- Aug 25, 2001
- 56,587
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$15 AMD A4-3420 2.8Ghz 65W dual-core FM1 APU (CPU only)
$28 ECS A55F-M4 v2.0 A55 FM1 micro-ATX mobo
$8 AMD FM1-compatible generic heatsink/fan
$18 Kingston 2x2GB DDR3-1600 unbuffered RAM
$9 *used* 16GB 2.5" SSD (pulls, supposedly from new rigs, replaced with other drives, but sold as "used")
$16 ATX mid-tower case
$42 EVGA 500W "80Plus White" ATX PSU
$136 total
$15 WD 160GB SATA 3.5" HDD (refurb, zero POH) - optional, for storage
$3 Generic N150 USB2.0 wireless B/G/N 2.4Ghz dongle (Linux compatible) - optional
Question, Windows 10 Home 64-bit (for $20 e-mailed key), or Linux Mint 18 Mate 64-bit ($0)?
Yeah, I know that the PSU is overkill for the rest of the parts, but I don't want to risk the liability of going with a lesser-quality PSU. It seems that every PSU significantly below $40 or so, is basically crap.
Also interested in comments on the viability of a 16GB SSD, with 4GB RAM (considered putting in only a 2GB stick), and Windows 10 64-bit size and updates / upgrades, and Linux Mint 18 size / updates.
I think Mint would have slightly less issues, with that size SSD, but in either case, it's gonna get cozy, with swap and all.
Edit: Now that I think about it, I think I'll put the full 2x2GB RAM in. I had a single 4GB stick of GSKill DDR3-1600 in my overclocked Sempron 3850 AM1 quad-core rigs with Win10 64-bit, and when I changed that out for a single 2GB stick, browsing was a pain, with that little RAM in 64-bit Windows. 4GB == OK, 2GB == painful, for 64-bit Windows.
Edit: These computers may end up donated to the local food pantry, for "under-privileged families". Or maybe the local Senior Center. (Although, I might have to do some installation / teaching / hand-holding if I do that, and I don't think I want to be stuck in that position. Most of the seniors in this town can afford their own PCs, if they wanted them.)
Comments of the viability of CloudReady OS are welcome too. I'll have to test that once I get one of these built.
$28 ECS A55F-M4 v2.0 A55 FM1 micro-ATX mobo
$8 AMD FM1-compatible generic heatsink/fan
$18 Kingston 2x2GB DDR3-1600 unbuffered RAM
$9 *used* 16GB 2.5" SSD (pulls, supposedly from new rigs, replaced with other drives, but sold as "used")
$16 ATX mid-tower case
$42 EVGA 500W "80Plus White" ATX PSU
$136 total
$15 WD 160GB SATA 3.5" HDD (refurb, zero POH) - optional, for storage
$3 Generic N150 USB2.0 wireless B/G/N 2.4Ghz dongle (Linux compatible) - optional
Question, Windows 10 Home 64-bit (for $20 e-mailed key), or Linux Mint 18 Mate 64-bit ($0)?
Yeah, I know that the PSU is overkill for the rest of the parts, but I don't want to risk the liability of going with a lesser-quality PSU. It seems that every PSU significantly below $40 or so, is basically crap.
Also interested in comments on the viability of a 16GB SSD, with 4GB RAM (considered putting in only a 2GB stick), and Windows 10 64-bit size and updates / upgrades, and Linux Mint 18 size / updates.
I think Mint would have slightly less issues, with that size SSD, but in either case, it's gonna get cozy, with swap and all.
Edit: Now that I think about it, I think I'll put the full 2x2GB RAM in. I had a single 4GB stick of GSKill DDR3-1600 in my overclocked Sempron 3850 AM1 quad-core rigs with Win10 64-bit, and when I changed that out for a single 2GB stick, browsing was a pain, with that little RAM in 64-bit Windows. 4GB == OK, 2GB == painful, for 64-bit Windows.
Edit: These computers may end up donated to the local food pantry, for "under-privileged families". Or maybe the local Senior Center. (Although, I might have to do some installation / teaching / hand-holding if I do that, and I don't think I want to be stuck in that position. Most of the seniors in this town can afford their own PCs, if they wanted them.)
Comments of the viability of CloudReady OS are welcome too. I'll have to test that once I get one of these built.
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