10 Useful Tips and Tricks
1. Keep Hardware Clean and Dust-Free
Dust is one of the biggest enemies of computer and server hardware. It blocks airflow, increases heat, and can reduce hardware life. Clean desktops, laptops, and servers regularly using compressed air. For servers, schedule cleaning during maintenance windows.
2. Monitor Temperature Regularly
Overheating can damage CPUs, RAM, hard drives, and power supplies. Use monitoring tools to check CPU, motherboard, disk, and server inlet temperatures. In data centers, make sure proper cooling and airflow are maintained.
3. Use UPS for Power Protection
Always connect computers and servers to a UPS. Sudden power loss can corrupt data and damage hardware. For servers, use enterprise-grade UPS systems with enough backup time for safe shutdown.
4. Check Hard Drive Health
Hard disks and SSDs can fail without warning. Use tools like SMART monitoring to check disk health, bad sectors, temperature, and wear level. Replace failing drives before they cause downtime.
5. Label Server Cables Properly
In server racks, cable labeling is very important. Label power cables, network cables, storage cables, and management ports. This saves time during troubleshooting and prevents accidental disconnections.
6. Maintain Proper Airflow in Servers
Do not block server front or rear vents. Use blanking panels in racks to avoid hot air recirculation. Keep cold air in front of the server and hot air at the back.
7. Update Firmware and BIOS Carefully
Server BIOS, RAID controller firmware, NIC firmware, and disk firmware should be updated when required. However, always read release notes and take backups before updating. Firmware updates can fix bugs and improve stability.
8. Use RAID, But Do Not Treat It as Backup
RAID protects against disk failure, but it is not a backup. Accidental deletion, corruption, ransomware, or multiple disk failures can still cause data loss. Always maintain proper backups.
9. Keep Spare Hardware Ready
For critical servers, keep spare disks, power supplies, network cards, RAM, and cables available. This reduces downtime when hardware fails.
10. Document Hardware Details
Maintain an inventory of all computer and server hardware. Include serial numbers, warranty details, IP addresses, rack location, CPU, RAM, storage, operating system, and support contract information. Good documentation makes support and replacement faster.
Bonus Tip
For servers, always use out-of-band management tools such as iDRAC, iLO, or IPMI. These tools help you access the server remotely, even when the operating system is down.