Finally got me a cheap used computer to fiddle - Although it's not that really cheap, costed me US $220 plus some $180 in upgrades; in good old times people in Japan would just put their used stuff at the door with a brief note like "Working ok, please take it home!", now there're second hand stores everywhere and they charge half or more as a new item.
The Dell Optiplex 3020 set looks like your typical corporate office mini-desktop or a 1980's stylish cashier machine. Intel i5-4570 is a 2013-2014 CPU with a mediocre Iris Graphics 4600. This old horse came with a 500GB 5.25" HDD as slow as a turtle (and fragmented like it's shell) and a weird 4GB 1200MHz DDR3 memory module that doesn't look Dell. First thing, I got a 240GB SATA SSD lying around and bought a pair of 4GB 1600MHz (coincidentally, the last on the shop and probably one of the last available in town). Also sign of it's age is the SVGA DB15 connector, but at least it has 6 USB ports on the back (2 are v3.0) and a couple upfront. As the small form factor case has nearly zero room, all I can hope to cram is a low profile GPU like nVidia 1030 or 1050; anything more would overload the power supply.
To my surprise the machine had Windows 10 Pro without the recovery partition and wouldn't download a new image / run Media Creation Tool. After some frustration with Minitool and Easeus, found Disk Genius, which is free but full featured, to transfer the system to the SSD (even if they're different sizes). All looks well but having hiccups with Net Framework, will try to fix as soon I've time.
The i5-4570 works well and, given 8GB of decent RAM and any mediocre SSD, is as flashy as any other processor while single-tasking in Windows 10. Multi-tasking, like encoding video while browsing and downloading, is not advisable. Gamming is definitely out of it's league, but can run Terraria and even a few 3D titles.
Now I've two external USB drives, 3.6TB each, and will add a NAS or a 32TB enclosure in the future. Just need that VPN...
Besides the AVs doing something to my downloaded files and an update interrupted midway, the system has behaved "funny"; will try to reformat soon...
The Dell Optiplex 3020 set looks like your typical corporate office mini-desktop or a 1980's stylish cashier machine. Intel i5-4570 is a 2013-2014 CPU with a mediocre Iris Graphics 4600. This old horse came with a 500GB 5.25" HDD as slow as a turtle (and fragmented like it's shell) and a weird 4GB 1200MHz DDR3 memory module that doesn't look Dell. First thing, I got a 240GB SATA SSD lying around and bought a pair of 4GB 1600MHz (coincidentally, the last on the shop and probably one of the last available in town). Also sign of it's age is the SVGA DB15 connector, but at least it has 6 USB ports on the back (2 are v3.0) and a couple upfront. As the small form factor case has nearly zero room, all I can hope to cram is a low profile GPU like nVidia 1030 or 1050; anything more would overload the power supply.
To my surprise the machine had Windows 10 Pro without the recovery partition and wouldn't download a new image / run Media Creation Tool. After some frustration with Minitool and Easeus, found Disk Genius, which is free but full featured, to transfer the system to the SSD (even if they're different sizes). All looks well but having hiccups with Net Framework, will try to fix as soon I've time.
The i5-4570 works well and, given 8GB of decent RAM and any mediocre SSD, is as flashy as any other processor while single-tasking in Windows 10. Multi-tasking, like encoding video while browsing and downloading, is not advisable. Gamming is definitely out of it's league, but can run Terraria and even a few 3D titles.
Now I've two external USB drives, 3.6TB each, and will add a NAS or a 32TB enclosure in the future. Just need that VPN...
Besides the AVs doing something to my downloaded files and an update interrupted midway, the system has behaved "funny"; will try to reformat soon...