Mine decided to freeze up after the pole behind my house was struck by lightning a week ago. The mouse also decided to spontaneously change from single click to double click. The monitor lost all reds…more to this list but who cares…solution? I ended up, after a whole damn WEEK, changing ONE memory chip, the modem and the mouse. For some reason it all works fine again.
Scuse me while I beat my head on the wall for a while here.
Atari 520STs had an official maintenence procedure of holding the computer horizontally a foot above a flat surface and dropping it. It reseated the chips.
The theater chain I worked for used to have a system like that. You’d call up tech support and they’d actually tell you to pick up the computer and drop it, lol.
Older hard drives made by IBM used to suffer from Stiction (A real term from IBM), and the fix was to lift the box a few inches and drop it to jar the heads loose from the platter. Worked like a champ!
It’s caused by heat, which is caused by your fan not spinning. When you kick it, the fan gets going. It’s probably clogged with dirt. Get some compressed air & clean it.
I fixed an old laptop with a little percussive maintenance. I took out the hard drive and dropped it on the table a few times. Worked great after that. Seems the it just gets stuck every once in a while.
Not to mention it’s pretty satisfying to abuse equipment like that sometimes.
Most of you posters are too young to rememeber such things, but I recall one of the early mainframe computers that was comprised of entire racks of the same board & chipset.
Often times the computer would weird out and diagnostic measures failed to reveal the source of the problem.
At this point, the official maintenance procedure called for several bushel baskets.
All the cards were pulled from the computer and placed in the baskets. The baskets were then shuffled and all the cards then reinserted. The problem card was invariably moved to a spot where the failed part was identifiable.
Ok… So it’s not exactly a “grandma and grandpa were swinging on the porch” story. It’s still true.
Two suggestions were made here - that you either cleared the dust from the fan, or jiggled one of the cards enough to give it a better connection. It is most likely one of these. Open it up, check your connections, blow out all the dust, and you should be all set. If you don’t, it’ll probably start freezing up on you again.
But, it is much more satisfying to give it a good swift kick.