I have some old Thinkpads (R50 and T40) from about 2003 at home as backup systems if somebody urgently needs a laptop. (It gets clearer every day that nobody around me wants to use those old devices any more – even in an emergency.) I keep them updated with Debian Buster LXDE. And each time I do the updates I am shocked about how well they are built. Especially the keyboards are a real joy. But even the screens are still very pleasant – if you don't want to do multimedia on it. (I'm writing this on a T40 because my T400s just froze in the middle of writing the first attempt and since I had it switched on already anyway.)
My daily driver, the Technoethical T400s, unfortunately doesn't come close to those older devices any more.
Sure, new light laptops like the ThinkPad Carbon X1, the Dell XPS 13 or the HP Spectre are more advanced in many ways. But they also lost this rigidity and tactile quality. Therefore, I was wondering what you would think of an idea I suddenly had: Wouldn't it be fun to combine new hardware with the old one? Use the old keyboard and case and swap out not any more useful IO with more recent technology. There must be enough space in those bulky cases for that.
But in the end I have to admit it most likely doesn't make much sense to attempt this because it would lead to a not very convincing mess. Nevertheless, it should be possible to accept some weight and and additional volume to gain this old tactile excellence back. Or doesn't anyone still have the means left to produce parts in the quality of those old laptops? Since almost everybody seems to be convinced that they always need to have the most recent and performant hardware, there probably isn't a big enough market for products like that.
And things are moving in the opposite direction now quickly with the new Apple M1 containing everything in one chip. Upgrades and modularity seem to be concepts of the past. Sure, good performance with low power consumption is good. But is it worth losing all options for future upgrades?
Anyhow. It is frustrating that since years now it is getting worse with my T400s. The frequency of freezes is increasing but I couldn't find a good reason for it so far. Even cleaning the fan and replacing the thermal compound didn't do anything. It is especially bad in summer but the problem can obviously occur at any time in winter too.
Therefore, I bought a used Dell Latidude e7470 as a replacement but I couldn't get myself to abandon my old T400s yet. Especially because I can use Libreboot on the T400s but not on the Dell. Besides, the hardware backdoors from Intel Management Engine and AMD Platform Security Processor are something I would rather like to avoid. Am I the only one reluctant to move to newer hardware because it doesn't only bring advantages?