poxic wrote:In a similar vein... a friend gave me her 7-to-10 year old computer to recycle and wipe the hard drive. It doesn't have a USB port. It has a 3.5 floppy, but my current PC doesn't. Her old box is Linux, so it won't talk to my new-ish LCD screen (we tried. It booted fine, then gave us "unsupported video mode" or something after the boot sequence).
Does the old computer have a CD drive? If not, I guess it must be a pretty ancient Linux distro that was loaded from floppies.
The USB to IDE interface sounds like a good idea. There's probably no point putting in a simple USB card, as the BIOS won't know how to boot from a USB stick, although there are ways around that if you have a boot floppy. I'm sure that some one here that lives on the same continent as you could post you a Linux boot floppy if you want to try that method.
hintss wrote:disassemble drive, hit platters with hammer.
No! They make excellent mirrors that don't break when you drop them. I've been using one as a shaving mirror for several years.
And if you're disassembling HDs, don't forget to scavange the supermagnets from them. They're great fun to play with if you're careful, but they do tend to shatter if they attract each other from more than a couple of centimetres.