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re: New Desktop Build Recs

Posted on 4/2/24 at 8:20 pm to
Posted by CubsFanBudMan
Member since Jul 2008
5097 posts
Posted on 4/2/24 at 8:20 pm to
I know I'm going overboard, but I tend to do that with electronics. I was at a tech conference for accountants many years ago, and the guy leading the intro section said to look at gaming quality components, keyboards, mice, etc. Not because you need them, but because they will last and you won't need to replace them as often. My last build lasted 13 years, so who knows what I'll need 5 or 10 years from now.

I'm mainly wondering what has changed since my last build. Should I run dual channel 8gb memory or a single 16gb stick? Any benefit to using all 4 channels over just the 2?

I know I said I planned on reusing my old hard drives, which I have a mix of a sata SSD and regular sata HDD. What would I gain by switching to an m.2 NVMe drive?

Anything i need to worry about with my Windows license?
Posted by SaintEB
Member since Jul 2008
22785 posts
Posted on 4/2/24 at 11:06 pm to
quote:

know I said I planned on reusing my old hard drives, which I have a mix of a sata SSD and regular sata HDD. What would I gain by switching to an m.2 NVMe drive?


About 12 times the speed. Fastest sata SSD 550 MB/s. Gen 4 nvme's are 7000 MB/s.

Always run dual channel. No need to run 4 unless you are doing some serious multitasking.

If a digital windows license, no worries. If not, then you may need to call with some info to get reactivated. However, there are key sites out there that you can get Win11 pro for 30 bucks, activated with no problems.

If you want some great recommendations, come on over to the gaming board. You will get some questions about what you want, how you want to use, and your budget. Someone will hook you up with a good build.
Posted by LemmyLives
Texas
Member since Mar 2019
6546 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 1:15 am to
quote:

but because they will last


That's horseshite. When there are no moving components, he's talking out of his arse. These aren't HDDs.

You know what you'll need 10 years from now? You'll probably figure that out in a couple of years. Don't stress.
"tech conference for accountants" sounds suspicious as hell. I have a very extensive background in training accounting grads in many technical areas, and ... eh., they got a few days (an hour?) of training in TCP/IP and had no idea what "IP ANY ANY" means.

Posted by TigerinATL
Member since Feb 2005
61581 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 12:48 pm to
quote:

because they will last and you won't need to replace them as often. My last build lasted 13 years, so who knows what I'll need 5 or 10 years from now.

I'm mainly wondering what has changed since my last build.


I'd think more about what is going to change in the next 2-3 years. AI models running locally is going to be a thing and I personally think it's going to spur a big device/computer upgrade cycle. Macs with the M chips already are built for AI. Current PCs need to add expensive NVidia GPUs currently. AMD and others are working on integrating AI with the CPU. I would either go cheap so you'll feel justified upgrading again in a year or 2, or make sure whatever you build is has the latest connections/busses and will be easy to upgrade the main components.
This post was edited on 4/3/24 at 12:49 pm
Posted by SaintEB
Member since Jul 2008
22785 posts
Posted on 4/3/24 at 1:51 pm to
quote:

look at gaming quality components, keyboards, mice,


Many companies will attach the word "gaming" to something subpar to get sheep to buy. So, no, don't do that. There are plenty of quality components out there that don't say "gaming" on them.

As for your actual PC, there is really no difference between a "gaming" power supply or "gaming" RAM vs just RAM ( or a PSU). Actually, for productivity, you'll want to go multi-core, multi-thread on the CPU. Gaming is mostly single thread processing.

That i5-2500K is a quad core, with an LGA1155 chipset that only supports DDR3 RAM. You don't want to try to replace any of these components and you certainly can't resale them.

You can still buy LGA1155 motherboards but the best CPU you can buy for it is 3rd Gen.i7-3770k, which you may find used out there, but new would be a niche buy and would probably cost more than worth. (someone on Newegg has one for $540. Yeah, don't do that).

You would be better off looking at a Z690 MB (LGA1700) and a 12th gen Intel CPU. If you don't game or do video processing, an i5 would probably be great (a 12600k is under $200 right now) and some DDR4 RAM. Would be a super huge upgrade from your current.

If you want something future proof, you'll want to go AM5 with PCIE 5.0 support which will be a little pricey, but AM5 could be around a few more years. Hell, AMD just announced some new AM5 CPUs that will be 40% faster than the current ones.

Anyway, if you want some good feedback, seriously go post a question on the gaming board. Even if you aren't using it for gaming.
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