• @HulkSmashBurgers@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    I recently resurrected an old desktop computer (linux is great for ding this) I had built in 2009. I upgraded the ram to 8Gb 16Gb, replaced the broken graphics card and installed Gnu Guix using the system crafters install guide. I’m not doing any hardcore gaming so it does everything I need it to do. I have a raid store, jellyfin server, and samba share.

  • Okami
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    581 year ago

    My Laptop will be 15 years old this year.

    It was running Vista when I bought it, then upgraded to Win 7, and now runs whatever flavor of Linux I feel like installing.

    Battery is shot. Screen connection is iffy, but works if you wiggle it. Several keys stopped working after I accidentally threw up on it, but I can use an onscreen keyboard for those.

    Still runs fine. She’s a trooper.

        • Okami
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          61 year ago

          You guessed correctly.

          I was pulling an all-nighter reading fan fiction serials while drinking Kraken mixed with Orange Juice and had also eaten a whole frozen pizza around midnight. I was not ok. The incident happened around 3am.

          First time I’d ever vomited while drunk. I know my limits better now.

  • Kichae
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    31 year ago

    My 11 year old desktop’s starting to go a little senile. I need to find it some new(ish) DDR3 sticks, I think.

  • OhStopYellingAtMe
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    141 year ago

    For MacBooks, 10 years is barely broken in. I’ve had MacBook Airs as daily drivers for well over 10 years.

    • @GhostlyPixel@lemmy.world
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      21 year ago

      My early 2015 MBP is still my daily driver for programming, I will never regret spending so much on an MBP when they last this long. I went through two windows laptops in four years before this one. It is starting to show its age with only 8 GB of RAM, but I’m going to use it until it melts haha

    • Resale value is great on them too. I sold my 10 year old MBP (after I paid for an Apple cert battery replacement) for close to 50% of what I paid when it was brand new.

  • Transporter Room 3
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    31 year ago

    My 9 year old laptop is currently sitting in two pieces… But only because I wanted to pull the hard drive out for easier transferring of old files I wanted to keep.

    When I get back to the main part, I’ll be removing 90% of the apps on it, doing everything I can to make it run better, and it will be my hobby shop computer. It was going back and forth between my game room and the garage where I kept my lasers and printers.

    If and when it finally bites the dust, it will be given a place of honor amongst the modern tech. Like a transparent top coffee table with all the parts disassembled and arranged inside.

    I’m weirdly nostalgic about my electronics.

  • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    My 2012 desktop PC died the other day.

    I took out all her parts and determined that the fault was with the power supply and with a wonky pci shield on the wifi card. Replaced the psu and straighten the shield with pliers, reapply thermal compound for fun, and bam, shes back.

    Its an i73770k lga1155 socket, with 16g DDR3 RAM. They dont make lga1155 sockets anymore, or DDR3 ram, so I would have been out $1600 to replace the CPU, motherboard, and RAM.

    But now, she might have another 5 years in her yet. Im determined to keep her around until she’s old enough to vote at least.

      • @Agent641@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Probably, but I wouldn’t settle for something that’s just more powerful, Id want to spend the money to get higher-end current-gen hardware that will last me another 15 years, including upgrading to a good M.2 drive and better GPU. In AUD Id probably be spending at least $2k.

        In fact I still have the birth certificate for my current PC, and I spent $1500 on it in 2012 dollars.

  • KillingTimeItself
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    221 year ago

    look at the laptop, he’s so happy.

    Just enjoying the tunes, and the light workload, content as can be.

    • @Glowstick@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Absolutely, a ten year old computer today is still capable of doing pretty much everything that most people use computers for. It’s not like the old days when every few years a new tier of computer would come out that made older devices no longer capable of doing what people wanted.

      • @Emerald@lemmy.world
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        41 year ago

        It depends on how good it was to start with. I have a machine from 2006 that is usable for daily tasks. I also have a netbook from 2009 that can barely do anything.

      • @Quetzalcutlass@lemmy.world
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        141 year ago

        I was still running a Q6600 (a 2.4 gHz quad core from 2007) until a few years ago. It ran most things acceptably for its entire life - it wasn’t until around the time of PS4 Pro/Xbox Whatever ports that it could no longer keep up, and even that was largely due to the other components I was restricted to on such an old motherboard.

        That thing was also a tank. The CPU cooler was stock and the thermal paste had degraded and separated to the point it idled at 65c, but I never had a single hardware fault in nearly fifteen years of running it. I kind of miss it.

    • @thejml@lemm.ee
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      141 year ago

      One hit 12 before I retired it… and now it’s a network file and web server.

  • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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    491 year ago

    You feel sorry for ze little old computer. Zis is because you crazy. It is just a machine; it has no feelings.

    It is working just as well as it was 10 years ago and capable of all the same things now as it was back then. Nothing has changed except your expectations of it. That’s right, there’s nothing wrong with it – in reality, you’re the problem.

    You monster.

    • @cm0002@lemmy.world
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      141 year ago

      Well actually, electronics age just like the rest of us, every electron that passes through wears down the component just a little more creating just a little more resistance with each passing use. So in effect the 10 year old laptop does have something resembling getting harder and harder to wake up

        • @marcos@lemmy.world
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          151 year ago

          The name to google is “electromigration”.

          It’s absolutely not what makes you old computer slow (neither are bad capacitors). But it may be what makes it stop working.

          • KillingTimeItself
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            21 year ago

            have there been like studies on this? Or anything that shows any sort of relevant data about it? I’ve been curious what effect it has on manufactured stuff like this for a while now.

    • @Modest_Toxic@feddit.uk
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      421 year ago

      Not really. As it’s been updated over the years with new features the OS has heavier usage on the hardware. Also if it’s still got a hard drive in there chances are it’s dying after 10 years

      • dual_sport_dork 🐧🗡️
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        171 year ago

        Running an OS significantly newer than original on a computer gets filed under “expectations.” Nobody bitches their Amiga can’t run Windows 98, either. If it is 10 years old, its original OS was Windows 8, updates for which ended in 2016 (or last year, for Windows 8.1). No new bloat after that!

        But even so, unless the computer in question is a netbook or something it’ll be fine. For reference, I have a ThinkPad laptop that was manufactured in 2012 and I still use it daily. It runs Windows 10 just fine. Updates and all. The latest Corel suite, modern browsers, video editing, no problem. PC performance reached a bit of plateau coincidentally… about 10 years ago.

        The MTBF of even a middling consumer hard drive is, if we are being extremely uncharitable, 300,000 hours. That’s 32 and a quarter years of continuous usage and there are vintage hard drives in circulation in perfect working order that are much, much older than that. The main thing this laptop is going to need help with is its battery, which probably is degraded a bit by now.

        • Kevin
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          51 year ago

          I need a moment to process the fact that Windows 8 was 10 years ago

        • @MalReynolds@slrpnk.net
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          21 year ago

          need help with is its battery, which probably is degraded a bit by now.

          Kingsener is your friend…

          Also, if windows bloat is bringing your old friend to its knees, time for linux!

        • KillingTimeItself
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          21 year ago

          But even so, unless the computer in question is a netbook or something it’ll be fine. For reference, I have a ThinkPad laptop that was manufactured in 2012 and I still use it daily. It runs Windows 10 just fine. Updates and all. The latest Corel suite, modern browsers, video editing, no problem. PC performance reached a bit of plateau coincidentally… about 10 years ago.

          even then you could just install something like linux on it, and it would probably be lighter than win7 which is what likely shipped with that machine, though i think some sported windows 8 later in the cycle.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        11 year ago

        As it’s been updated over the years with new features the OS has heavier usage on the hardware.

        windows skill issue.

        Also if it’s still got a hard drive in there chances are it’s dying after 10 years

        too bad they soldered those to the motherboard in a ball and grid arrangement type deal, those suck to remove…

        This is kind of like buying a car and not changing the oil and tires and being mad when it totals and kills your family on the highway.

    • wia
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      41 year ago

      Hey aren’t you that knife nerd?!

    • DaGeek247
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      91 year ago

      Assuming that the software updates haven’t slowed it down and that it’s been kept clean of dust (which also causes it to throttle itself to avoid overheating).

    • @Ptsf@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      Electronics most certainly age like you or I. A new off the shelf device will perform measurably better than an identical one with 10 years of wear.

      • @dustyData@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Silicon doesn’t age friend. Heat might degrade circuits and harms processors by thermal deformation. But most electronics are designed to stay well under the temperatures that will harm them with throttling and heat management. So, unless you’re incredibly negligent with maintenance or intentionally overclocking, most electronics have a way longer potential life span than people use them for. My 15 year old desktop computer was so beefy when I build it that today it still outperforms this year’s off the shelf office units in raw speed and processing power, despite being physically about 12 times larger. It’s only recently that new games started to tax it beyond performance goals (60fps at 1080p), but get a lower modest expectation (800p at 30 fps) and suddenly she is back in the game. Only thing I’m missing now is lack of on-board bluetooth connectivity and usb-c ports. Even if I were to build a new one, I bet the old beast could go on as a server for decades more.

        • @Ptsf@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          That’s lovely. When is the last time you bought an electronic device made entirely of silicon including no capacitors, thermal past, electric motors for fans, etc, etc? Electronics may seem permanent, and yes they have an amazing shelf life, but chips do in fact degrade (see solid state ssds), and you’re held back by your weakest link.

    • KillingTimeItself
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      11 year ago

      in reality, you’re the problem.

      NO, IT’S THE TECH INDUSTRY, NOT ME, I’M PERFECTLY FINE!

  • @Persen@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago
    • If it isn’t hp, it can work for 20 years, but with hp laptops, you are lucky if it lasts for 8.
    • Btw, it works for phones too. I got my dad’s redmi 4x from 2017 a month ago. It works suprisingly ok. I am planning to flash lineageos without gapps on it, to not have to use android 7. It should work for another couple of years.
    • @Valmond@lemmy.world
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      31 year ago

      I know people doesn’t like Redmi/Xiaomi, but man what a punch for the money, and “malware” have been inexistant up until very lately (deep malware are everywhere). I bought a (the FX) file explorer for like 5€, there is a totally ok free version too and that’s the only thing I needed to have a nice experience (no pub, I know everything is probably tracked like on all phones).

      Got the redmi note (pro?) 2 shipped from alibaba.com a long time ago for < 100€, then the 5, 7 etc.

      Greatest value for sure, they all still work except the 5 that I went swimming with, I cracked the screen on the 7, …

      The older ones also had swappable batteries (3000 mAh too!) and SD card slot when the concurrences had like 32GB for OS + everything else.

      I’m not a fanboi but my 4 year old phone for 250€ has 6GB RAM & 128 GB storage…

      😎

      • @Persen@lemmy.world
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        01 year ago

        Well, their newer phones do have a lot of shady things (even the 4x video player demands weird permissions), new mis, especially 11 series are known for being unreliable. I particularly hate the bootloader unlock experience, waiting time, issues with the app (on pc and phone), no linux and USB3 support (I had to use a vm in an old laptop). BTW, I’m angry as today I didn’t read the error messages properly and reset it. I wasted a day and now I have to wait another week (or more) to unlock it.

    • Nah, not business machines. I’ve made those last quite a while, even as an undergrad in engineering running simulations that were too heavy for what the machine could actually do.

      Pro tip: need an impromptu white noise generator? Load up some COMSOL or Ansys.

      • @Persen@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Ok, I admit, I was overgeneralizing. So you mean EliteBooks and ProBooks or some old series, I’m not aware of?