something to do with Windows (I run XP SP2). I had been toying with the idea of switching permanently to Linux (I work on desktop PC that runs Fedora Core 3), so I decided to take the plunge and throw Ubuntu on my laptop. After testing the Live CD to ensure all my devices worked (which they did) I tried to install Ubuntu.
I had an extremely hard time getting it installed... the disk partioning portion of the install kept freezing on me. After finally getting it installed, the OS then kept freezing on me. At this point my suspicions of a hardware problem with the laptop seemed to be confirmed. After googling for the symptoms I was seeing (it was also refusing to turn on sometimes) it seemed that the problem was a faulty memory module. I grabbed memtest off the web, and sure enough, the laptop failed one of the tests designed to
stress test your RAM.
Sweet! I thought. RAM would be easy to replace (I had worried it was the hard-drive or system board). After opening the memory access compartment on the laptop I found a single empty slot. Puzzled, I consulted my owner's manual and discovered that the base 512MB of RAM that comes with the laptop is mounted directly on the system board.
Not panicking yet, I phoned up Toshiba and asked them if I managed to dis-assemble the laptop, would I be able to remove the memory?
NO. The tech person did not offer specifics, but the memory is somehow inherently part of the system board and you can not remove it. SH#T !
So, instead of paying $100 for a new piece of RAM, I need to buy a whole new system board for $500+. Absolutely ridiculous! Who thought it would be a good idea to make the RAM non-removeable?!
I've attempted to find a way to somehow disable the faulty memory module (via the BIOS) so that I could just put a new piece in the available slot but I haven't had any luck. When our tech person gets back from holidays I'm going to see if he/she can somehow remove the faulty module. Otherwise I may have an expensive paper weight on my desk.