Skinnereal wrote:1. GIS tools here are horribly slow when used outside the head office. GIS systems seem to be heavily affected by latency (and other network issues). If it is all locally stored, it's probably hard drive speed slowing it down. Upgrading that gets messy.
2. It might be an electrical short.
When I used to build PCs, we had a standard way to put the motherboard pegs into the case, and we plonked the mobo on them to screw them in. A new model of motherboard got released and we had similar issues to what you mention. We twist the PC case, and it will power up. Put it down and it stops or reboots. One of the pegs was now touching components that used to be a screw-hole.
So:
Get your hard drive speed checked. If you an add a 2nd drive (M2, or something), do that for a fast drive. Install the GIS app and/or data on there.
Thanks for the advice. I spend an hour or so after work disassembling it as much as I could, giving it a good clean out with the air compressor and checking for any internal damage. I noted a couple of small things, there was a small screw loose and the thin metal foil surrounding the screw holes was rather warped, I figured it's possibly shorting our the system as I move the laptop a particular way. I've put it back together and it's greatly improved, in fact I'm writing this post from the machine itself.
I've also deleted the GIS software as well as some others which may be slowing it down, that seems to have improved it greatly, although it's still not 100% perfect it's a lot, lot better.
Crispy78 wrote:Employer not providing you with a machine to work on?
I'm probably a bit too used to enterprise-level support, but if someone showed up here expecting to be able to use their own computer I'd laugh hysterically before telling them to get it off my damn network.
Oh yeah they'll provide a machine, it's more that this has been bugging me for a while, and I figured just in case I need to go over reports or stuff while I'm at home this machine will be better to do it on.