I hate to sound like one of those "older is better" people, but I am
beginning to think that way. My first computer was a Leading Edge Fortive
5000 with a 486 DX 2 (66 MHz) and 16 MB of RAM and Windows 3.11. I expanded
the memory to 32MB, and in the late nineties I was still using the system
and installed an 8.4 GB hard disk in addition to the existing 511MB one. I
had a great multimedia setup, too with Sound Blaster 16 and a Virge DX
graphics card. I had the system tweaked and tricked out the way I wanted it
and everything ran smoothly. If Windows 3.11 crashed on me once in six
months it was a lot...
Fast forward. I finally broke down and built a new system around the year
1999. It was a Pentium 2 366 MHz with Windows 95 and some other stuff I
don't remember. It crashed almost once a day.
Then in August of 2003 I built a new P4 computer with all modern parts,
Windows XP, Radeon 9000 video card (64MB), Sound Blaster 64, and 1 GB of
RAM. That system is still in use at my home and although it is stable, it
is excruciatingly slow, with about 5 minute boot time.
This past December I built a new computer. After going through three
motherboards (defective components, compatibility issues, etc) I finally am
using an ASUS M2N-SLI Deluxe (which I hear is really good or really bad,
depending on your luck the day you buy it), AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ (whatever
these numbers mean but I hear it is supposed to be good), Windows XP Pro,
512 MB of RAM (will upgrade when budget allows) and a GeForce 6600GT video
card (256MB). So we're talking pretty top of the line, not the latest and
greatest, but it should boot and work no problem right?
Wrong... Well for the first week everything was great but after installing
minimal software (the usual office apps) the system is now running slow and
takes almost 5 minutes to boot and be usable. I regularly run defrag and
the diagnostics and it doesn't help. I am beginning to regret ever getting
the thing.
Has anyone else had similar experiences? Is it that the technology is
upgrading so quickly that the manufacturers are just pumping out stuff to
sell it even if it doesn't perform as well as it should??
Ernie
On 16 Apr, 15:46, "Ernie Werbel" <n...@spam.com> wrote:
this may be partly a philosophical issue.. i'll try to impart my
experiences and sort of philosophy, as something to consider.
I have heard that technology since 2000 tend to break quicker. It's
alot cheaper than it was pre 1995.
Some think buying more at lower price, evens it out.
Perhaps laptops have a longer life than desktops.
You might want to check the cooling.
If they're second hand, then more usage, so would prob die quicker.
I built one comp where with win98 it didn't crash but with winxp it
did. Win XP was more sensitive. It picked somthing up in event viewer,
I think about the CDROM having a bad block(can't remember if changing
CDROM,CD or IDE Cable or avoiding that IDE connector, fixed it).
People say Win XP is more stable, yet people keep posting about it
freezing and everybody knows now to look in event viewer for the red
Xs, it's a common problem.
If one sound card or video card doesn't work, I can change it in 5
min, it's nothing. No big deal at all. HDD going is a problem if stuff
isn't backed up.
For a comp not to crash and bother me. All I need is a quality MBRD
and working processor.. I don't really consider anything else breaking
to be a "crash". I don't play games, I don't need a good video card.
Any video card - without a fan - will do. Any sound card will do(none
have fans).
I have an ethernet card for if the ethernet port doesn't work
(sometimes they don't work 'cos not exactly the right MBRD drivers.
Or, other times they just don't work)
You need redundant parts. I don't like changing MBRD or CPU though.
Changing MBRD , involves putting the Heatsink back on the CPU, and if
the MBRD is different, can mean you need new parts. If MBRD is the
same, then it should be a new MBRD, not second hand.
Changing CPU, if done with polythene gloves,99% IPA, Arctic Silver
paste, a razor blade, .. Well, it's a job. Maybe water and a tissue
will do! And, I have found putting a heatsink on P4 Socket 478 to be a
struggle. Often easiest taking the MBRD out onto an anti static bag
with a light shining over it. Trying a few times without paste to get
the nack of not messing it up, then, I do it putting the arctic silver
paste on and getting it right.
Anything else is fine to replace. Get used to it!! But I think maybe
you've had some bad luck. If you've got all good make new parts and
had a faulty MBRD. Though the warranty should cover that.
Replacing anything else wouldn't cause me to bat an eyelid. HDDs can
be a nuisance, with screws , and backing up data. I use thumbscrews.
And USB-IDE adaptors (or USB enclosures if you want) are quite good.
One issue of USB-IDE adaptors that just occurred to me that I haven't
written of in a post, is that one should / I should use a USB Ext
cable. 'cos the USB-IDE adaptors usually are about 6" long from the
USB end to the IDE end. So, one has to "build something" e.g. stack
books up, to rest the HDD on - outside the comp.
Since I can replace things. Compatibility isn't much of an issue for
me.
Like with software. If one doesn't work I use another. I can have
both. With HW, it may be one on a shelf and one in my computer.
For my internet connection I have an MBRD ethernet port , an ethernet
card, a PCI DSL Modem , and a backup 56k modem. I've had bad luck all
the time with routers. But recently I think i've run into some good
makes..
Bad ones first.
People keep recommending linksys, maybe it's just a US thing.
My few friends that i've spoken to in UK have moaned about linksys.
They've all got them because they read on the internet they were good,
and they turned out to have issues. Needing rebooting. Port forwarding
nto working. (though the latter may have just been a firmware issue. I
found that eventually it needed rebooting anyway! so may have
overheated too)
I hear good thinsg of netgear.
But I've seen a company that uses Zyxel without needing to reboot them
ZyXEL Prestige 600.
Somebody I know that had many bad experiences with Linksys, said 3Com
were great.
I've heard that the Draytek Vigor is good (Draytek may just be a uk
make)
I called Zen and they agreed many routers have issues. Check their
page. They sell and support Speedtouch routers. They say they haven't
had problems with them. Not very geek friendly, but they work. Though
recently, after a year or so of use, they lose connection temporarily,
maybe for 2 minutes. I assume it's my router rather than my isp..
Anyhow, I have the PCI DSL modem, and the 56k modem, which saved me
from my linksys!
So, you can always deal with problems with redundant parts. I actually
bought 2 speedtouch routers, though one vanished.
I like to keep a running list of good makes or router.
People say bad things about Belkin . I don't use them, but some people
whose comps I fix do use them (sometimes they get things without
asking me, then call me when things don't work out). At least Belkin
tech support is open 24/7 and they are good if you need to send it
back.