R. D. Davis wrote:
Something about all of this upgrade mania makes no
sense to me.
Upgrading just for the sake of upgrading seems rather pointless. If I
need more disk space, I'll just add another drive, or another file
server. If speed becomes an issue, which it rarely does (I'm talking
about UNIX, not Windoze with all of it's super-duper crash-happy
bloatware), I'll do processing on a faster system on the network, find
a faster system at a hamfest, replace a PC's CPU with a faster CPU,
etc... whatever's cheapest. A 200 MHz CPU on a PC running FreeBSD,
for example, is plenty fast for most things, from compiling large
programs to the kind of processing needed for LaTeX (when writing
manuscripts hundreds of pages long), Csound and Lilypond. Peripherals
such as keyboards, monitors and laser printers go for many, many,
years without being replaced, unless they become unrepairable or
higher-resolution is needed... 1280 x 1024 and 1024 x 768 displays
have been available for many years. Tape drives - those only get
replaced with higher-capacity drives as storage needs increase.
Network cards... well, those old 10MBit/s cards from a decade or so
ago still work fine.
Congratulations, you just did a good job of showing why it doesn't make any sense to
you, and proved you're not a typical user. Most people (that's most people not on
this list) don't have a network of various speeds of computers, so finding a faster
system on their network isn't an option, just like adding another file server really
doesn't make sense in a home environment. As for a 200Mhz PC running FreeBSD being
plenty fast for most things, it totally depends on what you do with the computer, and how
much time you have to waste waiting on it. I maintain that surfing on a system that slow
is painful, it takes way to long to render the webpages. Also, you can forget gaming,
graphics, and video (well you can run older games and graphics apps, but video is still
out).
Basically my point is it's all in what you're using the computer for, as to if
it's to slow or not. There are other issues to consider as well, by upgrading, do you
get something that is quieter, generates less heat and uses less power?
Oh, and how many typical users have tape drives at home :^)
Still a lot of those upgrades are pointless. Is it really worth upgrading to get a 5-10%
increase in performance? In certain cases, yes, but in most, no.
Zane
--
--
| Zane H. Healy | UNIX Systems Administrator |
| healyzh(a)aracnet.com (primary) | OpenVMS Enthusiast |
| | Classic Computer Collector |
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http://www.aracnet.com/~healyzh/ |