igor_kavinski
Lifer
Try love. If that doesn't work, I recommend industrial strength tape 😛wife is a much bigger noise problem than server rooms
Try love. If that doesn't work, I recommend industrial strength tape 😛wife is a much bigger noise problem than server rooms
I can't exactly wear ear protection when "talking" with her.Try love. If that doesn't work, I recommend industrial strength tape 😛
Implement strict "chatting on messaging app" only rule. If she is unable to comply, every infarction wins you a favor from her.I can't exactly wear ear protection when "talking" with her.
do you know how I know you are not married?Implement strict "chatting on messaging app" only rule. If she is unable to comply, every infarction wins you a favor from her.
wife is a much bigger noise problem than server rooms
:Owife is a much bigger noise problem than server rooms
you can get LCD on aircooler as well xdsigh...
Lessons in water cooling.
Unless your a Custom Water Cooling Loop build person, whose done it several times, and knows the math, anyone that says they NEED a AIO, either really needs it, or is completely lost in the laws of thermodynamics, and think water is something akin to Yoshi's stomach which deflys the 4th dimensional wall in space.
Meaning... water is not mana,, it not magical.. it can not do impossible things with physics like carry an unlimited heat load at any ambient, and definitely can not destroy heat.
PSA... radiator size is in direct relationship with pump head flow.
A D5 (our custom liquid cooling standard) can push water though most looks at about 1gpm.
With that flow thats 350-400W of carry capacity @ that flow.
Meaning inside the ENTIRE SYSTEM... not just that cpu part the entire system is now shuffling 350-400W of heat to another location... NOTE... this is not dissipation, but transportation.
Then you need the Radiator with the Fans.
Rad size + Fan STATIC... (NOT CFM but STATIC) translates to how much a radiator can dissipate.
150W @ 2200RPM on moderate static fans = 120mm radiator space.
So you need a minimum of 240 in most custom liquid systems to balance flow.
Its a complex match, of course you can YOLO it with a Man grunt, or just go Dubai Chocolate sytle, and just get the best of everything with radiators so big you can pool the pacific ocean. (sarcasm) but you know what i mean.
AIO's at best are toys meant for gamers.
AIO pumps do not push out more then 0.5GPM. and well do the math guys.. how much heat is that in transportation capacity.
You see what i mean about people thinking they NEED an AIO either really do, (SPACE reasons is always the main), or they want bling first and performance is secondary, because they like that big LCD screen that now comes on the CPU PUMP Block.

SOMEBODY is going to tell me those old Skylakes are slow, but there not slow at all for what I need.
When I was teaching in a university computer science department, my benefactor -- the department chair -- told me that I would very likely "buy or build a new computer every year". Not so much of that came to pass, but when I returned to CA to be with my fam-damn-ily, I would build new when the family needed new PCs, or I would do it every few years for myself and hand down the discarded systems to my family.If office work had been all that I needed my desktop PC for, the i5-4690k rig I replaced in 2023 wouldn't have been necessary. My 7800X3D is barely any faster in Linux for basic use, it's only when I'm doing stuff that pulls out all the stops that the better processor comes into play (Handbrake, XZ data compression, gaming probably).
Doesn't this belong in the "Love and Relationships" forum?"Remarks like that will not get you invited to Sunday dinner!"
"My luck's changing for the better already!"
I think if my need for a computer was purely for casual and basic use, I'd use each one up until it died / became sufficiently problematic. SSDs have been a game-changer for the longevity of PCs.When I was teaching in a university computer science department, my benefactor -- the department chair -- told me that I would very likely "buy or build a new computer every year". Not so much of that came to pass, but when I returned to CA to be with my fam-damn-ily, I would build new when the family needed new PCs, or I would do it every few years for myself and hand down the discarded systems to my family.
At this point, I've gone so long without new technology that I wonder -- I ask myself -- if I'm relying on old processors and chipsets beyond practicality. I just know that Win 11 is doing fine on these systems.
I think it's good to have input from colleagues such as yourself. I should "take it easy". I bought the Rocket Lake i7-11700K and Z590 STrix board almost a year ago before fully exploring the possibilities of (a) Win 10 IoT Enterprise LTSC and (b) Windows 11 on the Sky/Kaby cores. I've upgraded three Z170 systems to Win 11 with absolutely no problem whatever. So I think your advice about old hardware is very practical.I think if my need for a computer was purely for casual and basic use, I'd use each one up until it died / became sufficiently problematic. SSDs have been a game-changer for the longevity of PCs.
Until a month ago, a customer of mine had been using one of my Athlon 64 AM2 builds that dates back to 2007, which went from 512MB RAM / WinXP to probably 4GB / Win7 to an A64 X2 / Win10 / SSD. The only reason it was replaced was the end of support for Win10 and their desire for continued security updates. They were happy with its performance and it was reliable, so why not get as much from it as possible. They're now on a Skylake build of mine on Win11, IIRC.
IMO if the user's needs aren't so time-sensitive that they can potentially do without an ailing computer for say a week then it makes perfect sense to get as much longevity out of it as possible, the only trick is to look out for scenarios that could be costly (e.g. weird / intermittent stability issues that cost time/resources to investigate).
This should get you motivated: https://browser.geekbench.com/v6/cpu/compare/17792233?baseline=17793297I WANT a PC capable of running dated racing and flight simulators. The old Sky/Kaby systems provide both and all.
A day without vaguely related movie quotes is like a day without sunshine.Doesn't this belong in the "Love and Relationships" forum?
I always meet amazingly interesting people in these forums, Mikeymikec. And I need to think about that thought. OK! Here's a movie quote -- the trivia question : Guess the name of the movie.A day without vaguely related movie quotes is like a day without sunshine.
Anyway, Bro, I never had a problem ripping optical media to ISO files I could play on my Media PC -- and we're talking about Sky and Kaby Lake cores. With the Rocket Lake, I'll have to find out if (a) it's easier and (b) if the output is better.@BonzaiDuck ripping DVDs and BRs (assuming you want to make smaller files than the originals) is CPU intensive (assuming software encoding and not GPU accelerated encoding), at least I always go for software as you get smaller file sizes and better quality than with GPU acceleration.
Only if you use a more advanced and powerful codec that would've been too slow to use on the older CPUs, like HEVC.(b) if the output is better.
Igor is "Johnny on the Spot"!Only if you use a more advanced and powerful codec that would've been too slow to use on the older CPUs, like HEVC.

I'm not going back to air cooling unless I have little choice in the matter. Installation takes a bit longer due to all the different wires and connectors but still much easier than trying to fiddle with a gigantic heatsink and the huge benefit is that the heat is dumped OUT of the case instead of inside from where the case fans try to expel that heat but the damage in my opinion is already done because those heated air molecules end up warming things that are already in no need of being warmed.There have been times when I thought I would try an AiO, and I'd looked at or considered a few.
No idea 🙂I always meet amazingly interesting people in these forums, Mikeymikec. And I need to think about that thought. OK! Here's a movie quote -- the trivia question : Guess the name of the movie.
"My children, I'm your father,
your protector.
I'm of your blood.
But believe me,
these matters take time.
You must be patient."
"With your permission,
my president,
we make our tortillas
out of corn, not patience.
And patience will not cross
an armed and guarded fence."
YOU UP TO THE CHALLENGE, MIKEY? I'll provide the full detail if you give up.
Brando's third film, screenplay by John Steinbeck: "Viva Zapata!" Steinbeck spent two years in what had once been the Mexican state of Morelos, interviewing old people and researching his subject. The quote comes from the opening scene, where the villagers visit the President Porfirio Diaz, to complain of having their lands seized by sugar-cane plantations.No idea 🙂