https://www.pcmag.com/news/avoid-the-trash-heap-15-great-uses-for-an-old-pc
In 2019, after seven years of slumps, PC sales went up by the tiniest increment—0.3 percent. Demand then surged in recent weeks as people shifted to work-from-home setups due to COVID-19 quarantines. Which means some of you may be getting a new computer. But what do you do with the old PC?
You may be tempted to go the easy route and just junk it. But don't. If that laptop or desktop was created any time in the last decade, you'd be surprised by how much life you (or others) can get out of it. I'm not talking about limping along, but of ways to bring an old PC back to useful life.
[This editor can vouch for plenty of life in old boxes. For the past 4 years, a now-nearly-decade-year-old Core 2 Duo Laptop with 6 GB RAM has been my primary computer.--martyb]
(Score: 2) by toddestan on Thursday April 30 2020, @11:25PM (1 child)
On the other hand, the Q6600 is from 2008, and the Ryzen manages less than an older of magnitude in terms of performance improvement. And single core performance is only double. That's not really impressive for CPU's that came out a decade apart from each other.
My main computer is a bit newer, a Core i7 3770. The only real reasons to upgrade would be more cores, NVMe storage, and possibly some improvements with DDR4 memory. But really, for so many things it's the single core performance that matters and that hasn't changed as much, a SSD on SATA is still fast enough, and ditto for DDR4. The most I demand out of it is play games on it, and PCI Express hasn't changed one bit and it'll accept any of the latest graphics cards and that's really what matters the most. I would guess that a Core 2 Quad with the latest graphics cards could play most games.
I'm actually typing this on my laptop, a Core 2 Duo 2.4 GHz from 2007 that I got for free from work when they were going to recycle it about 7 years ago. It has a Windows XP license sticker on the bottom. I've upgraded it with 4GB of ram, a 64 GB SSD (back when you could buy them that small), and Linux Mint. Performance wise it's anything I could want out of it. Only reasons to upgrade would be because the battery is no good and the rather lousy (even for the time) 1280x800 screen.
(Score: 2) by takyon on Friday May 01 2020, @01:14AM
The great stagnation of the mid-2010s is now over. Quad-core went from the premium $500 segment to the $100 landfill tier [anandtech.com]. Now 6-8 cores is emerging as a new minimum, 16 cores is "mainstream", and Zen 4 could deliver 24 cores as "mainstream" by 2022.
The long stretch of Intel quad-cores and AMD Bulldozer garbage probably helped software and games to stagnate. With quad-cores, single-threaded performance is still king, and dual-cores needed to be accommodated. The shift to 8 cores and up makes multi-threading much more difficult to ignore.
For gaming specifically, PC gaming is held back by the consoles as well as older systems. Now the next-gen consoles released this year will be packing 8 cores, 16 threads by default (and Zen 2, which is no slouch), as well as NVMe PCIe 4.0 SSDs (from HDDs, skipping SATA SSDs and NVMe PCIe 3.0 entirely). Quad-cores will begin to hold back gaming performance, and there's an argument to be made for 12-16 cores for at least game + background tasks. There have also been claims that the consoles could effectively have the performance of more than 8 cores due to dedicated hardware functions and the design:
Microsoft: Xbox Series X Performance Is 25+ TFLOPs when Ray Tracing; I/O Rate Equal to 13 Zen 2 Cores [wccftech.com]
The claim for PS5 is more like 19 Zen 2 cores, due to even faster storage, dedicated audio chip, etc.:
Inside PlayStation 5: the specs and the tech that deliver Sony's next-gen vision [eurogamer.net]
Apparently, Sony is trying to use the SSD as if it is a giant pool of DDR2 RAM.
Understanding the PS5's SSD: A deep dive into next-gen storage tech [tweaktown.com]
That leads into another point. The next-gen console chips are giant APUs/SoCs with the graphics performance of a high-end discrete GPU. Computing is probably going to move more towards chips like these in the near future.
[SIG] 10/28/2017: Soylent Upgrade v14 [soylentnews.org]