What do you possibly do with them? Or just to toy with?I have two 2010 vintage Linux boxes that run like a champ. i7 quad cores with 32GB RAM. They only ever run a console, never a GUI.
What do you possibly do with them? Or just to toy with?
Keep that bad boy off the network/internet and I don’t see an issue with this.It’s all relative I guess. I still use my Dell Dimension 8200 to burn cds. Used it last weekend. Got it 2001.
I did upgrade the Ram to 384 mb.
They do very useful things, like SQL script testing, backups, etc. A few months ago we fixed a couple million broken smileys from the UBB days, which required about 100 scripts to be run against the live database. Every single script was tested on one of the backup servers before being run on the live database. In the course of testing we probably restored the test database 50 times because something didn't work as expected. Then you debug and test again until you get it right. Did you notice any crashes or downtime when we ran those scripts on the live database? Nope, because we tested the daylights out of the scripts first. @JeffKeryk Dr. SQL extraordinaire advised on some of those scripts.What do you possibly do with them? Or just to toy with?
Probably so.My backup computer is running an AMD-8350 bulldozer from 2011.
Up until recently, it held the GHz world record for a consumer grade CPU at 8.8Ghz
https://skatterbencher.com/2024/03/20/raptor-lakes-unbreakable-overclocking-world-record/
Unfortunately I cannot find the special TPM chip designed for the motherboard so I cannot upgrade to Win 11 so when W10 support ends, it will be time to upgrade. I don't think the chip would have supported Win11 anyway but it would have been fun to try out.
My current laptop is ThinkPad t530 from 2012 (my boss gave it to me, formerly used for drafting at our survey office). It is finally getting old but I don't use it for anything demanding at this time.I bought my PC back in 2017. Since then, I upgraded the PSU, and graphics card, and added another 32gb of ram.
It began:
i7-7700k
1080gtx--->1080ti--->4060ti
32gb 2133ms----64gb
500w PSU--->850 gold+ PSU
Anyway, it's no longer pulling the performance I want, so...
i9-14900kf
Gtx 4080 Super
32gb 5600ms
Im proud to have gotten 7 years of use out of it with minor plug and play upgrades. How long do you all usually get from a PC?
Without 1% lows average framerate is a useless determination for gaming experience.. its more for "FLEX" at a lanpartyWell, there aren’t many people willing to test these old CPUs. But the point of this was to showcase that an older CPU can still work for some, especially if you’re on a budget and play non-competitive games, like elder ring (it’s locked to 60fps anyways) or similar.
Now OP stated he plays PUBG, which being a competitive shooter you want high and smooth FPS, so naturally it would not make sense to keep using his old CPU since it already stutters with a 4060ti.
The front intake area looks pretty restricted, but other than that, it's a clean build. Congrats!
Neat so used for work purposes . I familiar with command line learning it in business computing 1988-1990 in high school and into college work study job as Unix printer admin . I thought id never use it then got a Mac and realized cloud computing is command line.They do very useful things, like SQL script testing, backups, etc. A few months ago we fixed a couple million broken smileys from the UBB days, which required about 100 scripts to be run against the live database. Every single script was tested on one of the backup servers before being run on the live database. In the course of testing we probably restored the test database 50 times because something didn't work as expected. Then you debug and test again until you get it right. Did you notice any crashes or downtime when we ran those scripts on the live database? Nope, because we tested the daylights out of the scripts first. @JeffKeryk Dr. SQL extraordinaire advised on some of those scripts.
[edit] Both servers also have caching hardware RAID controllers, which makes I/O very fast. These machines seriously haul for doing the type of work I do on them. Remember it's all in a shell (command line).
Microsoft doesn't do OSes well, and they never have. I find that Linux has about twice the performance as Windows on the same hardware, and Linux doesn't get bloated and slower over time. And it's more secure and reliable. And free open source.I was disappointed with the performance of Windows after Windows 7. Windows 10 and 11 have so much bloat and overhead and use so much memory unnecessarily. Also due to the poor design of Windows OS where each module has dependencies on several other OS modules, Windows will always have numerous new zero day vulnerabilities no matter how much you patch it.
Now, I don't like the deterioration in privacy of Windows 10, 11 and Office 365 where your data is no longer your data.
I'm looking at alternatives to Microsoft OS's.