Engineering student wanted to improve his skills and knowledge
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Hi!
I'm a recent engineering graduate with a background in commercial electronics repair. I've done repairs from phone to lab equipment. I recently worked as a PCB repair technician for laptop motherboards. After a year or so of doing pcb repair and 4 years of common commercial electronics repair i have achieved my goal. That goal was to learn how to repair and do it until I absolutely hated it. Now I'm on to phase 2 and a new goal. To regain my love for repairs and do it for myself and not others.
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Originally posted by chivas1973 View Posthi your guys, this is chivas from south of china, i got some problem on my HP Z440 bios update, i use the download bios for my HP Z440 bios update, but it does not worked, it stucked at the lan initialization, it will be appreciate if you can provide professinal advice.
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Hello!
My name is Greg Kim
I'm 40. I am Korean. I am a network engineer and computer technician. Fixing electronics is my hobby. Mostly fix TV's and small appliances. occasionally fix laptops and computers.
also love to build and test small NASes.
My current PC is:
Ryzen 5 5600X. B550 aorus elite, 1TB SSD, RX580 8GB (not a gamer), PC is fully for programming or graphic design.
like learning new stuff every day.
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Hello everyone,
My name is Anh engineer. I come from an engineering background, and while my core training is in electrical and industrial systems, I've spent a good part of my career working with computers in various forms — both hardware and software.
Over the years, I've built, repaired, and maintained numerous PCs, dealt with hardware diagnostics, data recovery, BIOS updates, and have handled everything from dead GPUs to corrupted drives. I'm comfortable working on both the electronics level (multimeter in hand) and the system level (clean installs, driver issues, malware removal, etc.).
Right now, I'm actively learning board-level laptop repair, trying to fix a few dead mainboards for family members. It's not easy, but I'm committed to understanding schematics, measuring voltage rails, and identifying failed components. Every board is a new challenge, and I'm here to learn from those with more experience and hopefully share back what I pick up along the way.
Looking forward to practical, no-nonsense discussions.
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