frederick
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 154
- Location
- Phoenix, AZ
I get asked this a lot from customers, "should I just replace it or should I upgrade it?"
With your OEM boxes, I say you can get about 10 years out of the box easy. Somewhere after the mid-point, upgrade the RAM, replace the PSU (that's just my thing), and if need be, clone and transfer the OS drive to a new one, and if need be, upgrade the OS to something more modern. Sometimtes I can knock out one of these boxes for less than the price of a new one. But it depends on what it is used for too. Casual web surfing, or a small home office system with nothing too important on there excpet all those pictures from the family vacation to the grand canyon.
The custom box, way too easy. Take my media server for example. About every 2-3 years, for about a few hundred, she gets something upgraded or replaced. She is coming up on a new MoBo and Processor as her old Core 2 Duo is just not cutting it anymore. Sure, she's running Vista, and you can complain all you want about that, but honestly, I have no need to upgrade the OS as it has not once caused me a single problem. In the 8 years I've owned her, she runs like new (just needs a power boost with a new CPU and board), and I've spent less than $500 on her in the time I've owned her. It is way to easy to customize, upgrade and keep them going for many moons to come with a little TLC here and there.
But, there are times, when I say replace. Still using DDR1? TOSS IT!!!! PATA HDD's? Take it to the shooting range and see how high you can get those MB's to go! What the hell is a P4 processor (in my old age, sometimes I forget about the 90's)? People still have those? What it really comes down to then is what is it going to cost the wallet to find outdated RAM that the MoBo or OS will actually support that can be considered an "upgrade". If I can buy new for less, then that's what I'm going to do. Normally, if I crack open a case, and I don't see a single SATA port, it's not worth rejuvenating.
It's been a hard road getting my customers to see computers the way I do. Which if done right, they can last for quite the time, sometimes longer than their car ever will. I'm curious to see how you guys view computers these days.
On a personal note, tablets, laptops, and those annoying all-in-ones are all considered "toss when broken" in my book.
With your OEM boxes, I say you can get about 10 years out of the box easy. Somewhere after the mid-point, upgrade the RAM, replace the PSU (that's just my thing), and if need be, clone and transfer the OS drive to a new one, and if need be, upgrade the OS to something more modern. Sometimtes I can knock out one of these boxes for less than the price of a new one. But it depends on what it is used for too. Casual web surfing, or a small home office system with nothing too important on there excpet all those pictures from the family vacation to the grand canyon.
The custom box, way too easy. Take my media server for example. About every 2-3 years, for about a few hundred, she gets something upgraded or replaced. She is coming up on a new MoBo and Processor as her old Core 2 Duo is just not cutting it anymore. Sure, she's running Vista, and you can complain all you want about that, but honestly, I have no need to upgrade the OS as it has not once caused me a single problem. In the 8 years I've owned her, she runs like new (just needs a power boost with a new CPU and board), and I've spent less than $500 on her in the time I've owned her. It is way to easy to customize, upgrade and keep them going for many moons to come with a little TLC here and there.
But, there are times, when I say replace. Still using DDR1? TOSS IT!!!! PATA HDD's? Take it to the shooting range and see how high you can get those MB's to go! What the hell is a P4 processor (in my old age, sometimes I forget about the 90's)? People still have those? What it really comes down to then is what is it going to cost the wallet to find outdated RAM that the MoBo or OS will actually support that can be considered an "upgrade". If I can buy new for less, then that's what I'm going to do. Normally, if I crack open a case, and I don't see a single SATA port, it's not worth rejuvenating.
It's been a hard road getting my customers to see computers the way I do. Which if done right, they can last for quite the time, sometimes longer than their car ever will. I'm curious to see how you guys view computers these days.
On a personal note, tablets, laptops, and those annoying all-in-ones are all considered "toss when broken" in my book.