Skip to main content

Fixing a McLaren F1 is tricky enough, but you'll also need an early 90s laptop

When the McLaren F1 launched in 1992, it was one of the most advanced cars in automotive history, and it’s still the fastest street-legal car on the planet. Computers have changed a lot faster than cars have in the last 24 years, and as a result, McLaren has to find a special version of an old system, the Compaq LTE 5280, in order to actually work on the electronics, according to a report from Jalopnik.

In fact, the laptops that are able to service the McLaren F1 are almost as rare as the car itself. McLaren has only produced just over 100 of the cars since the first production run, and just over half of them are street legal. Meanwhile, the Compaq can’t be just another off-the-shelf system, and needs a special CA card slot for the specially designed interface chip.

Recommended Videos

Apart from its special hardware support, the Compaq is an unsurprisingly cumbersome system. The display is a 640 x 200 grayscale panel, with four shades of gray. Under the hood, users could expect decent performance from a 120MHz Pentium chip, running not Windows, but MS-DOS.

Compaq LTE 5280 Hands-On

The pairing is definitely a weird one. While a Compaq LTE 5820 would only cost you a few hundred dollars without the CA slot, the properly equipped system, in functioning order, costs closer to a few thousand bucks. That might sound like a lot, until you realize that F1s still sell for over 10 million dollars on the secondary market.

But the reliance on older hardware is starting to wear the engineers thin, and one of them admitted that the company is working on a new version of the interface that will work with more modern systems. That should mean more time fixing up some of the rarest and most sought-after cars in the world, and less time trying to get an old DOS-based Compaq to work.

Brad Bourque
Brad Bourque is a native Portlander, devout nerd, and craft beer enthusiast. He studied creative writing at Willamette…
AMD’s RDNA 4 may surprise us in more ways than one
AMD RX 7800 XT and RX 7700 XT graphics cards.

Thanks to all the leaks, I thought I knew what to expect with AMD's upcoming RDNA 4. It turns out I may have been wrong on more than one account.

The latest leaks reveal that AMD's upcoming best graphics card may not be called the RX 8800 XT, as most leakers predicted, but will instead be referred to as the  RX 9070 XT. In addition, the first leaked benchmark of the GPU gives us a glimpse into the kind of performance we can expect, which could turn out to be a bit of a letdown.

Read more
This futuristic mechanical keyboard will set you back an eye-watering $1,600
Hands typing on The Icebreaker keyboard.

I've complained plenty about how some of the best gaming keyboards are too expensive, from the Razer Black Widow V4 75% to the Wooting 80HE, but nothing comes remotely close to The Icebreaker. Announced nearly a year ago by Serene Industries, The Icebreaker is unlike any keyboard I've ever seen -- and it's priced accordingly at $1,600. Plus shipping, of course.

What could justify such an extravagant price? Aluminum, it turns out. The keyboard is constructed of one single block of 6061 aluminum in what Serene Industries calls an "unorthodox wedge form." As if that wasn't enough metal, the keycaps are also made of aluminum, and Serene says they include "about 800" micro-perforations that allow the LED backlight of the keyboard to shine through.

Read more
Google one-ups Microsoft by making chats easier to transfer
Google Spaces in Google Chat on a MacBook.

In a recent blog post, Google announced that it is making it easier for admins to migrate from Microsoft Teams to Google Chat to reduce downtime. Admins can easily do this within the Google Chat migration menu and connect to opposing Microsoft accounts to transfer Teams data.

Google gave step-by-step instructions for admins on how to transfer the messages. Admins need to connect to their Microsoft account and upload a CSV of the Teams from where they transfer the messages. From there, it requires just entering a starting date for messages to be migrated from Teams and clicking Star migration. Once it's complete, it'll make the migrated space, messages, and conversation data available to Google Workspace users.

Read more