Steven, I have been using a DEC Hinote (486, 20M RAM and 200 M HD) as a home proxy and print servers for a few years and it is great. I use COX cable modem for Internet access, and I have a home LAN with 4 computers on it. I also have my high sped laser printer hooked up to the parallel port, and the printer is shared by all on the network. I don't use the battery, the laptop is just plugged into the wall and sits quietly in the corner doing its thing. It is better than trashing it! Mark -----Original Message----- From: plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-admin@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Steven Martindale Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2001 10:11 PM To: Plug Discuss Mailing List Subject: Laptop as a server? I've been struck by an idea and wonder if anyone on the list has done something like it. I've been wanting to put together a modest computer to use as a dial-up server for a modest network (Hey, only two working computers in the apartment currently). My current desktop computer is running a bit too hot right now to consider leaving it on for long lengths, and my old box is mostly put back together (pentium 100 on an old Intel board I can't seem to find any documentation for), but I've only got one monitor and as of yet no KVM switch (Yes I said to working computers in the apartment, the other is my Sister's not mine). So I got to wondering, I keep running across listings for older laptops for $350-400 and lower. Later 486 models and early pentium and pentium clones. Has anyone tried simply running a laptop of a wall-wart rather than battery and using it as a modest home network server? When I didn't need to work on it I could simply fold down the monitor (hmm, well as long as it isn't a model that shuts down when you do that) to keep the keyboard from getting poked and set it aside. Now I know the newer laptops can get quite hot, but would I be likely to have heat problems with say a pentium 100? Sure it wouldn't be a "great" server, but I'd think it ought to be at least adequate, and best of all no need to either get a second monitor (taking up the last of the free space on the desk) or a KVM switch. Though I would need to more than likely get a PCMCIA network card and modem (though if the laptop has a serial port then I could simply plug in my external modem). It's an idea anyway. ________________________________________________ See http://PLUG.phoenix.az.us/navigator-mail.shtml if your mail doesn't post to the list quickly and you use Netscape to write mail. Plug-discuss mailing list - Plug-discuss@lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss