Does it matter?
If you understood the concept of how forums, sub forums, threads and replies work in conjunction with one another, you wouldn't need to ask that.
Does it matter?
If you understood the concept of how forums, sub forums, threads and replies work in conjunction with one another, you wouldn't need to ask that.
No offense RS, but I think that you are being wildly optomistic about selling things in five years.
I've tried to flip a brand-new Sandy Bridge i3 3.4Ghz rig I bought for $180 (list $400), and I can't find a buyer locally.
I also have an Ivy Bridge i3 3.4Ghz rig that I upgraded to 8GB RAM and an aftermarket PSU. (I was planning on making it a gaming / DC rig, but AMD's drivers kept giving me problems. That, or the mobo in that rig is flaky. I don't know for sure, other than it didn't get along with my HIS 7790 1GB card.) Paid $330, list is $500 before the upgrades, and I can't find a buyer for that one either.
Basically, desktops are dead. Nobody wants them. And no-one is going to want a used and worn out desktop mobo and CPU in five years.)
Quit worrying about the latest and greatest. I'm running a fx6300 stock and am happy.
^^^Jesus man, what's any of that got to do with this thread?^^^
I know that you're trying to help, so let me preface this post with a Thank You.You don't have to stick to the strategy I outlined. It could be upgrading every 2.5-3 years. You just have to choose what works for your needs and try it out.
I live not far from Boston, pretty high population density, but the desktop parts market is oversaturated. I got responses to my "C list" ads, but none of them were serious. One guy kept saying that he wanted that laptop, when I clearly described it as a desktop. One guy said he wanted it, so when I suggested a meetup place (in a public place), he disappeared. They're all scammers. "C list" is like a hive for scammers. It's not like it used to be, it used to be a legit way to unload parts.Do you live in a very low populated area? This is a huge factor. When I had to work in places with < 1 million people it was a lot tougher to sell anything than in Toronto.
I guess my strategy of reselling works for me since there are so many people looking to buy something used for cheap. I suppose you could try eBay.
Nobody wants it! At least, not for any reasonable amount. They all want it for free!You shouldn't be expecting to make $ off PC hardware. My advice was only to sell it more often to minimize your cost of ownership. In this example you'd buy a $330 rig, use it for 2 years and sell it for $150, not try to flip it for $500.
Maybe Macs retain their resale value better, but I certainly don't want one myself. And I DO live near a MC, making resale of desktop parts much harder.You could consider buying a MacMini then. They are very small, allow you to hook up an external display and retain their value very well. I have little trouble selling 3-5 years old i5/i7 CPU+mobo combos for $150-175. For you it should be even easier since not everyone has access to a MC in the US, giving you an advantage already.
You're not getting it. Maybe availability of boards is scarce where you are. Where I am, desktop parts / PCs ARE NOT SELLING.As I linked above, a 4-year-old 2500K is going for $102 on eBay without the mobo. Therefore, it should not be that difficult to sell the i5 4690K or 5690K in 4-5 years with the $85-100 MC motherboard for $125-$150.
Yeah, now imagine 5 years from now. No-one will want it, it will be like S775 stuff.Haswell is 2-year-old tech so it's going to be much tougher to sell it in 5 years from now since it's essentially nearly 2-years "behind" as of now.
Well, I haven't tried doing ebay. Mostly failed attempts at "C list". It seems the only thing it's good for is hook-ups and giving away free junk.A lot of us have been doing this for a long time and we aren't any more gifted at posting an ad on eBay than you!![]()
And why would I want an i7 and a 980? Ok, maybe DC, but: 1) I can't afford those parts, 2) I'm not a hardcore gamer, and 3) that Mini-ITX case I picked out is small and works well, and the 120W PSU is more than adequate for a basic desktop. That's all I really need. Something to Skype and browse and listen to music. If I'm buying mini-ITX, why would I be looking for "expandability"? If was looking for that, I wouldn't be buying mini-ITX! And why would anyone try to shove WC parts into an ITX build?BTW, the case you want to buy points to exactly what everyone has been trying to tell you. You try to save a couple bucks here and there but then you automatically set yourself up for extra costs and dissatisfaction later. That miniITX case is $60 but has poor expandability and a weak PSU (120W!). Just get a good miniITX case to start with that gives you ample room for an i7 + 120mm radiator options, and even a 980 will fit in there! In addition you can upgrade up to 600W PSU, not limiting you to future upgrades for the next 10 years!
I hate to break it to you, but you're insane. (Edit: for clarification, I meant that in a nice way. I guess I should just say you're "off-base"?) No-one is going to want to buy a five-year old case or PSU.Also, because this Silverstone case is very popular among the miniITX crowd, it'll be easier to sell it for $50 in 4-5 years if you want to while the case you'll buy will be worth about $0 because it's too specific to your taste. The same goes for a Silverstone SFX PSU.
Again, I don't game, AMD's Kaveri APUs are still overpriced, even with discounts, and I actually did purchase three FM2+ / A4-6300 mobo+CPU combos already, to have for builds for customers. After using the A6-5400K APU rig I built for a friend, I don't really want an AMD APU rig. They're slow. Piledriver may be marginally better than Bulldozer, but it still isn't faster than an E8400, a 10-year-old CPU.That's a good point. For someone like Larry, a desktop with an A8-7850K will provide him with a faster CPU+GPU than anything he has for $120, or even the A8-6800K CPU+Mobo deal for $90.
He is actually THE perfect customer for AMD's APUs if intending to build a budget desktop system. Alternatively there is always the option of the G3258 + OC to 4.5Ghz and just pick up a used AMD/NV card. R9 270 went as low as $100 many times. Shouldn't be that hard to find a used 7850/7870 for < $100.
If you want to lol, I just completed a computer with an Intel i5-4570 (3.2 GHz quad-core) and 8GB of 1600MHz RAM. I compared it to an Intel Core2Duo E8500 3.1 GHz with 2GB of 1066 MHz RAM. After a 2 and a half hour recording using Camtasia 7, the E8500 machine took over 6 hours. It took 2 hours and 45 minutes with the i5-4570 (with the very same hard drive). I was relieved on the one hand that I had something faster, then all of a sudden, I felt like I wanted an even faster machine right away.
Because of the cost, I may very well wait 18 months to get an Intel Skylake processor and Windows 10. But this time I might go for an SSD.
I'm still surprised the 4570 didn't go much faster as someone here on the boards once told me a 4670 would probably do the same in 20 minutes. Well, the 4570 didn't do that. (I may as well have figured otherwise as benchmarks put the 4670 about twice as fast as the E8500 anyway even if I was probably looking at gaming benchmarks. I guess I was doing some wishful thinking when I was hoping a quad-core would do it faster than it did.)
EDIT: For those who remember me saying I wanted to buy an i5-4670, when I saw the "games that were being played" with prices on the newegg.ca web site, I decided to go ahead and buy the i5-4570. They had put the i5-4690K at $230 if I remember correctly. Well, the i5-4670 which is compatible with my board (without a BIOS flash) was $240. I went ahead and bought the i5-4570 at $209 (partly because I want to buy some Rockshox forks for a mountain bike frame I bought hehehe).
For rendering should have gone non K 4790. I'd bet money that would knock another 45min+ off the total.
I've tried to flip a brand-new Sandy Bridge i3 3.4Ghz rig I bought for $180 (list $400), and I can't find a buyer locally. I also have an Ivy Bridge i3 3.4Ghz rig that I upgraded to 8GB RAM and an aftermarket PSU. (I was planning on making it a gaming / DC rig, but AMD's drivers kept giving me problems. That, or the mobo in that rig is flaky. I don't know for sure, other than it didn't get along with my HIS 7790 1GB card.) Paid $330, list is $500 before the upgrades, and I can't find a buyer for that one either. At this point, I would accept what I paid for them.
Why Mini-ITX over Micro-ATX? You pay a premium for mobos, cases and PSUs.
For a small desktop that takes very little power... why not just make one high-performance rig...
You should probably sell all that and buy a real computer. You want SFF, check out my sig rigs.
You've mentioned doing computer support and consulting for cash - a much better business model, IMO, would be to offer free advice on which computer they should buy from Best Buy, and then offer in-home setup for half whatever Geek Squad charges. There's no money in assembling parts - and then you turn around and have to warranty crap. No thanks.
After that, charge $30/hour for training.
Soft skills, man. Training and support are where the money is. Screw this "fixed income" noise.:thumbsup:
P.S. - when you buy a computer to flip for a profit, don't forget to flip it for a profit.
Just stop buying all the junk?
And you dont need LGA2011-3.
Why on earth would you run DC on a tablet? Or run DC at all, specially considering you wish to be "green". Tho you already used uncanny amount of energy on your throw away purchases.
Exactly. It's the same as the people that switch from an old to a new Prius. With that in effect they waste more energy and produce more CO2 than the guy that keeps his Porsche Cayenne for longer.
Half of the pollution a car creates over it's lifetime is from the manufacturing process (mining of the iron, creation of steel, their transport,...). You never save energy by buying a new car. The opposite is the case because you "fuel" production and hence the economy and hence more pollution.
I have a friend who has nearly every Apple product: iMac, iPad, MacBook Air, Apple TV, iPod, iPhone. People nowadays don't know what they want it seems. For example, I don't want to buy a tablet and a smartphone so I'd rather get a 5.5-5.7 inch phablet phone. I personally don't want 10 devices in my house. I'd rather have 2-3 good ones. I don't understand why there needs to be a distinction between a workstation, HTPC and a gaming desktop anymore. You can drop a Titan Z + a 5960X into a MiniITX case for crying out loud.
^ I don't understand the point of 4 desktops. You can build a MicroATX HTPC with a 5820K OC + 980 for games, drop 2 SSDs with 2 OSs that you can test games/errors/etc. on 1 and use the other for games. Get a 5-6TB drive for media/movies. Sounds like a total waste of $ and space, no offense.
I mean if it makes you happy it doesn't matter what we think but I'd rather have 1 fast desktop, 1 great laptop/tablet (unless your work gives you one free every 2-3 years) rather than 3-4 outdated PCs.
^ I don't understand the point of 4 desktops. You can build a MicroATX HTPC with a 5820K OC + 980 for games, drop 2 SSDs with 2 OSs that you can test games/errors/etc. on 1 and use the other for games. Get a 5-6TB drive for media/movies. Sounds like a total waste of $ and space, no offense. I mean if it makes you happy it doesn't matter what we think but I'd rather have 1 fast desktop, 1 great laptop/tablet (unless your work gives you one free every 2-3 years) rather than 3-4 outdated PCs.
This reminds me of people on head-Fi.org that over 20 years will get 50+ headphones. Why? Instead of wasting all that time, just get Shure SE846/Sennheiser IE800/JH 13 Pro HF for on the go, then something like Sennheiser HD700/800 or LCD-2 for in-home listening and be done with it. You only need 2-3 awesome heaphones for everything. Instead they go through a bunch of $100-300 heaphones for years, then they move up to $400-500 level and in 10 years the $1000 level. Same idea with desktop/tablet/laptop. Get a decent one right away and you just need to update key parts as they age. Peace of cake.
Honestly you can browse the Internet really well on a $350-400 used Note 3 even. I have a friend who has nearly every Apple product: iMac, iPad, MacBook Air, Apple TV, iPod, iPhone. People nowadays don't know what they want it seems. For example, I don't want to buy a tablet and a smartphone so I'd rather get a 5.5-5.7 inch phablet phone. I personally don't want 10 devices in my house. I'd rather have 2-3 good ones. I don't understand why there needs to be a distinction between a workstation, HTPC and a gaming desktop anymore. You can drop a Titan Z + a 5960X into a MiniITX case for crying out loud.
I always have 2 PCs, one for games, and one for the rest. You have redundancy for one, and the second box is silent and sips power, for second.
