Comments on: Speed Up Your Laptop with an SSD https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/01/05/speed-up-your-laptop-with-an-ssd/ Business Strategy, Marketing, Sarasota, WordPress & More... Wed, 15 Oct 2025 14:20:40 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 By: Binance https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/01/05/speed-up-your-laptop-with-an-ssd/#comment-81094 Wed, 15 Oct 2025 14:20:40 +0000 http://www.epiphanydigest.com/?p=948#comment-81094 Your point of view caught my eye and was very interesting. Thanks. I have a question for you.

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By: David G. Johnson https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/01/05/speed-up-your-laptop-with-an-ssd/#comment-78750 Tue, 27 Mar 2018 16:31:53 +0000 http://www.epiphanydigest.com/?p=948#comment-78750 A few weeks ago, I did something I’d been planning to do for a long time: I ordered a Lenovo ThinkPad.
Having looked forward to this for years, I was refreshing the UPS tracking URL like a fiend, and I knew the moment it arrived. Imagine my shock when I opened the box and discovered that a completely different machine than the one I ordered was in the box.
What followed can only be described as a sequence of customer service SNAFUs that I can only hope were accidents.
Regardless, I’m happy to report that as of today, Lenovo USA has gone above and beyond and made everything right.
Some Important Thanks
There were a few key players who got involved when this situation was rapidly devolving into a disaster:

Kayle, who answered one of my phone calls and then really took ownership of the issue until it was resolved

Erica, who was one of the helpful folks staffing the @lenovohelp Twitter account, and who pushed a case through the necessary escalation to get it to Tonya

Tonya, who called me back in response to the case that was created after my Twitter outreach, and who emailed me her direct contact info in case Kayle’s efforts were unsuccessful.

Perhaps the biggest hero of this whole story is a guy from Pennsylvania named Cameron. When I reached out to him because I’d received the machine he ordered, he responded and agreed to ship me my machine (which thankfully he had received) while I shipped his to him.
A Dream Machine
My Lenovo ThinkPad T570 is truly a fantastic piece of hardware. It lives up to the longstanding reputation of the ThinkPad family of laptops going back to the IBM days.
To give you some context: I hate spending money on laptops. There are a number of reasons for this, but the most significant one is probably the sheer amount of abuse that gets dealt out to any laptops I own. With frequent travel for consulting and speaking, my devices get a lot of miles.
Consequently, years ago, I adopted a policy that I would buy the cheapest possible machines that I could find. This approach served me well. My last machine lasted me for over 6 years (a record by at least a factor of 2), and I originally paid less than $500 for it (including tax) at a local Best Buy.
Because I’m a geek and I like to tinker (another reason I don’t enjoy laptops as much as the good old days of desktops that you could take apart and upgrade), I’d done a number of things to my last machine, including:

swapping the optical drive for an SSD (which truly rescued it from the scrap heap)

doubling the ram (something which I did twice, much to my own chagrin)

replacing the LCD screen when it died

re-soldering the power supply connection to the motherboard

Like I said… I’ve been cheap where laptops were concerned.
But that last machine (a Gateway), was seriously on its last leg. And part of the reason I kept trying to stretch out its life was because I was avoiding Windows 10 at all cost, and was grateful that Windows 7 was still serving me reasonably well.
Since I’d proven I could make a cheap machine last so long, I decided to re-think my strategy a bit. What could I do with a high quality piece of hardware that was spec’d out with a super-fast SSD, a top-of-the-line processor, a decent GPU, and tons of RAM?
For high quality hardware in the laptop space, there’s nothing better than Lenovo’s ThinkPad line. And they tend to be built to be taken apart and upgraded, which adds an enormous benefit to me personally.
So I started watching the Lenovo Outlet (yes, even when I’m making a bigger investment, I can be a little cheap) for a ThinkPad with at least 32GB of RAM, an Intel I7 CPU, and a decent NVIDIA GPU video adapter. When I found this ThinkPad T570 that I’m writing this blog post on right now, I was elated. It was a great price, and had everything I was looking for (except the SSD capacity, which I planned to fix by adding another SSD).
Perhaps now you can see why I was so utterly disappointed when I got a completely different machine that didn’t have anywhere near the specs that I had paid for.
I immediately opened a chat session with a support person on the Lenovo Outlet website, got lots of assurances, but ultimately no help. After a few days of giving plenty of time for people to work and swapping emails, I took to Twitter:

Hey @lenovohelp: this week, I received the wrong laptop, & the one I ordered from the Lenovo Outlet got delivered to someone in another state. Chatting with support has gotten me nowhere. Can you help?— David G. Johnson (@TheDavidJohnson) March 8, 2018

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsThey responded, but initially they just investigated my existing case and weren’t able to improve the situation.
A few days later, I was tired of waiting, so I placed a phone call and expressed significant displeasure with the entire support experience. I kept poor Kayle on the line for far longer than she wanted to be, while I tried to urge her to do the right thing for me.
Not confident that that would turn out well, I took to Twitter again:

Another day of runaround from @lenovohelp with no resolution to my issue. This is quickly turning into a very negative experience.— David G. Johnson (@TheDavidJohnson) March 12, 2018

https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.jsThat resulted in a call from Tonya, who checked into what was being done for me, and who also invited me to contact her directly if things didn’t turn out well.
Ultimately, Lenovo paid for the shipping cost I incurred when I sent the laptop I initially received to its rightful owner. I’m sure that had my initial contacts with their support people worked out, they would have arranged for that to occur, but they were simply not responding fast enough nor appropriately.
It was an unusual situation, to be sure. When I compared the order numbers for my order and that of Pennsylvania Cameron’s, they looked similar. It would be easy if you were working in a Lenovo warehouse full of nearly identical boxes to stick the wrong shipping labels on two boxes. Thankfully, the person who made this simple mistake managed to swap the shipping labels. It would have been a real disaster if multiple orders/shipments were affected.
In any event, I couldn’t imagine having Pennsylvania Cameron ship my long-awaited machine back to Lenovo’s warehouse, letting them sort out what happened, and then almost certainly be unable to ship it to me for one reason or another. (In fact, the first thing the customer support person I initially contacted via chat wanted to do was cancel and refund my order. I didn’t want my money back, dangit. I wanted the machine I had watched the Lenovo Outlet for!)
In any event, I’ve managed to write one of my longest blog posts in recent history about a customer service issue. I’m going to wrap it up now by saying this:
Even though I initially had a poor experience, Lenovo USA has truly won my trust and turned a negative situation into a perfectly acceptable one.
Thank you, Lenovo. I love my ThinkPad.

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By: David G. Johnson https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/01/05/speed-up-your-laptop-with-an-ssd/#comment-78754 Sun, 05 Oct 2014 20:58:46 +0000 http://www.epiphanydigest.com/?p=948#comment-78754 t cost me a dime.Well… not today, anyway.<strong>TL;DR:</strong> The RAM wasn’t seated properly. Like… for a <strong>long time</strong>. And I’m a geek who should know better. <strong>Try reseating your RAM</strong>.I’ve had this machine for almost 3 years (in itself a record, but that’s another blog post). It was a nice middle-of-the-road machine that I bought after an uncharacteristically brief research period. Suffice it to say that I wasn’t expecting it to last long, since I am (at times) a bit of a road warrior and it was purchased to be my daily driver.I realized it was slowing down some about a year after purchasing it. So, I did the obvious and bought new RAM for it. In fact, I doubled the RAM that day… or at least that was the intention. I happily removed the factory-installed 2GB memory sticks and popped in fresh 4GB ones.Imagine my horror when, on boot, Windows reported 4GB of RAM.What?! There must be some mistake.I shut the machine down, re-seated the new RAM (and verified that I had, in fact, put the <strong>new</strong> sticks in). Rebooted. 4GB.One of the new sticks must be bad, I thought.So… I swapped them. Still 4GB. So… it isn’t the sticks. Must be one of the slots.So… I booted up with a stick in only one of the 2 slots. Machine worked. 4GB.With a stick in only the 2nd slot, the machine never came up.Just to be sure, I put the original RAM in. Booted up with what should’ve been 4GB (2 x 2GB sticks). BIOS and Windows both reported only 2GB.Shoot. The 2nd slot is dead. No wonder it’s been running slow!!I contacted Gateway, since I was just inside the warranty period. After explaining my predicament, they authorized an RMA. All I had to do was ship the machine in.That was 2 years ago. I didn’t have time then, nor have I had it since, to be without my daily driver for the time it would take them to fix it up and ship it back.So… I decided—more through inaction than anything else—to live with it. And it really hasn’t been too bad, frankly.A few months ago, I decided that an <a href="http://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/01/05/speed-up-your-laptop-with-an-ssd/">SSD upgrade</a> would be a nice boost, and that did wonders for the machine’s performance. In fact, it was so nice that it made me think I might be able to hang on to this machine for maybe even a whole year more!But for the last few months… I’ve started to really bump up against the upper limits of this thing’s performance. Maybe its my habit of having too many Chrome tabs open… or maybe everything just uses more resources now… but with 2 screens full of Google Chrome and one of the Adobe products (usually Photoshop) running, I’d find that my physical memory usage was at 99%. Even worse: I started getting warnings about low memory.Yechhh….So… today, on a whim, I decided to open the case and just try to fix it.I could never understand why on earth there was no physical sign of difficulty. The slots both appear to be soldered nicely to the motherboard. There’s no hint of cracking on the motherboard itself, nor on the physical structures that make up the slots. The machine has undergone no trauma of which I’m aware… unlike the machine before this, which I managed to run over with my convertible one day.So… I went through the gamut of test all over again. All this time, I’ve had a RAM stick sitting in the “dead” slot not doing anything. It never seemed like there was a good reason to remove it, so I left it.After doing some tests… even flashing the latest BIOS from the manufacturer, I was unsuccessful and not really getting anywhere. So… I ran some Google searches about dead memory slots. I even ran across <a href="http://www.laptoprepair101.com/fix-laptop-memory-slot-failure/">one post that showed a nifty memory slot fix involving a guitar pick</a>. It just so happened that I had a guitar pick handy, but that didn’t help.Now… let me just say that for the last 21 years, my daily work has revolved around technology. For large chunks of that time, <strong>fixing</strong> technology was even a major component of my life. I do my own IT support, and always have. In fact, right or wrong, I handle all of our own internal IT needs.…which is why I feel really stupid saying what I’m about to say.I don’t honestly know know which board I was reading (I’ve gone back to look at the pages I visited today while trying to solve this, and I haven’t found it)… but some joker in a thread about dead memory slots actually made a remark that went something like this:<blockquote>Any chances you seated the RAM incorrectly 3 times in a row? I’ve done it.</blockquote>I didn’t think too much about it at the time… probably due to my vast IT experience. But as I continued tinkering, it started to haunt me.Wouldn’t you know it?I opened everything back up, looked at slot number 2, and realized the memory stick wasn’t seated.Could it be that simple? Have I done without the full capacity of my hardware for 2 years over <em>a failure to seat a memory stick properly?</em>Yep.I’m typing this on my newly responsive machine with 8GB of RAM.Sheesh.<a href="https://cdn.epiphanydigest.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/gateway-NV57h-RAM.jpg"></a> Here’s what my (properly seated) RAM looks like now Share this: <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=facebook" title="Click to share on Facebook">Facebook</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=twitter" title="Click to share on Twitter">Twitter</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=google-plus-1" title="Click to share on Google+">Google</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=email" title="Click to email this to a friend">Email</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=reddit" title="Click to share on Reddit">Reddit</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=pocket" title="Click to share on Pocket">Pocket</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=pinterest" title="Click to share on Pinterest">Pinterest</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=tumblr" title="Click to share on Tumblr">Tumblr</a> <a href="https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/10/05/fix-laptops-dead-ram-slot/?share=linkedin" title="Click to share on LinkedIn">LinkedIn</a>]]> Today, I doubled the RAM in my Gateway NV57h.And it didn’t cost me a dime.Well… not today, anyway.TL;DR: The RAM wasn’t seated properly. Like… for a long time. And I’m a geek who should know better. Try reseating your RAM.I’ve had this machine for almost 3 years (in itself a record, but that’s another blog post). It was a nice middle-of-the-road machine that I bought after an uncharacteristically brief research period. Suffice it to say that I wasn’t expecting it to last long, since I am (at times) a bit of a road warrior and it was purchased to be my daily driver.I realized it was slowing down some about a year after purchasing it. So, I did the obvious and bought new RAM for it. In fact, I doubled the RAM that day… or at least that was the intention. I happily removed the factory-installed 2GB memory sticks and popped in fresh 4GB ones.Imagine my horror when, on boot, Windows reported 4GB of RAM.What?! There must be some mistake.I shut the machine down, re-seated the new RAM (and verified that I had, in fact, put the new sticks in). Rebooted. 4GB.One of the new sticks must be bad, I thought.So… I swapped them. Still 4GB. So… it isn’t the sticks. Must be one of the slots.So… I booted up with a stick in only one of the 2 slots. Machine worked. 4GB.With a stick in only the 2nd slot, the machine never came up.Just to be sure, I put the original RAM in. Booted up with what should’ve been 4GB (2 x 2GB sticks). BIOS and Windows both reported only 2GB.Shoot. The 2nd slot is dead. No wonder it’s been running slow!!I contacted Gateway, since I was just inside the warranty period. After explaining my predicament, they authorized an RMA. All I had to do was ship the machine in.That was 2 years ago. I didn’t have time then, nor have I had it since, to be without my daily driver for the time it would take them to fix it up and ship it back.So… I decided—more through inaction than anything else—to live with it. And it really hasn’t been too bad, frankly.A few months ago, I decided that an SSD upgrade would be a nice boost, and that did wonders for the machine’s performance. In fact, it was so nice that it made me think I might be able to hang on to this machine for maybe even a whole year more!But for the last few months… I’ve started to really bump up against the upper limits of this thing’s performance. Maybe its my habit of having too many Chrome tabs open… or maybe everything just uses more resources now… but with 2 screens full of Google Chrome and one of the Adobe products (usually Photoshop) running, I’d find that my physical memory usage was at 99%. Even worse: I started getting warnings about low memory.Yechhh….So… today, on a whim, I decided to open the case and just try to fix it.I could never understand why on earth there was no physical sign of difficulty. The slots both appear to be soldered nicely to the motherboard. There’s no hint of cracking on the motherboard itself, nor on the physical structures that make up the slots. The machine has undergone no trauma of which I’m aware… unlike the machine before this, which I managed to run over with my convertible one day.So… I went through the gamut of test all over again. All this time, I’ve had a RAM stick sitting in the “dead” slot not doing anything. It never seemed like there was a good reason to remove it, so I left it.After doing some tests… even flashing the latest BIOS from the manufacturer, I was unsuccessful and not really getting anywhere. So… I ran some Google searches about dead memory slots. I even ran across one post that showed a nifty memory slot fix involving a guitar pick. It just so happened that I had a guitar pick handy, but that didn’t help.Now… let me just say that for the last 21 years, my daily work has revolved around technology. For large chunks of that time, fixing technology was even a major component of my life. I do my own IT support, and always have. In fact, right or wrong, I handle all of our own internal IT needs.…which is why I feel really stupid saying what I’m about to say.I don’t honestly know know which board I was reading (I’ve gone back to look at the pages I visited today while trying to solve this, and I haven’t found it)… but some joker in a thread about dead memory slots actually made a remark that went something like this:

Any chances you seated the RAM incorrectly 3 times in a row? I’ve done it.

I didn’t think too much about it at the time… probably due to my vast IT experience. But as I continued tinkering, it started to haunt me.Wouldn’t you know it?I opened everything back up, looked at slot number 2, and realized the memory stick wasn’t seated.Could it be that simple? Have I done without the full capacity of my hardware for 2 years over a failure to seat a memory stick properly?Yep.I’m typing this on my newly responsive machine with 8GB of RAM.Sheesh. Here’s what my (properly seated) RAM looks like now
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By: The Fix to My Laptop's Dead RAM Slot - EpiphanyDigest https://www.epiphanydigest.com/2014/01/05/speed-up-your-laptop-with-an-ssd/#comment-39160 Sun, 05 Oct 2014 19:58:57 +0000 http://www.epiphanydigest.com/?p=948#comment-39160 […] few months ago, I decided that an SSD upgrade would be a nice boost, and that did wonders for the machine’s performance. In fact, it was so […]

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