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Survey Results

Do you upgrade your computers' components?

Survey period: 6 Jun 2022 to 13 Jun 2022

We're talking about just the main computer, not any peripherals.

OptionVotes% 
No - I don't have a computer that can be upgraded10313.12
No - but I'd like to557.01
No - I have no need to16721.27
Yes - for basic things like a new graphics card, more RAM or new drive44656.82
Yes - for more involved things like CPUs and motherboards22028.03
Yes - for other things such as case, power, cooling19324.59
Respondents were allowed to choose more than one answer; totals may not add up to 100%



 
GeneralMultiple of the above Pin
jackbrownii10-Jun-22 11:02
professionaljackbrownii10-Jun-22 11:02 
GeneralMy last upgrade... Pin
DaveAuld10-Jun-22 7:47
professionalDaveAuld10-Jun-22 7:47 
GeneralHow often do you upgrade? Pin
maze37-Jun-22 22:57
professionalmaze37-Jun-22 22:57 
GeneralRe: How often do you upgrade? Pin
Nelek8-Jun-22 2:35
protectorNelek8-Jun-22 2:35 
GeneralRe: How often do you upgrade? Pin
Julian Ragan9-Jun-22 6:02
Julian Ragan9-Jun-22 6:02 
GeneralRe: How often do you upgrade? Pin
ScottRobertson9-Jun-22 22:38
professionalScottRobertson9-Jun-22 22:38 
GeneralOr reusing components? Pin
trønderen7-Jun-22 8:50
trønderen7-Jun-22 8:50 
"Standards" ain't.

I never could upgrade a CPU to a new one using the same socket (well, maybe you still could buy CPUs using the socket of my old one, but performance improvement would be a small fraction of what CPUs for a newer socket can offer). Every new CPU I have bought over the last 35 years has required a new socket - read: a new mainboard.

So the MB must be upgraded. But memory "standards" turn obsolete so rapidly that the chance of reusing your old RAM is epsilon squared. Every new mainboard I have bought over the last 35 years has required newer RAM chips than my old board.

I've got a pile of 6-8 retired (or 'deceased'?) display cards in my 'museum', every one to its own 'standard'. The oldest one is an ISA card, and if my memory is right, it lived through two MBs. The rest have had a rather monogamous, faithful relationship to their MB spouses, for simple compatibility reasons.

My museum holds maybe twenty extension cards for peripherals such as handhold scanner, Travan tape station (remember those? There was a multitude of formats - never trust that your old format tapes would be accessible through a newer Travan station!), printers, video camera inputs, ... A few of them were usable across two mainboards; bus standards were fairly stable in the early days. Then came USB solving a lot of the peripheral problem (you had to thrash your old stuff, but the new stuff was more portable), but gave mainboard bus standards the freedom to mutate far more rapidly.

Power supply standards are not quite as volatile as some of the others: I have had a couple PSs surviving a transfer from one MB (+ CPU + RAM + display card bus) to another, but I understand that for my next upgrade, there is yet another extension of the PS standard, so my old PS won't be useful for MB and display card.

I once was eager about the SCSI 'standard'. When I paid about 50€ for a cable to connect the ninth SCSI plug alternative (I refuse to call it 'standard'!), I complained to the salesman. You're lucky, he said, there are fourteen different SCSI plugs! (So I am decided: The day the USB community comes up with yet another USB so called standard plug, I am through with USB! It looks as if USB C may hold for at least four or five more years, though.)

Disks are the most durable 'standard' there is. My old disks are spread over no more than six or eight different 'standards'. Just like USB and Ethernet, even though they are quite different 'standards', they may use the same physical connector, so as long as your electronics can handle both (or the three or four alternatives!), you won't, as a consumer, notice that under the cover there are several standards (except that sometimes performance is much lower, and you don't understand why).

You may extend (the capacity) of what you've got - more RAM, more disk space, ... (I just ordered another 2 * 16 TB disks for my PC - I am in the process of loading my entire BD/DVD/CD library onto HD.) That neither extends the functionality nor improves the performance of my PC. So is it an 'upgrade'?

When I upgrade my CPU, RAM, MB, PS and display card (there are new standards for all of them), I do retain the hard disks. The system disk will be new - I currently have no M.2 disk. I probably can retain the case. If I replace everything within that steel box, would you really call it a 'PC upgrade'? Isn't it more like reusing a few basic components to build an all new PC?
GeneralRe: Or reusing components? Pin
jsc428-Jun-22 5:54
professionaljsc428-Jun-22 5:54 
GeneralRe: Or reusing components? Pin
trønderen8-Jun-22 7:07
trønderen8-Jun-22 7:07 
GeneralAges of the pieces Pin
Ed Attfield7-Jun-22 8:51
Ed Attfield7-Jun-22 8:51 
GeneralRe: Ages of the pieces Pin
trønderen7-Jun-22 8:52
trønderen7-Jun-22 8:52 
GeneralRe: Ages of the pieces Pin
Ed Attfield8-Jun-22 7:00
Ed Attfield8-Jun-22 7:00 
GeneralRe: Ages of the pieces Pin
Chris Maunder8-Jun-22 3:23
cofounderChris Maunder8-Jun-22 3:23 
GeneralRe: Ages of the pieces Pin
Ed Attfield8-Jun-22 7:00
Ed Attfield8-Jun-22 7:00 
GeneralThe PC of Theseus Pin
Dan Neely7-Jun-22 3:21
Dan Neely7-Jun-22 3:21 
GeneralRe: The PC of Theseus Pin
trønderen7-Jun-22 9:00
trønderen7-Jun-22 9:00 
GeneralRe: The PC of Theseus Pin
Dan Neely7-Jun-22 9:21
Dan Neely7-Jun-22 9:21 
GeneralRe: The PC of Theseus Pin
Nelek8-Jun-22 2:31
protectorNelek8-Jun-22 2:31 
GeneralHow about inapplicable Pin
MarkTJohnson7-Jun-22 2:44
professionalMarkTJohnson7-Jun-22 2:44 
GeneralRe: How about inapplicable Pin
trønderen7-Jun-22 9:00
trønderen7-Jun-22 9:00 
GeneralRe: How about inapplicable Pin
MarkTJohnson9-Jun-22 7:54
professionalMarkTJohnson9-Jun-22 7:54 
GeneralUndecided Pin
Jacquers6-Jun-22 20:57
Jacquers6-Jun-22 20:57 
GeneralRe: Undecided Pin
BryanFazekas7-Jun-22 1:24
BryanFazekas7-Jun-22 1:24 
GeneralRe: Undecided Pin
trønderen7-Jun-22 9:10
trønderen7-Jun-22 9:10 
GeneralRe: Undecided Pin
Dan Neely7-Jun-22 10:31
Dan Neely7-Jun-22 10:31 

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