Difference between revisions of "Meta Triage of Systems"
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<graphvizr> | <graphvizr> | ||
− | digraph | + | digraph D { |
node [fontname="Helvetica", fontsize="11"] | node [fontname="Helvetica", fontsize="11"] | ||
Line 8: | Line 8: | ||
missingmobo [label="Missing the\nMotherboard?"] | missingmobo [label="Missing the\nMotherboard?"] | ||
− | damaged [label="Missing sides?\nor | + | damaged [label="Missing sides?\nor other major damage?"] |
atkeyboard [label="AT Keyboard\nconnector?"] | atkeyboard [label="AT Keyboard\nconnector?"] | ||
− | + | proprietary [label="Non-upgradeable model?\n(see list)"] | |
− | + | p2 [label="Marked P2 or worse?"] | |
+ | low_speed [label="Marked too slow?"] | ||
+ | uncovered [label="Does it have an\nUNCOVERED ELECTRONIC DEVICE\nor an\nFG-PDX\nlabel?"] | ||
+ | exceptional [label="Can you see anything\nfrom the\nEXCEPTIONAL COMPONENTS\nlist?"] | ||
+ | keep [label="KEEP IT HERE\nin Incoming Pile", shape="box", style="bold"] | ||
+ | blue [label="This will need to\ngo through the\nBLUE CHART\n(Visual Triage)", shape="box", style="bold"] | ||
+ | yellow [label="YELLOW\n(mining)", shape="box", style="bold"] | ||
− | start -> | + | start -> atkeyboard |
− | damaged -> | + | damaged -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] |
damaged -> missingmobo [taillabel="NO"] | damaged -> missingmobo [taillabel="NO"] | ||
− | missingmobo -> | + | missingmobo -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] |
− | missingmobo -> | + | missingmobo -> keep [taillabel="NO"] |
− | atkeyboard -> | + | atkeyboard -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] |
− | atkeyboard -> | + | atkeyboard -> proprietary [taillabel="NO"] |
+ | proprietary -> p2 [taillabel="YES"] | ||
+ | proprietary -> damaged [taillabel="NO"] | ||
+ | |||
+ | p2 -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] | ||
+ | p2 -> low_speed [taillabel="NO"] | ||
+ | |||
+ | low_speed -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] | ||
+ | low_speed -> damaged [taillabel="NO"] | ||
+ | |||
+ | uncovered -> yellow [taillabel="YES"] | ||
+ | uncovered -> exceptional [label="NO"] | ||
+ | |||
+ | exceptional -> blue [taillabel="NO"] | ||
+ | exceptional -> yellow [taillabel="YES"] | ||
+ | |||
} | } | ||
</graphvizr> | </graphvizr> | ||
− | |||
− | + | The idea of this chart is to determine is a system is so low end we are not interested in mining it for parts. In general this job should be done by trained system evaluation instructors and staff. | |
+ | |||
+ | ;RED LIGHT COMPUTERS: systems are not worth mining. There parts are not worth keeping. We will just destroy the drive and send them to recycling for deconstruction. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ;GREEN LIGHT LIGHT COMPUTERS: systems are potentially worth keeping because they will likely get reused. We will mine them lightly to test their components. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ;YELLOW LIGHT LIGHT COMPUTERS: systems are in between. We will mine them for components, but we will not reuse the system as a whole. | ||
+ | |||
+ | There will be two carts, one for '''GREEN LIGHT''' systems (bound for storage), and one for '''YELLOW LIGHT''' and '''RED LIGHT''' systems, bound for recycling. | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Non-upgradeable == | ||
+ | Systems that are typically not upgraded are: | ||
+ | * Compaq | ||
+ | * White or beige Dell (black Dells are OK) | ||
+ | * eMachine | ||
+ | * Gateway | ||
+ | * HP | ||
+ | * Micron | ||
+ | * Packard Bell | ||
+ | * IBM PS/1 model | ||
+ | * IBM PS/2 model | ||
+ | |||
+ | Since these systems are seldom upgraded, markings on the outside usually indicate what is actually in the computer. | ||
− | + | [[Category: Old Prebuild]] | |
− | [[Category: Prebuild]] |
Latest revision as of 15:24, 14 March 2009
<graphvizr>
digraph D {
node [fontname="Helvetica", fontsize="11"] edge [fontname="Helvetica"]
start [label="START HERE", shape="box"]
missingmobo [label="Missing the\nMotherboard?"] damaged [label="Missing sides?\nor other major damage?"] atkeyboard [label="AT Keyboard\nconnector?"] proprietary [label="Non-upgradeable model?\n(see list)"] p2 [label="Marked P2 or worse?"] low_speed [label="Marked too slow?"] uncovered [label="Does it have an\nUNCOVERED ELECTRONIC DEVICE\nor an\nFG-PDX\nlabel?"] exceptional [label="Can you see anything\nfrom the\nEXCEPTIONAL COMPONENTS\nlist?"] keep [label="KEEP IT HERE\nin Incoming Pile", shape="box", style="bold"] blue [label="This will need to\ngo through the\nBLUE CHART\n(Visual Triage)", shape="box", style="bold"] yellow [label="YELLOW\n(mining)", shape="box", style="bold"]
start -> atkeyboard
damaged -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] damaged -> missingmobo [taillabel="NO"]
missingmobo -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] missingmobo -> keep [taillabel="NO"]
atkeyboard -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] atkeyboard -> proprietary [taillabel="NO"]
proprietary -> p2 [taillabel="YES"] proprietary -> damaged [taillabel="NO"]
p2 -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] p2 -> low_speed [taillabel="NO"]
low_speed -> uncovered [taillabel="YES"] low_speed -> damaged [taillabel="NO"]
uncovered -> yellow [taillabel="YES"] uncovered -> exceptional [label="NO"]
exceptional -> blue [taillabel="NO"] exceptional -> yellow [taillabel="YES"] }
</graphvizr>
The idea of this chart is to determine is a system is so low end we are not interested in mining it for parts. In general this job should be done by trained system evaluation instructors and staff.
- RED LIGHT COMPUTERS
- systems are not worth mining. There parts are not worth keeping. We will just destroy the drive and send them to recycling for deconstruction.
- GREEN LIGHT LIGHT COMPUTERS
- systems are potentially worth keeping because they will likely get reused. We will mine them lightly to test their components.
- YELLOW LIGHT LIGHT COMPUTERS
- systems are in between. We will mine them for components, but we will not reuse the system as a whole.
There will be two carts, one for GREEN LIGHT systems (bound for storage), and one for YELLOW LIGHT and RED LIGHT systems, bound for recycling.
Non-upgradeable
Systems that are typically not upgraded are:
- Compaq
- White or beige Dell (black Dells are OK)
- eMachine
- Gateway
- HP
- Micron
- Packard Bell
- IBM PS/1 model
- IBM PS/2 model
Since these systems are seldom upgraded, markings on the outside usually indicate what is actually in the computer.