• Upgrading the New PC

    From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jun 24 19:37:31 2023
    So, I've owned this new PC for just over a month, and already I'm
    upgrading its hardware. That's normal behavior, right?

    Although, strictly speaking, the above statement is not entirely true.
    Only days after receiving this PC, I was already plugging in new
    hardware: specifically, a second mechanical drive intended to house
    all my 'old games', including the entirety of my DOS Games collection.
    But I don't really count that as an 'upgrade' since a) I was merely
    swapping the hard-drive out of the old PC and into the new one, and b)
    it was a planned addition from before I had even purchased the new PC.
    It was less an upgrade than part of the planned build that I - rather
    than the boutique from whom I had purchased the machine - was going to
    do the install.

    This upgrade, though, wasn't intended from the start. Also, it's been
    a month. So it's totally different, ya know?

    Not that the upgrade is anything to boast about. I'm merely upgrading
    that slow 2TB mechanical drive - the very one I installed just a month
    ago - with an equally slow 4TB mechanical drive. It's not even that I
    really needed the space; it's just that every time I opened File
    Explorer the old drive showed up in red because it was 95% full, and
    that made me antsy. Old habits insist I maintain at 50% free on my
    drives; it's a daft compulsion, I know, but not really a troublesome
    one. On the plus side, it's nice to have a drive that hasn't been
    spinning for 1600+ days. ;-)

    So, not an upgrade worth mentioning, other than the fact that I /am
    upgrading/ so soon after getting the new PC. This is what happens when
    I don't find old computers lying around in the trash; I start
    tinkering on my work machine. I really hope I salvage something from
    the curb soon; it makes me nervous when I fiddle around with my
    primary...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From rms@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jun 24 18:25:10 2023
    Not directly related, but for those with a M.2 slot (or a PS5), this is a
    great deal (I paid $200 for this same item last year). Just be sure to
    update the firmware with samsung magician:

    https://slickdeals.net/f/16736609-2tb-samsung-980-pro-ssd-with-heatsink-pcie-gen-4-nvme-m-2-internal-solid-state-drive-mz-v8p2t0cw-125-99-free-shipping

    rms

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Dimensional Traveler@21:1/5 to Spalls Hurgenson on Sat Jun 24 19:05:53 2023
    On 6/24/2023 4:37 PM, Spalls Hurgenson wrote:

    So, I've owned this new PC for just over a month, and already I'm
    upgrading its hardware. That's normal behavior, right?

    No.

    Although, strictly speaking, the above statement is not entirely true.
    Only days after receiving this PC, I was already plugging in new
    hardware: specifically, a second mechanical drive intended to house
    all my 'old games', including the entirety of my DOS Games collection.
    But I don't really count that as an 'upgrade' since a) I was merely
    swapping the hard-drive out of the old PC and into the new one, and b)
    it was a planned addition from before I had even purchased the new PC.
    It was less an upgrade than part of the planned build that I - rather
    than the boutique from whom I had purchased the machine - was going to
    do the install.

    This upgrade, though, wasn't intended from the start. Also, it's been
    a month. So it's totally different, ya know?

    Not really.

    Not that the upgrade is anything to boast about. I'm merely upgrading
    that slow 2TB mechanical drive - the very one I installed just a month
    ago - with an equally slow 4TB mechanical drive. It's not even that I
    really needed the space; it's just that every time I opened File
    Explorer the old drive showed up in red because it was 95% full, and
    that made me antsy. Old habits insist I maintain at 50% free on my
    drives; it's a daft compulsion, I know, but not really a troublesome
    one. On the plus side, it's nice to have a drive that hasn't been
    spinning for 1600+ days. ;-)

    So, not an upgrade worth mentioning, other than the fact that I /am upgrading/ so soon after getting the new PC. This is what happens when
    I don't find old computers lying around in the trash; I start
    tinkering on my work machine. I really hope I salvage something from
    the curb soon; it makes me nervous when I fiddle around with my
    primary...

    Then don't do it. :P

    --
    I've done good in this world. Now I'm tired and just want to be a cranky
    dirty old man.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Spalls Hurgenson@21:1/5 to rsquiresMOO@MOOflashMOO.net on Sun Jun 25 09:54:32 2023
    On Sat, 24 Jun 2023 18:25:10 -0600, "rms"
    <rsquiresMOO@MOOflashMOO.net> wrote:

    Not directly related, but for those with a M.2 slot (or a PS5), this is a >great deal (I paid $200 for this same item last year). Just be sure to >update the firmware with samsung magician:

    https://slickdeals.net/f/16736609-2tb-samsung-980-pro-ssd-with-heatsink-pcie-gen-4-nvme-m-2-internal-solid-state-drive-mz-v8p2t0cw-125-99-free-shipping

    The Samsung 980 Pro's are nice drives; I've a couple of the same model
    but with only 1TB each. Still, I wouldn't mind upgrading

    (No! Bad! No more upgrades for a while!)

    just because, well, hey, who doesn't want more disk-space? The
    real-world performance of those drives is nice too; no complaints
    there.

    I'm still bugged out by the limited lifespan of solid-state drives,
    though. I've spinning rust that's been online for 10+ years (and
    probably will keep going for longer). I don't expect to see the same
    longevity with SSDs, especially those used as primary drives (Windows
    does a lot of background read/writes for various logs and memory
    operations that eat NAND cell rewrite capability). And they suck for
    long-term data archival. None of these issues are deal-killers, but
    add a little added reluctance whenever it comes to buying new SSDs.

    So maybe I won't upgrade.

    Not yet, at least.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)