Completely divorced from Starbound, but I sincerely hope
someone got fired for that, MZ. That's, just... well. It's certainly not to the
consumer's benefit, that's for sure, and probably explains why it's been such a pain in the rear to find drivers and system specs and whatnot in the past. Wish I knew whether it'd be safe to stick another harddrive in the thing... it's got space for it, but no clue about power, whatever software/hardware settings would need to be mucked with, so on, so forth. And I haven't been able to find out. Apparently because there's a dozen of the bloody things on the market, and gods only know what manuals apply to which. Thinking on it, something like this is probably why the monitor replacement I tried to do for the last HP laptop didn't work out...
I
do vaguely remember it having some sort of specific code or... something... but I think there was like two or three different versions of
that, too.
Massively stupid thing to do. Had to have made administration and logistics considerably more troublesome than it should have been
Regardless, to the original point, while it's the strongest computer I've ever had access to, it's still pretty damn weak in the overall scheme of things. Starbound's not exactly the heaviest program I've tried to run, not by a long shot.