22 Steps on how to take good care of your laptop computer
STEP 1:Keep liquids
away from your laptop. As tempting as it might be to drink coffee, cool
drink, water or any other liquid near your laptop, accidents can happen
all too easily. Spilled liquids may damage the internal components or
cause electrical damage to the laptop. Short circuits can corrupt data
or even permanently destroy parts. The solution is very simple: Keep
your drinks away from your computer. Even if you’re careful, someone
else might bump into your desk or you. Or you can use a cup with a cover
on it, so even if it does spill, the liquid doesn’t go on to your
laptop!
STEP 2: Having an available antivirus software would help. Even if you know what you download, it may contain a virus that can lead to an error in your system hardware or slowness in the software or operating system
STEP 3: Keep food away from your laptop. Don’t eat over your laptop. The crumbs can go down between the keys in the keyboard and provide an invitation to small bugs. The crumbs can also irritate the circuitry. Worse, it makes the laptop look dirty if there are crumbs and food stains on it.
STEP 4: Always have clean hands when using your laptop. Clean hands make it easier to use your laptop touchpad and there will be less risk of leaving dirt and other stains on the computer. In addition, if you clean your hands before use, you will help reduce wear and tear on the coating of the laptop caused by contact with sweat and small particles that can act upon the laptop’s exterior underneath your wrists and fingers.
STEP 5: Protect the display monitor. When you shut your laptop, make sure there are no small items, such as a pencil or small earphones, on the keyboard. These can damage the display screen when shut; the screen will scratch if the item is rough. Close the lid gently and holding from the middle. Closing the lid using only one side causes pressure on that hinge, and over time can cause it to bend and snap.
STEP 6: Hold and lift the computer by its base, not by its display (the screen). If you lift it by the screen part alone, you could damage the display or the hinges attaching it to the base. The display is also easily scratched or damaged by direct pressure – avoid placing pressure on it.
STEP 7: Don’ Don’t pull on the power cord. Tugging your power cord out from the power socket rather than putting your hand directly on the plug in the socket and pulling can break off the plug or damage the power socket. Also, if you have the power point near your feet, avoid constantly bumping into the plug or you could loosen it and eventually break it.
STEP 8: Don’t roll your chair over the computer cord. Stick the cord onto your desk with tape or a special computer cord tie, which can be easily undone when you’ve finished using the laptop. Always try to keep most of the cord away from the floor or your legs; sometimes you can be so engrossed in what you’re doing that you move your legs and forget the cord is there.
STEP 9: Plug in accessory devices into their proper slots. Always look at the symbols on the laptop carefully before inserting devices. Jamming a phone line into an Ethernet port or vice versa could damage the sockets, making it impossible to use them again. It is very important to observe this step
STEP 10: Handle any removable drives with care. CD drives that have been removed from your laptop can easily get crushed, dropped or pressed if you are careless. Put them straight into a bag or a storage box/case for safe keeping if you are not putting them back into the laptop.
STEP 11: Insert drives into their slots carefully and at the correct angle. Pushing the wrong drive into a socket, or at an angle, or even upside down can jam it.
STEP 12: Check to see if labels are affixed securely before inserting media into your laptop computer. Media such as CDs, DVDs or floppy disks should not have any loose label parts that might jam inside the laptop drive.
STEP 13. Don’t expose your laptop to rapid temperature fluctuations. When bringing your laptop indoors during winter, don’t turn it on immediately. Instead, let it warm to room temperature first. This will avoid any potential damage to the disk drive from condensation forming inside the machine. Avoid heat from sunlight as well.
STEP 14. Don’t leave your laptop in a car. Not only do the insides of cars experience large temperature swings that could damage a laptop, but a laptop (or laptop bag) is an inviting target for a smash and grab thief.
STEP 15. Have the unit cleaned once a year to remove internal dust. Get this done by a computer professional. If dust accumulates, the system cannot cool itself correctly. Heat may destroy the motherboard.
STEP 16. Avoid placing heavy materials, such as books, on top of your laptop and keyboard. This can push the LCD screen into the keyboard, and will eventually damage it. Also, the CD-ROM insert will also be squashed and, eventually, will break.
STEP 17. Use a properly-sized laptop case. Whatever you use to carry your laptop around in, be it a case, a bag or something you have made yourself, make sure that it it large enough to contain the laptop. This will avoid scratching, squeezing or even potentially dropping it.
STEP 18. Look into getting a laptop bag. Many breaks happen because of laptops being dropped or bumped. A bag greatly reduces the risk of damage.
STEP 19. Use and store in a well-circulated area. When you are using your laptop, do so in a place that has a constant air-circulation. Lots of people ruin their laptop by using it in an enclosed area and thus making the laptop overheat. It also helps if you store it in a well circulated area.
STEP 20. Use an old tooth brush to clean the area around the exhaust fan screen. If that gets plugged up, air flow is diminished and overheating can most certainly occur.
STEP 21. Try and keep the laptop on a flat surface. This prevents damage to the laptop. This step can be hard, particularly if you are going out with your laptop, but if there is a flat surface available to put your laptop on then do so.
STEP 22. Don’t use your laptop on the bed. Repeated use of the laptop on the bed will cause the fans to suck up the dust and furthers which lies in the bed, ultimately blocking the fan. Refrain from this by using the laptop somewhere else than the bed, or get a laptop cooler pad so that you place your cooler pad between the laptop and the bed hence allowing it to cool down.
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