Hard drives won't be able to, you'd need solid state flash disks. Sustainable operation will dry out lubricant in bearings, so any fans won't last very long. Any cooling requiring convection won't work, radiative cooling only. I suppose backlighting should be able to do, don't see how LCDs will get damaged. If high voltage is sufficiently good insulated, otherwise it will arc. It all depends on how hard your vacuum is, of course. And how long you want to operate the device. You'd need an old laptop, passively cooled (if it won't foul up your vacuum, immerse it in silicon oil), outfitted with flash sticks or flash drives. All of this is an educated guess, of course. On Fri, Jul 16, 2004 at 06:35:02AM -0400, An Metet wrote:
Does anyone *know* (first or second hand, I can speculate myself) which laptops, if any, can safely go to zero air pressure (dropping from 1 atm to 0 in, say, 1 minute.)
-- Eugen* Leitl <a href="http://leitl.org">leitl</a> ______________________________________________________________ ICBM: 48.07078, 11.61144 http://www.leitl.org 8B29F6BE: 099D 78BA 2FD3 B014 B08A 7779 75B0 2443 8B29 F6BE http://moleculardevices.org http://nanomachines.net [demime 1.01d removed an attachment of type application/pgp-signature]
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Eugen Leitl