Hi, this is Wayne again with a topic “Futureproofing As Fast As Possible”.
If you’re one of those PC builders who agonizes over every component, you select to make sure that everything you have is the latest and the greatest. It can be really frustrating. When you hear about a new product release a couple months later kind of like when Apple announces, some incremental update at a press event right after you finally bought the did. I thing to your so you feel like part of the in-crowd. Well, technology does indeed move very quickly, so many people wonder if trying to future-proof their pcs is a good idea to try to stay ahead of the curve.
I mean when you think about it. The future is going to happen at some point, so in that sense, future proofing makes about as much sense as trying to death proof your body or tax proof, your income, but does it really extend the lifespan of your PC and by how long? To answer that question: let’s take a look at some strategies that people who try to future-proof their PCs use. Many are interested in being early adopters of a just-released platform that supports something like a new type of memory. Others might invest in a super beefy power supply, for example, under motherboard, with lots of expansion slots for a future multi GPU setup or a type of expansion card that doesn’t exist today. The idea seems to make sense, on the surface, put together the most powerful thing that you can to keep it from being hopelessly out of date in a few years.
But is that really the best way to go? What we usually recommend? Instead of buying the most high-end ball or stuff out there, because you want to future-proof your computer is to get the best stuff that you can afford. That represent a good price to performance ratio today without blowing the entire budget. But why here are some examples of why our philosophy is to be more concerned about value for the money than future proofing? Let’S start with your builds CUDA grass, the graphics card.
Well, GP technology tends to advance pretty quickly so unless a new architecture that promises significantly higher performance is right around the corner, it makes more sense to buy the best thing you can afford comfortably now and only prepare for SLI or crossfire with a pricier power supply. If you know that you’ll be able to afford a second card soon after and actually have the monitor set up to take advantage of it, otherwise you might end up like a lot of people who dropped a bunch of money on an expensive power supply and more Expensive motherboard, but never ended up, adding a second graphics card after all, because you probably won’t be buying a second graphics card. That’S identical to what you have two years down the road unless you’re comfortable buying something used anyway, which, if you’re the sort of bleeding edge type person, doesn’t really fit into your customer profile to think about that.
But how about your CPU? Let’S suppose you want to somehow make sure that your CPU will trade punches with whatever comes out in three or four years. Well, the nice thing is that processors, these days are generally very efficient. So as long as you’re buying a mid or an upper tier CPU, like an unlocked k, processor from Intel you’ll have a chip that will probably last you for a few years anyway, regardless of whether you’re actively thinking about future proofing and since CPU sockets change.
Quite frequently, it is highly likely that you would end up locked into whatever processor architecture you’re buying or at best, the next one coming making your future proofing of your motherboard and CPU pretty pointless. It’S also worth thinking about whether trying to future-proof your PC with the newest stuff will result in a real-world performance boost, for example, faster memory, speeds or PCI Express speeds. Look good on paper, but often result in little to zero performance gain in the real world, which you can learn more about here and by the time, games or other programs mature to the point where they might be able to take advantage of it. She’Ll probably be wanting to upgrade a a lot of your other components anyway, really high-end Ram with the absolute fastest speeds, also typically comes at a hefty price premium, making it a galactic waste of money for most people. The point here is that, instead of worrying too much about how viable your rig will be in a few years compared to what everyone else is building at that time, instead focus on having a reasonable upgrade path for a system you can afford. Today, for example, I would spend the extra six dollars or whatever it is on a motherboard that has a couple of extra RAM flaws, because memory upgrades are something that are likely to occur over the lifespan of a computer and another thing.
For example, if you’re a person who tends to eat through hard drive space, maybe make sure that you buy a case that has a quite a few well-placed drive slots that are easy to get at, so that your future expansion will be relatively easy. The thing I don’t recommend is spending a fortune on something that’s marginally better when you could have just pocketed the money waited a couple years for Moore’s law to continue its onward death march and get something equivalent or better than what you would have been able to Afford with the money that you saved effectively getting what you did get and what you’re able to get later for the same amount of money, because the cold, hard truth of it is there’s pretty much. Nothing that you can do to future-proof a computer and often the better value a to go about. It is to actually trade in or sell your old parts every two or three years and upgrade that way. If you want to stay on the bleeding edge. Speaking of keeping up with things fresh books, fresh books is the cloud-based accounting solution that allows small business owners to save time.
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