top | item 20405957

Preserving Laptop Stickers on MacBooks

612 points| graystevens | 6 years ago |grh.am

334 comments

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thelonelygod|6 years ago

This is nifty, but I don't really see why this beats using a case. I've been switching laptop cases for a while (actually need to get a new one) and I put them up on my wall when I'm done.

Checkout a photo - https://imgur.com/a/nWz95Ex

They're like $15 on Amazon and I honestly don't mind that people can see them since the laptop is going to be covered in stickers and won't be looking like something off the shelf anyway.'

js2|6 years ago

A case makes the laptop thicker and heavier. My wife and kids have cases on their MBAs and I don’t care for them at all.

miguelmota|6 years ago

Those are cool looking cases; makes for an interesting wallpaper. The problem I have with laptop cases, and phone cases too, is that it simply ruins the slick look and feel and makes the device feel clunky, and I don't really care about scratches either here and there. But if there was a skin tight case then I'd consider it.

PascLeRasc|6 years ago

Were you in the HH facebook group back around 2016? When I read this article I was thinking of some guy there who said he got a new case every year and preserved the old ones as a memento.

geoah|6 years ago

I tried this with a transparent case but the result was kinda meh, made the macbook feel weird due to the way the case wraps around the screen to clip

donkeyd|6 years ago

Off topic, but I also went to Junction! What year were you there? I'm guessing you're with MLH?

amelius|6 years ago

You didn't leave any room for the Apple logo to shine through ...

jeen02|6 years ago

[deleted]

want2know|6 years ago

It's sad to see that in this thread most people jump in conclusions because they only assume there is only one reason why people put stickers on laptops.

Without giving it much thought you place people in a 'category' that only exists in your mind.

There are a million reasons why people put stickers on laptops. And also a million why people don't.

I guess it's best to keep an open mind and don't think you know why people sticker.

coldtea|6 years ago

>There are a million reasons why people put stickers on laptops. And also a million why people don't.

Well, let's not get carried away. There are a handful of reasons at best:

1) they feel the laptop is drab/empty and want to decorate it

2) they are fans of an artist/band and want to promote it

3) they want to broadcast the world the company they work for and/or their choice of frameworks and tools

4) they want to cover some scratch

And that's pretty much it

panpanna|6 years ago

Maybe this is a reaction towards the people who often do this?

After all, we have seen both kinds in our workplaces and they sometimes have certain attributes?

Shivetya|6 years ago

pretty much the same issue exist for using stickers on automobiles. I am of the opinion, your property, your choice. plus sometimes it can be very creative or just get a chuckle out of you during the day and that is always a worthwhile endeavor

crex|6 years ago

Good to see a fellow stoic in the thread.

libertine|6 years ago

Oh I've seen this plenty of times when it comes to the possible idea of one being influenced by a brand to the point of carrying their logo/promoting them for free.

Like those who do it are shills, easily influenced, sheeps, etc - and the ones who don't are completely immune to any branding/advertising/marketing, because of reasons (usually there's a sense of superiority bound to it).

Funny enough, this is just an illusion to them, because it doesn't matter what they think, they're still influenced by brands, by the simple fact that every single product/service is branded and signals something to someone, even if the signaling is "I don't buy into corporate brands". Because that's how humans work, with symbols and signals.

To make matters worst, it's when you think you're immune to such thing that you're most vulnerable. It's like you're a sitting duck.

The sooner you embrace we're influenced everyday, the sooner you'll be more aware of it and prepared for it.

numlock86|6 years ago

In my company I introduced stickers on working machines. We have a lot of developers with different skillsets spread over the entire campus. There are many departments sharing similar technology stacks and needed skills. This helps people to get together if they have questions or ideas they want to verify or share with others not in their department for example. Got a problem with a particular thing in Erlang, Redis, Yocto, NodeJS, Go, Linux or something else? Just approach the guys that have appropriate stickers and get together and exchange some of that sweet knowledge. While on it they might notice yours and do the same.

tragic|6 years ago

> * Resale - By putting stickers on my laptop, I am either going to have to try to remove them again once I come to selling it, lowering my resale price because the laptop isn’t in near pristine condition.

> * Damage - There is a worry that some stickers may leave a horrible hard-to-remove residue, or maybe leave a discolouration to the aluminium.

To which may be added a third - your Mac gets sent off for repair, but repair nowadays means "we take the hard drive out and put it in another Mac because even we can't fix them"

kalleboo|6 years ago

> repair nowadays means "we take the hard drive out and put it in another Mac because even we can't fix them"

Even the SSD is soldered in now

JoshTriplett|6 years ago

Likewise; half the laptop repairs I've gotten involve screen replacements.

lttlrck|6 years ago

3M adhesive remover is amazing stuff. It beats Goo Gone by a wide margin, I recently used it to remove PETG residue from my 3D printer bed and that stuff is gnarly.

3M 38983 General Purpose Adhesive Remover - 12 oz. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B004EBNTYK/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_cU...

tomkinstinch|6 years ago

Helpful tip, thanks. Here's the Safety Data Sheet (SDS) in case anyone is curious what's in 3M 38983 General Purpose Adhesive Remover[1]: Mostly methyl acetate, with some naptha, xylene, and a small amount of ethylbenzene. Definitely worth heeding the precautionary statements...

For contrast, "Goo Gone" is mostly naptha-like light petroleum distillate with small fractions of limonene and orange extract[2].

1. https://multimedia.3m.com/mws/mediawebserver?mwsId=SSSSSuUn_...

2. https://googone.com/mr_sds/data/2018-06-14%2013:44:51/GG_Ori...

analog31|6 years ago

For dealing with milder adhesives, try peanut butter or vegetable oil. Let it sit overnight, then wipe off. The only reason for considering peanut butter is that it doesn't drip off while the oil does its work.

I'm not averse to "chemicals" per se, but I like to minimize the number of different specialty liquids I have to find a place for in my house.

thinkingkong|6 years ago

Yeah its awesome. Just make sure you have an organic solvent respirator on when you use it. Its pretty nasty stuff.

Causality1|6 years ago

Does it have the same plastic-eating properties as Goo Gone?

Stratoscope|6 years ago

I have devoted my life to removing stickers from all my computers. The first thing I do with a new ThinkPad is remove the Intel and Lenovo stickers from the palmrest.

(Tip: If you have a Swiss Army knife with the plastic toothpick, the flat point of that toothpick is a perfect tool for lifting a corner of a sticker.)

The one exception was when I realized I was using my late 2013 MacBook Pro in Windows more than in OS X. I thought it would be fun to turn it into a WinBook Pro, so I got a Windows 10 decal for it:

https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B014I1ICX8/

I lined it up just right so the machine lights up the Windows logo as if it had always been there.

I guess this wouldn't work so good on the new MacBooks...

darkerside|6 years ago

I have found it similarly satisfying to remove the dealer decals from every car I buy. Although it's probably easier just to make them remove it as a condition of sale.

sschueller|6 years ago

The Swiss Army knife flat toothpick (Victorinox) is also the perfect tool to get dust out of USB-C sockets. If your USB-C cable doesn't "click" in to your phone anymore there is probably dust stuck in there deep.

lozf|6 years ago

Our old toilet had a "Designed for Windows" sticker from an old ThinkPad, and the current one has "Intel Inside".

meerita|6 years ago

Call me weirdo but I never jumped on the sticker wagon. I don't see the point of advertising companies for free. My support would be more in terms of using their services (paying, yes) than paying and also putting stickers on my laptop. Is just because fanatism or feeling proud of using something? I'm not trying to be jerk, but I never understood that movement.

orhmeh09|6 years ago

Most of my stickers aren’t really related to IT or a business or anything, save for some nonprofits. It helps me differentiate my work laptop from personal (similar looking thinkpads) and to enliven an otherwise dull but functional design in a way that is pleasing to me by virtue of it reflecting my interests and tastes, if these are ones that I feel comfortable sharing. What would be a good reason, in your opinion?

seanmcdirmid|6 years ago

Stickers are purely a way to identify your laptop in a sea of otherwise identical MacBook pros.

mrexroad|6 years ago

I keep an EFF bumper sticker on my laptop for that very reason — advertising for non-profits or causes. I’ve had a surprising (or not?) number of people ask “what’s this EFF thing?”, and in turn had many good conversations with folks about privacy, encryption, Etc. I know of at least one person who dug deeper after our chat and ended up donating to the EFF.

kstrauser|6 years ago

All of my stickers are for companies I've been directly involved with (eg past employers), FOSS projects (Python/PyCon, PostgreSQL), charities I'm active with (EFF, FSF, etc.), or services that I personally use a lot (Mastodon, Twitter). They're kind of a way of saying "I like these things".

craigmcnamara|6 years ago

I have googly eyes on mine. Not only can I definitely find my computer in a sea of identical MacBooks, people across from me at meetings seem to enjoy them.

khendron|6 years ago

The only reason I put a sticker on my laptop is to identify it out of all the other identical laptops at work.

I generally don't get a tech related sticker either. Instead I buy a sticker of an animal or something. Of my current laptops, one has an owl, one has a cat, and one has a flying fish.

ahartmetz|6 years ago

Many to most typical laptop stickers don't advertise companies. Also, if you stick one over the glowing apple, you disable some rather obnoxious advertising.

mcv|6 years ago

I've also never put stickers on my macbook. And not to keep it pristine either; it's collected plenty of gunk, and I use my macbooks up completely (my 2011 MBP is currently on its deathbed), so resale value is no issue.

For some reason I just don't see the value in covering it with stickers.

Although I did put two stickers on the laptop I'm using at a client's office. Maybe they'll help draw some attention to our team and product, and inform people which department I'm working for.

mattschmulen|6 years ago

How else do you identify your mbp going through TSA. Call me laptop roulette paranoid.

hknd|6 years ago

I'm working with >100 engineers in my team and >1000 engineers in my building, and nearly everyone has a mbp.

We usually just drop our macbooks somewhere if we attend an event, or a meeting, or go for lunch in our building.

Not having stickers (or any other unique feature) makes it very difficult to find your computer.

tsumnia|6 years ago

Funny enough, for me, it depends on the "thing". Laptop or car? No dice; but water bottle and home PC, stickers on them. I don't go out of my way to sticker them up, its mostly a collection of stickers I think look "cool" or hold sentimental value. For example, I have the skydiving bumper sticker on my water bottle cause, while it is rather bland looking, marks the skydiving trip I took two years ago. The Hot Ones sticker on my tower is because I really like hot sauces.

Overall, I like to do it because I've done it since my high school folders. I used to tape magazine clippings all over it and even made a small amount of money doing it for others at my school.

turbinerneiter|6 years ago

On my old machine, I had three mission patches from space missions I was (a small) part of.

On my current machine I have a Rick, the Micropython logo and a sticker from my Moped gang.

Stickers of companies are not the only ones existing.

delinka|6 years ago

I use stick figures, shadow shapes, etc. This differentiates my laptop from all the others in a crowd of them, and does it with my taste.

I’m with you on advertising - not interested.

mwfunk|6 years ago

Usually when I see people put stickers on laptops it's just for stuff they like or things they think looks cool. Maybe sometimes that ends up being a company they like for whatever reason. It's the same reasoning someone would use picking out t-shirts. The goal is to not give corporations free advertising.

tlear|6 years ago

But there is so much more you can put there.. mine has:

Kids sticker my daughters put there, cartoon like power rangers(some new one but same concept) Trail running club that I ran some races with Some star wars sticker Friends startup company Postgress meetup(cool design) Few coworking spaces I been to Muai Thai stadium in Bangkok Couple conference stickers(swift and ml) Running sandals that I like Couple ski resort stickers that I bought for my kids and they put it on my laptop Climbing festival Canadian Alpine club

Only one that is company advertisement for free is Mammut outdoor brand. I really like their branding for whatever reason, so I have few of their things

Vaskivo|6 years ago

> I don't see the point of advertising companies for free.

I feel the same way. I also stopped using T-shirts with stuff related to companies, technology and any kind of pop culture for the same reason.

And, aesthetically I find the clean laptop more elegant.

azernik|6 years ago

I just care about some visual distinctiveness - useful for both identification and aesthetics. Never put them on for a company I don't work for, though, just little bits of art from assorted Etsy shops.

vlunkr|6 years ago

This behavior isn’t isolated to stickers. It’s no different than wearing a Star Wars shirt. It does seem silly though when the sticker is for a company that like, sends emails for you or something

disordinary|6 years ago

I've put stickers on laptops before but it's always been OpenSource projects which I use and only to cover scuff marks as the laptops age.

Commercial products to me seem similar to wearing brand names.

rtdp|6 years ago

I had forgotten my laptop while going through security at the Detroit airport. So when loudspeaker announcements happened, I went back to collect the laptop. The security guy asked "Why type of laptop is it?" intending to check if it's really mine, I replied: "One with lots of stickers". "There you go" he said handing me my laptop that was inside a protective cover.

metasyn|6 years ago

Have you considered putting art on your machine?

navigatesol|6 years ago

>I don't see the point of advertising companies for free. My support would be more in terms of using their services (paying, yes) than paying and also putting stickers on my laptop.

So you won't advertise for free, but you'll pay the company to advertise for them?

gumby|6 years ago

random stickers (that don't have to be corporate) make it easier to tell whose machine you're about to grab.

That could mean yours, or your rival's; I leave that part of the decision to you.

bdcravens|6 years ago

I have 3 on mine: our company sticker, and 2 satirical ones related to what we do (we audit Fedex and UPS accounts; I have a "FedUp" and an "Oops" stylized like those logos)

flukus|6 years ago

> I don't see the point of advertising companies for free

What if I'm covering up the free advertising built into the machine? I like how my triforce sticker looks a lot more than the dell logo it replaced.

teekert|6 years ago

Bash nor Linux nor BSD nor "anti-NSA" are companies...

Shorel|6 years ago

I don't use stickers either but with this technique, I could give it a try for a few months.

Totally unrelated: I feel the same about tattoos.

cyberjunkie|6 years ago

My two stickers cover a scratch and a tampered badge on a top-end, used ThinkPad X1 Carbon. Stylish and serves the purpose!

Justsignedup|6 years ago

THANK YOU!

I saw the same thing. If I am going to be decorated like a NASCAR driver, I would much rather paid for that.

css|6 years ago

I used a flat white Dbrand skin and put my stickers on top. My stickers have 100% coverage: https://twitter.com/rxcs/status/888214143097987072. No problems after 2 years aside from some slight fading of the colors on the reflective stickers.

If OP is in this thread, check out 3M 1080 (or newer) series. It is used on cars, designed to not bubble or leave residue, and comes in clear.

graystevens|6 years ago

3M 1080 is great stuff - I avoided clear vinyls however as i found they lost the metallic look due to them being a little too glossy, even with the matte ones.

pimlottc|6 years ago

Nice, how do you keep the Apple logo clear? You just cut the stickers carefully before applying? The shape is still quite well defined.

slantyyz|6 years ago

Another option: If you have a Cricut or other cutting machine, you can buy the vinyl and cut your own.

hknd|6 years ago

That looks absolutely amazing!

vcavallo|6 years ago

wow, i find that amazingly stupid-looking

apazzolini|6 years ago

Small nitpick, but "orange peel" refers to the texture of clearcoat resulting from not spraying it properly, not anything to do with an orange hue.

Example: https://cl.ly/f5e28bc2db85

jiveturkey|6 years ago

small nitpicks on your nitpick, but

- orange peel refers to any paint layer, not just clearcoat. (almost all, if not all, cars today are shot with at least 2 stage, but older and maybe some cars may be a single paint coat, where orange peel can still be exhibited).

- it's not from spraying it improperly, which can be a cause, but more typically that the spraying conditions (from paint mix to atmospheric conditions, even inside a booth) aren't "ideal". most new cars are robot sprayed with perfect spray control, and almost all new cars exhibit a small degree of orange peel.

even ferraris have orange peel from the factory. this is why high dollar detailers do a "paint correction" as part of their work, even on a brand new car.

MH15|6 years ago

TIL

seanlane|6 years ago

My alternative to slapping them on a laptop or laptop case:

https://imgur.com/gallery/TTlSdKK

Grab some magnet sheets, place sticker, and cut out. Makes them a bit more durable in that you can move them around, rather than only being able to stick once.

thinkingemote|6 years ago

Do magnets do horrible things to computers? Or was that only CRT screens?

neilv|6 years ago

Has anyone ever tried this with ThinkPads, with the rubberized matte coating?

I was looking at the skins sold on eBay, and wondering whether they'd mar the coating. The old coatings hold up very nicely for over a decade, and I don't want the skin to react with the coating, nor to later leave behind an adhesive that can't be removed without ruining the coating.

I'm also wondering whether the skins could be transplanted, like if one laptop breaks in a hard-to-repair way, so you move your SSD and skin full of decals to the replacement laptop.

(I have an unapplied backlog of nerdy decals, to make the perfect social nerd cafe laptop out of a spare Coreboot X200. So long as being social doesn't mar the coating, because priorities.)

linsomniac|6 years ago

I've pretty much had a ThinkPad with me since the mid '90s, and, and used to carry them everywhere with me, usually one or more trips a day. One of them I got a custom printed skin, it wasn't that expensive, maybe $50... I peeled that skin of ~3 years later when I got a new laptop, and the top looked PRISTINE. I realized at that time: While the normal finish wears pretty well, it does wear. The skin totally protected it.

valbaca|6 years ago

Or just buy Goo Gone

https://googone.com/

dmix|6 years ago

Agreed. I really don’t see how removing stickers off an aluminum case is really that difficult.

Even for the “bad” ones that leave residue there are plenty of products for this purpose that won’t damage the metal.

_cerv|6 years ago

I used to be in the anti sticker camp, but then someone nearly walked off with my identical MacBook Pro at Newark. After that, I've gone through three laptops and each one ends up caked in stickers from various customers and conferences. I don't have to risk someone picking up my MacBook unless they have the same arrangement IP video tech and Seattle sports stickers.

Razengan|6 years ago

Another way is to just use a body case or "shell" and applying the stickers to that. It may not perfectly match the original aluminum look but it provides more protection and personalization.

I got an Incase one from the Apple Store:

https://www.apple.com/shop/mac/mac-accessories/cases-protect...

https://www.incase.com/devices/macbook/mackbook-pro-2016-wit...

abootstrapper|6 years ago

Putting stickers on my laptop is the closest I’ve come to getting a tattoo.

ryukafalz|6 years ago

I use a hard case on my work laptop for similar reasons - it's not my laptop, and when I give it back I want to keep the stickers! (I get a bit attached after using a stickered-up machine for a while.)

The framed set of stickers at the bottom is kinda what I have in mind.

xivzgrev|6 years ago

IT departments at larger tech companies may be interested in this. Every time an employee leaves or they recall equipment they need to remove stickers, a manual and time consuming process. The key question is whether the amount of time to apply this coating is significantly less than removing individual stickers later?

jaclaz|6 years ago

Only for the record, there are already people selling laptop wraps.

leather and wood: https://www.rvinyl.com/Laptop-Wraps

Various skins, already tailored for specific models:

https://mightyskins.com/pages/laptop

And you can even create your own design:

https://mightyskins.com/collections/custom-laptop

Another one (Macbook):

https://dassidecal.com/collections/macbook-skins-cases

And yet another one:

https://www.decalgirl.com/skins/laptop-skins

archagon|6 years ago

Any transparent ones, or ones that match the color of the laptop exactly?

Waterluvian|6 years ago

I bet Louis Rossman would have some thoughts on this. He had a customer who became a local meme after having a tantrum about sticker residue. These things can be trivial or impossible to remove depending how much you know about the adhesive and removal methods.

Someone1234|6 years ago

And you have to be thoughtful with removal methods too, some like rubbing alcohol for example, can damage certain surfaces.

finnjohnsen2|6 years ago

i would like to see some proper psychological research on why we put stickers and brands on our pretty and expensive laptops.

Some keywords cones to mind based on my own feelings;

- software tribalism and identity signaling to peers. like a mini resumé.

- idealism and dreaming, the cool stuff I wish I was using (Who sticks a .NET logo there, right?)

- added uniqueness, my laptop is mine, my special tool, it is set up as an extention of my unique set of skills

citeguised|6 years ago

My hobby project is collecting photos of stickered laptops [1]

From my impression and experience, it‘s like saying „I am root. This is MY device“ more than anything else. So I‘d say your last point applies in most cases. Although Salesforce-people seem to have a special relationship with their stickers [2]. They have tons of them, but usually none from other companies. They seem to be achievment-badges.

[1] https://devlids.com

[2] https://devlids.com/all/tag:salesforce

asark|6 years ago

Yeah, I think you mostly got it. Same reason people wear clothes with large, prominent brand names on them, or movie references, or whatever. Legible clothing generally. Bumper stickers. Same stuff.

paranoidrobot|6 years ago

Easier to spot/identify.

I can spot mine easily at a distance, and it's very unlikely that someone else will have theirs marked similarly. Useful in situations like security lines at airports (Please step to the side sir, while we pat you down and someone nicks your laptop from the baggage scanner), or even in an office where everyone has the same laptop.

doyoulikeworms|6 years ago

It reminds me a lot of bumper stickers on cars or tattoos on skin

TeMPOraL|6 years ago

- conversation starter ("woah, that's a cool sticker, where did you get it?")

But yeah, mostly what you mention.

NietTim|6 years ago

> Resale - By putting stickers on my laptop, I am either going to have to try to remove them again once I come to selling it, lowering my resale price because the laptop isn’t in near pristine condition.

Small remark, I've been rocking stickers on my macbook for years now and have "clean" periods in between, you can take stickers off the aluminum without any issue, and the few times I've had residue left it's easy to take it off with some alcohol or iso. After this it's 100% clean and you can't see there have been stickers on it, it's no issue at all

FluffyKitty|6 years ago

It's weird that this is being talked about as if it's not something that companies/sellers have been offering for ages.

This "special" car vinyl with the air channels is 3M's Controltac product. You can find many sellers on eBay/AliExpress [1] or the myriad of other Chinese web stores offering this product.

[1] https://www.ebay.com/itm/Surface-3M-Skin-Decal-Sticker-Cover...

b123400|6 years ago

Wonderful idea! My friends drew some brilliant illustrations on my Macbook Pros ( https://i.imgur.com/O4mGZqZ.jpg ) using marker, directly on the case. Not soon afterward, the anti-reflective coating went bad and I tried to took it to Apple Store and was predictably told it's not possible to repair the screen without swapping out the entire screen. So 4 years later I am still using a never paired machine. I wish I knew about this kind of wrapping earlier.

beezischillin|6 years ago

I just buy some dbrand skins for mine. I have no idea if other manufacturers' stuff is good, probably is but I've had the best experience with them so far. I buy and apply whichever skin I like the most at that time and put stickers on it to my heart's content. Plus the skins are pretty tough so I get scratch protection and it comes off without leaving a mark in case I need to sell it. The guy who bought my old MBP didn't have anything to complain about.

sascha_sl|6 years ago

this is essentially why i have a dbrand skin (aka a piece of textured vinyl) on my macbook pro

jhinra|6 years ago

But that's almost a harder decision - you can certainly buy a bland colored skin to put stickers on, but if you're going to the effort of skinning your laptop, why not pick an interesting skin?

vcavallo|6 years ago

TIL people really care about dumb stickers

torgian|6 years ago

Each sticker adds 5MHz to your speed!

ayeung|6 years ago

Fun fact: a razor blade from a box cutter, and some rubbing alcohol will remove any sticker off a MacBook’s aluminum case without scratching the MacBook.

theon144|6 years ago

Man, I wish I had done that with my last laptop! There were some stickers that I will never get again, because the communities have since been extinguished, some were personal gifts, some were mementos of specific events...

Not too optimistic about getting them off undamaged, seeing as they've been caked into the ThinkPad plastic for a couple years, and some have even took some scratches and tears...

jiveturkey|6 years ago

Lot of effort for something you can buy pre-cut, off the shelf at many places. you can get matching color, or any number of background designs.

his only covers the top. i have top, bottom, keyboard surround, and trackpad covered.

i'm most ambivalent about the trackpad. the silky smooth texture of a naked pad is amazing. but i really hate how it picks up rub marks after a relatively short period.

PTRFRLL|6 years ago

Love this. My old MacBook was covered in stickers but I grew out of most of them and removing them was a giant pain. Plus, like you mentioned, resale value took a hit. On my new MacBook, I've kept it sticker-free due to my past experience. This would give me the freedom to slap some new stickers on there knowing they're easily removable down the line.

rootusrootus|6 years ago

As a couple others have mentioned, if you keep the stickers carefully contained to the aluminum surfaces of the computer, acetone will take them right off and will not damage the metal.

znpy|6 years ago

This article could be the definition of "first world problem"

duxup|6 years ago

Are people often reselling their laptops?

I wanted to downsize my laptop recently and found that the places to sell hard to find amounts offered ...not worth it.

One thing I found amusing is that they sell whole packs of "laptop stickers" on Amazon. I just sort of assumed they were like travel stickers you gather over time but.... I guess not.

gonehome|6 years ago

If you live in a place that has a strong tech market, then reselling is worth it (on craigslist).

Apple gear resells really well, in Palo Alto I usually get 60-70% of the cost on resale. In some instances this makes it worth it to buy new gear every year (particularly with phones) to maximize the resale value and keep new hardware.

When I lived in Buffalo I couldn't sell anything.

JoshTriplett|6 years ago

I'd love this for a non-Mac laptop, as well.

graystevens|6 years ago

I think that might work for certain popular brands - Dell XPSs certainly crossed my mind, as well as the Lenovo Thinkpads. Both are likely to have a vinyl equivalent available that could be used, although I'd want to thoroughly QC how the Thinkpad lid holds-up with the residue on removal.

habosa|6 years ago

When it was time for me to get a new laptop I put my old macbook in the office scanner, got a high-dpi scan of the whole thing.

Then I ordered a custom full-size sticker for my new macbook that has all the stickers of my old macbook. Then I kept stickering on top. Final result: https://photos.app.goo.gl/VQ75mPshvzs6ubf87

I am very happy with it, even though it doesn't look half as nice as what this person did. The combination of old and new stickers on the laptop is fun, and the whole thing took me 30 minutes to do.

nautilus12|6 years ago

I became disenfranchised with the whole sticker thing, just another one of the many cultural distractions that companies use to make us feel like we are part of something and in exchange pay us less.

bootlooped|6 years ago

There is a brand that makes screen (or body) protectors for phones, tablets and laptops. I have used their phone protectors and have always been happy. I don't agree with the downsides listed for this approach, they offer matte finish, I have never had an issue with the protectors yellowing, and I can source (buy) them right now.

https://www.bestskinsever.com/laptop-skin

ValentineC|6 years ago

I had one of these on a 2008 MacBook, and it started yellowing and flaking around 2–3 years later, most noticeably on parts that had considerable heat (like the bottom case and removable battery).

If it was just used for the top case, I think it should be fine. Mine has yellowed, but was autographed by my favourite author. :)

Theodores|6 years ago

I like the idea of using the wrap plastic used for cars, maybe with fancy colours, skipping the stickers. When I am done with the machine I could remove the wrap and have a brand new looking case. Actual hard shell covers do protect the machine but they do get dirt inside that does add wear patterns.

Has anyone done anything really cool with automotive wraps and laptops? Not necessarily on Apple products but on PCs that don't have a tough aluminium shell?

nullorundefined|6 years ago

anyone else think stickers are super gaudy?

amiga-workbench|6 years ago

Yeah, but I have an immense distaste for branding anyway. If my ThinkPad didn't have a badge on the lid it would be perfect.

killjoywashere|6 years ago

License this to Sticker Mule. Sell it with framing options.

archagon|6 years ago

Serendipitous! I've been agonizing over this very question for the last few months. I have a few rare and interesting stickers that I'd love to stick on my Macbook, but I haven't been able to find any transparent/color-matching covers that would let me keep them after I switch computers. Really hope this product gets sold! (Or that Graham makes a one-off for me. ;)

betandr|6 years ago

I like this idea although I use vinyl stickers on my MacBook and then, before needing to sell it, I peel them off again. They leave very little residue which I clean with some isopropyl alcohol and they prevent the case from being scratched because they're covering it. For me there's not much difference between a vinyl sheet then stickers or just the stickers themselves.

systematical|6 years ago

If I were to get any sticker, it would simply say "Burn Your JavaScript Stickers." That sums up my opinion of stickers.

gaebn|6 years ago

That's truly amazing how many people have difficulties differentiating their laptops from the others. It would be a pity if they were just covering up their need to signal the world how special they are and how important their interests are. Glad that it's not the case, it would be pretty stupid to do this on the internet, right?

hk2001|6 years ago

> their need to signal the world how special they are and how important their interests are

Honestly, the compulsion to accuse others of narcissism for something as harmless as putting stickers on their personal property screams "LOOK AT ME, I'M SPECIAL" much more.

spilk|6 years ago

I've been doing this for years with easy-to-acquire clear protective films that are specifically cut for laptops.

dudul|6 years ago

Maybe I read a little fast, but why only mention "MacBooks"? Wouldn't this system work for any laptop?

miloignis|6 years ago

A similar system, I'm sure, but he got the material specifically to match the metal of the MacBook and is gauging if other people are interested in it.

Sendotsh|6 years ago

You could just use a clear vinyl and trim it to size before sticker bombing your laptop. Matte or gloss depending on your taste, and stick to the automotive ones for UV-resistance and lasting quality. I’ve been doing this for years on work laptops using a 3M clear vinyl wrap.

futureastronaut|6 years ago

I think there's a large overlap between image-conscious Mac users and image-conscious developers, for whom laptops are an expression of self or something like that.

jkmcf|6 years ago

MacBooks are fairly limited in external sizes. Other laptops probably vary by tiny dimensions. OTOH, a 2013 MBP lid is slightly different from a 2015.

rcarmo|6 years ago

When I had a black Lenovo X1, I glued a single sticker in the center (a silver cutout of the Imperial Sigil from Star Wars) and stuck all the “other” stuff (conference logos, mementos, etc.) to the underside.

This was part of a long-running joke about my joining the Dark Side (I work for Microsoft), and was all the individuality my laptop really needed.

My last work MacBook had the same sigil stuck under the Apple logo (back when it was lit) and a couple of other stickers on the underside as well, just so I could single it out, but I never really went for glueing lots of stickers to my machines, and these days I carry a Surface Pro (which folds at the back) or a Surface Laptop (which I like for its clean looks), so stickers are mostly out (I make do with a big high-res Stormtrooper close-up photo on my login screens, which are usually the first thing people see when I set up for a presentation :))

I like the idea, though, and wonder if I will end up combining it with a large decal of some kind. Printing a partially opaque monochrome image on that big a Surface (pun not intended) is... interesting.

torgian|6 years ago

That's cool. It's a nice idea, but I think cases are just a better, easier way to do it.

That said, I use a case and have no stickers. Everyone else I see has tons of stickers on their MacBooks, though nobody seems to put stickers on their Windows laptops.

fredley|6 years ago

Acetone (nail polish remover) will easily and harmlessly remove almost any sticker residue.

rootusrootus|6 years ago

Harmless on aluminum, for sure, but it will melt plastic, so avoid splatter on apple logos, keyboards, etc.

astura|6 years ago

It's not harmless if your laptop is plastic.

velp|6 years ago

And easily remove plastic stuff

veritas3241|6 years ago

I have 12 small whiteboards (14x14 in) mounted on my wall that I add stickers to now. The only stickers on my laptop are ones I have duplicates of. It's a nice collection and it's scaled more than the back of my laptop has.

gravypod|6 years ago

If you're looking for something like this that also includes a texture or color change then the company dbrands makes a nice product. They're not really over priced, they apply easily, and it is very easy to remove.

jaakl|6 years ago

I used screen cleaner gel to clean up some old macbooks with pile of years old stickers and it worked without any trace left I can notice. And I guess it is already safe for electronics. No special formulas needed.

ratsimihah|6 years ago

You could even not bother showing the Apple logo and have more sticker surface.

mikeymop|6 years ago

I was on the same search and ultimately gave up and applied them directly to my lid after finding Isopropyl gets the residue off nice.

I would love to know how they cut it so clean so I can attempt to make one for the XPS 13.

rhizome|6 years ago

AKA "Cloud flair"

crazysim|6 years ago

Cloudflare Cloud flair

jiveturkey|6 years ago

aka nerd tats. (mine has about 90% coverage.)

jrslv|6 years ago

Once I decided to remove all stickers from my 2013 mbp. A piece of cloth and small quantity of vodka did the job surprisingly well. No residue at all. (Disclaimer: I’m from Eastern Europe)

gadgetoid|6 years ago

I’ve peppered my laptop with stickers. Not out of some desire to promote the services they embody, but rather because it makes my laptop look less appealing to a would-be thief.

aripickar|6 years ago

I used to put stickers on my laptop, but I lost them all when I had to bring them to the genius bar for some work. Would this be re-aplicable? I would think no, right?

graystevens|6 years ago

So it remains sticky when removed, but I certainly wouldn't expect it to fit quite as snuggly the second time around. Interesting idea though, but my initial reaction would be no, not re-applicable.

Fnoord|6 years ago

Oil, peanut butter, or what I used is "HG stikkerverwijderaar" (I don't know the English word or brand name) which I bet is just turpentine.

timvisee|6 years ago

This is brilliant! Kind of a coincidence, I've been thinking about something like this a week ago. I wonder how well this would work on a ThinkPad.

PhasmaFelis|6 years ago

I can honestly say this is the first time I've ever heard of someone worrying about the resale value of their computer.

zrail|6 years ago

So maybe a silly question, but is there some reason clear contact paper wouldn't work? Is the sheen not quite right?

reiichiroh|6 years ago

What about stickers for various causes leading to profiling, targeting and harassment by security thugs?

jimnotgym|6 years ago

Am I the only person who is sick to death of Macs on their network? My mac users take up so much more time than the Windows majority for their overpriced hipster-books.

The ones that really get me are the ones that use MS Office all day. Wrong computer for the job.

the_arun|6 years ago

May be we need to fix the gums in stickers to peel off easily - then it could work for all laptops/devices. Another option could be put an easily peelable tape and then sticker on top of it.

bdamm|6 years ago

The technology already exists, but not all stickers you might want to stick to a laptop has that good type of sticky chemistry. So the implication is that the achieve such a "fix" would require regulation to limit the types of stickers that are generally available. It would potentially be global as well, since people travel and put stickers from travel on their gear. Also, sometimes people put bumper stickers on laptops. Should we limit the chemistry of bumper stickers? Obviously this leads to madness, and I would not want such burdensome regulation.

juandazapata|6 years ago

Or buy a $10 case. Or buy a $4 3M sticker remover.

sswaner|6 years ago

Page said you are looking for a name: LapWrap

_pmf_|6 years ago

That's one nice looking blog theme.

cardamomo|6 years ago

Bonus feature: You can apply one of these to the back of your non-Mac laptop and pretend you have a Mac!

MartinCron|6 years ago

The right term for that would be MockBook.

elif|6 years ago

None of those stickers are sentimental or novel...

You could probably get them all at the same conference for free

citeguised|6 years ago

Those stickers match pretty much the product-tester-pack you get from sticker-mule for 1€.

snek|6 years ago

does anyone know of vinyl skins for the thinkpad x1 extreme?

elif|6 years ago

Any vinyl skin will do. Use a razorblade around the edges like it's a skateboard.

If you try to size it perfectly, you'll get lifting eventually.

elasticrash|6 years ago

the most interested part of this article was that, people are actually worrying about sticking a sticker on their laptop. I would never resale a laptop with my hard drive on it, and nowadays most laptops (and definitely all macbooks have soldered hard disks)

BLanen|6 years ago

I mean... There's many many products like this already and I don't understand the point of this article.