Which is the best on-line small engine repair course?
I want to learn small engine repair from home. Which place offers the best course?
http://home.howstuffworks.com/how-to-rep air-small-engines.htm

I want to learn small engine repair from home. Which place offers the best course?
http://home.howstuffworks.com/how-to-rep air-small-engines.htm
expert tips to fix small gas motors.
www.12SCEarn.com Learn Small Engine Repair
After removing a lawn mower's fuel tank to access the carburetor, the carburetor can be cleaned with a carburetor cleaner or a simple brush ...
www.citytowninfo.com Interested in repairing small engines for a living? Watch this video to learn what a career in small engine repair is really ...
Most of the people I know here volunteering in one of the several charities in and around Jerusalem have a laptop. A lot of people have a laptop for just home use as the prefer to access the web in a comfy chair.
Increasingly now, some people are turning to smaller laptops better suited for working on the move.  Netbooks, which came about in the last three years or so, are popular as they are cheap small and enable you to get online anywhere too.
I have serviced and maintained various ultra-mobile computers for my work and for friends, I thought I would give a brief review of what I have found. It has to be said that with Netbooks, they are compromised on performance and usability to make the cheap and smaller, depending on your requirements this can be a hindrance or perfectly adequate for just working on the move.  Remember, as in most cases there isn’t a DVD drive built in, you have to buy this separately, which means a lot more cost and more to possibly carry around with you, this of course necessary if the computer’s OS crashes and needs to be reloaded again.
Asus EEE 701
This was one of the first netbooks on the market, and when I was working for NICE systems (UK branch of Israeli software developers) some of my colleagues got some of these from an overseas business trip before they were out in the UK. Cheapness and lightweight were the main things that appealed here.  The machine is small and light, but the plastic body feels a bit cheap, and the trim looks poor. The EEE easily flops over as the screen is actually heavier than the base. The LCD is 1024×600 which is adequate but cramped for anything than word processing and web browsing.  The one I tested had a 3G card onboard for browsing on a phone network, 4Gb SSD (solid state disk, that is a purely non-mechanical flash based memory card that acts as a hard disk)  This is very limited for Windows XP, the one I was using the SSD suddenly stopped working, causing the machine to no longer boot. After some google searching, these type of SSD disks seem to have questionable reliability and hard to replace as this is a non-standard part and cannot be substituted by a regular hard disk.  The EEEs are popular hackers as some features absent can added by soldering USB wireless sticks inside spare space inside the screen lid.
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