Hitting it with a hammer was my first thought but I know that’s generally frowned upon.

Random aside.... many years ago I worked in PC support and was issued a toolkit which included a variety of screwdrivers and sockets, some wire-cutters.... and a hammer.Or as a Navy electrician friend told me (he served on a DD back in the 70's) their mantra was the "If a hammer doesn't work it must be an electrical problem..."![]()

Our IT folks have a saying about certain repeat customers. Their tickets are referred to as PICNIC (problem is not in computer) which may be a time where a hammer would do the trick.Random aside.... many years ago I worked in PC support and was issued a toolkit which included a variety of screwdrivers and sockets, some wire-cutters.... and a hammer.
I really really wanted to use that hammer on someone's PC, but never found the right opportunity![]()
PICNIC (problem is not in computer)
Ha, reminds me (and we could probably do this all day) of when I worked at a record company and we’d get particularly bad demo tapes. We kept golf clubs in the reception area and when one was truly, exquisitely bad, we’d tee it off out the front door. We were kind of mean.<lol> we had those, called PIBCAK (problem is between chair and keyboard).
Oh, and yet another random aside - at my former employer, occasionally when a particularly troublesome PC appeared to be no longer worth the effort to repair, it was given one last test, fondly called "the gravity test". You'd take it up to the roof of the building and toss it over the edge. If it still didn't work after hitting the parking lot, 3 stories below, it was officially declared dead.