JasperFrank
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2018
- Messages
- 1,866
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I think the desktop is now a dead end technology. It was always only a small percentage of people that used these, for private creative reasons, at home. The true use of computers for most people, is now mobile information access. The Smart Phone provides this.
The last useful field for a desktop is in gaming. And this is mostly dependent on the video card, and if the platform can handle it, as the game is almost entirely written for the Video Card.
In any other use, an I3 dual core will render a text file, or redo a spread sheet as fast as you need it to be.
For heavy lifting, such as video compression, there are a plenty of used Xeon based work stations that are nearly free now. We have a Dell Precision 7400, made way back in 2008 for these tasks. Bought mine for $90 with dual, quad 2.4 ghz processors and 12 gigs of ECC ram. An a 2 gig SSD was added later. I just see no reason to buy anything new in the desktop world, if you are not a gamer. If you are a gamer, then the ONLY important thing is the PCIe interface and what level it is. The rest of the computer doesn't matter.
The last useful field for a desktop is in gaming. And this is mostly dependent on the video card, and if the platform can handle it, as the game is almost entirely written for the Video Card.
In any other use, an I3 dual core will render a text file, or redo a spread sheet as fast as you need it to be.
For heavy lifting, such as video compression, there are a plenty of used Xeon based work stations that are nearly free now. We have a Dell Precision 7400, made way back in 2008 for these tasks. Bought mine for $90 with dual, quad 2.4 ghz processors and 12 gigs of ECC ram. An a 2 gig SSD was added later. I just see no reason to buy anything new in the desktop world, if you are not a gamer. If you are a gamer, then the ONLY important thing is the PCIe interface and what level it is. The rest of the computer doesn't matter.