With regards to "Futureproofing"

SpyderTracks

We love you Ukraine
Hi all

Just a note, I've been thinking about this quite a lot recently, this is especially pertinent with those early on in their gaming / computing needs.

When I started gaming, I was in a council funded shared house in a derelict part of the country, living on around £25 a week I got from the government. Within a few years, I had a job and was living in my own apartment with a long term girlfriend, wasn't earning much money at all, but my life had massively changed for the better, and in a way I never expected.

My first gaming PC was a very entry level affair with all AMD parts, and they were all budget. Move along a few years and I was entering mid range setups.

Similarly, I never thought I'd end up interested in music production, or having my own media server. These are just things I never saw coming.

My point is, with regards to futureproofing, there is the core platform of the build (PSU, Motherboard, CPU, RAM (to some extent, but this is easy to upgrade) and Case that are really important to get right at the outset.

The reason being is that a decently specced PC will have a strong platform that can support any upgrades you wish to do in the future. These are things like GPU and monitor mainly. But a well designed PC should happily last you for 7 - 10 years with a couple of GPU / Monitor upgrades during that time, perhaps more RAM if you find you're moving more into streaming or something like that.

I never in my wildest dreams thought I'd ever spend over a couple of hundred quid on a monitor. For years I had basic office monitors at 60Hz and made do. Then as my budget started to change, I found that I was considering far higher specced gaming monitors and higher tiered GPU's to boot.

A lot can happen in that 7 - 10 year lifespan of your PC. Especially if you're in the Uni / College days, you could be living with your parents, scraping by on your student loan one month, and the next you could easily walk out of Uni into your first job earning 50k a year within a year or so, thinking nothing of suddenly buying a £1500 top tier 8k gaming monitor, it happens a lot. My point is, prepare for the future, prepare for your budget and your goals changing, concentrate on building a platform that will support anything you choose to do in the future. The GPU / Monitor / RAM, you can upgrade at any time, so long as your platform is strong enough to support it.

Keep the faith, hope for brighter things, play the games, frag the demons!

 

TonyCarter

VALUED CONTRIBUTOR
This is even more important of you were/are into Apple computers, as very few of them could be upgraded easily after you’d bought them…so you made sure you maxed them out initially.

The earlier and ‘pro’ level Macs were relatively straightforward to unscrew unclip to add RAM or a co-processor, but the consumer ones not so much (iMac, MacBook Air, etc.) unless you were handy with a soldering iron and glue gun.
 
I can attest to this but from a photography business standpoint. 2 months ago I was happily shooting with my Canon 1DX Mark II thinking it was still the greatest thing since sliced bread. It was only after coming back from a day's shooting at Snetterton that one of the guys on a motorsports FB group I'm in mentioned how good that latest mirrorless cameras are for their subject tracking. I started looking into the Canon EOS R3, was really impressed by what I saw, and then began looking into ways to get my hands on one. Well, a business loan and government grant and a few weeks later and I own it.

First rugby shoot with it the other day absolutely blew my mind. A camera that sees where you are looking and allows you to instantly focus there. It's an amazing time to be a photographer.

Coming back to your point. A lot can happen, even in 2 months.
 

lynnec

Member
Very true. I bought my last tower here from PCSpecialist, and after 8 years I'm about ready to upgrade. This thing is solid, and the only reason I'm looking at upgrades is that my cpu is "too old" to get Windows 11. One gen too old. So, with the OS being retired in a few years, I'm starting to look at a new rig. (And tbh the lure of the shiny and new). My main upgrades have been storage, from a slower SSD to a faster one, and then to NVME. I'll probably take some of that with me to the new tower, when I get one. I'll take what I want from this rig, leave it as a functioning computer and donate it, probably with a new HDD because I don't donate those.
Thanks to the people on this forum, who checked my spec, and a friend who did a computer course, I ended up with exactly what I wanted, with a margin on top, at a fair price.
I have to use laptops when I travel. I think I've had 3 of those in that time. Not my thing, really.
 
Top