On 10/10/19 4:03 AM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
Samuel Sieb writes:
I'm not understanding what you mean here.  What's wrong with several decades?

I've got HDDs that are already that old. They still work fine. They'll probably work fine for just as long.

SSDs haven't been around long enough, I feel, for their claimed longevity to be proven. And no matter what it is, SSDs have a ticking clock, counting down towards failure. I just have a conceptual problem with hardware that's guaranteed to fail at some point. There's no expiration date on regular HDDs.

Regular HDDs have a ticking clock just like any other hardware. I've had ones that lasted a decade, but I've also had ones that lasted only a year or two. SSDs tend to have more catastrophic failure though, but that's what RAID is for anyway.

$3K is way overkill.  You could get an AMD 16-core with 64GB of RAM for much less than that.  And that would even be more than you need. Most build

Where, for example?

I don't know where you are, but I just looked at the prices at my local computer store.

systems are not parallel enough to use that many cores.  An 8-core is plenty.  Your biggest speed improvement would be that SSD that you don't want to use.  And if you're not wanting to play the latest hot games, you can get the cheapest graphics card you can find.

Right. I don't need games. But I do need something that just comes up and works in X without having to fiddle with drivers; and is good enough for video playback.

Other than NVidia, any cheap card should work. With NVidia, you might need to install the proprietary drivers.
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