Dell Model Pp04x Drivers

Dell PP04X Laptop User Manual. Of 152 www.dell.com support.dell.com. Dell™ Latitude™ D830. User’s Guide. Where can i get fairly used of Dell DCTR A: 18.0A. Trying to find the user's manual for dell inspiron. Dell 1710 manual. My DCTA boots up but no longer permits the keyboar. Sponsored Listings.

I recently came into possession of a Dell PP04X laptop with Windows XP SP3 installed on it. I plan on donating it either to a thrift store or to a local charity that gives pre-used computers and laptops to low-income families, but as the title suggests, I'm a little uncertain as to what the best method is for getting this laptop 'donation-ready.' Naturally, all the personal data from the previous owner needs to be removed, but I don't have the installation disk that came with the laptop, so I'm not sure what to do after that step (I do have the product key, and some other Windows XP installation disks, but I suspect that trying to reinstall WinXP on this may be a fool's errand). If anyone can give me some tips or steer me in the right direction, I'd greatly appreciate it. We need to confirm the model name and model number of that Dell laptop and what hardware came in it. Examine the labels/stickers and advise us what the exact 'service tag' number and/or 'express service code' number is. Reinstalling Windows XP SP3 32-bit and getting it up-to-date is a time-consuming and difficult job, and it's a no longer supported operating system.

Unless you find someone who wants to use for some reason, Windows 7 and newer is what most people want. Click to expand.According to those numbers, you have Dell Latitude D830 15.4' laptop. It shipped in November 2008 in the U.S.A. And came with Windows XP Professional SP2 32-bit and came with these specs: processor 2 GB DDR2 RAM 120 GB hard drive DVD+/-RW disc drive graphics (256 MB) Sigmatel STAC 92xx C-Major high definition audio Dell Wireless 1505 Mini-Card Broadcom NetXtreme 57xx gigabit Ethernet -------------------------------------------------------------- I bought that same model laptop (with a slower processor) in 2012 for my oldest grandson.

It came refurbished with Windows 7 32-bit and maxed out with 4 GB of DDR2 RAM. English burmese dictionary pdf. It's been a good laptop and is still in use today. Because that laptop is worth almost nothing now, buying more RAM and Windows 7 would be throwing money away. You might consider formatting and wiping out the hard drive and then donating it that way. Anyone who has a decent amount of computer knowledge can install a Windows operating system in it.