03-12-2019
The good news is that you can replace the IDE disk with a SATA disk or SSD. The bad news; neither is likely to fit in the T30 case.
It has occurred to me that your notebook is not the original hardware for the following reasons:
SCO 5.0.5 was superseded by 5.0.6 prior to 1999, and 5.0.5 does not reliably run on pentium 4 systems.
https://www.unix.com/303018403-post5.html
You can switch to a SATA drive, as long as the motherboard bios supports the drive in legacy mode (emulating an iDE controller.)
This User Gave Thanks to jgt For This Post:
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Clone(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation Clone(3)
NAME
Clone - recursively copy Perl datatypes
SYNOPSIS
package Foo;
use parent 'Clone';
package main;
my $original = Foo->new;
$copy = $original->clone;
# or
use Clone qw(clone);
$a = { 'foo' => 'bar', 'move' => 'zig' };
$b = [ 'alpha', 'beta', 'gamma', 'vlissides' ];
$c = Foo->new;
$d = clone($a);
$e = clone($b);
$f = clone($c);
DESCRIPTION
This module provides a clone() method which makes recursive copies of nested hash, array, scalar and reference types, including tied
variables and objects.
clone() takes a scalar argument and duplicates it. To duplicate lists, arrays or hashes, pass them in by reference. e.g.
my $copy = clone (@array);
# or
my %copy = %{ clone (\%hash) };
SEE ALSO
Storable's dclone() is a flexible solution for cloning variables, albeit slower for average-sized data structures. Simple and naive
benchmarks show that Clone is faster for data structures with 3 or less levels, while dclone() can be faster for structures 4 or more
levels deep.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2001-2013 Ray Finch. All Rights Reserved.
This module is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
AUTHOR
Ray Finch "<rdf@cpan.org>"
Breno G. de Oliveira "<garu@cpan.org>" and Florian Ragwitz "<rafl@debian.org>" perform routine maintenance releases since 2012.
perl v5.18.2 2013-12-07 Clone(3)