Re: Time to refresh my hardware

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Tim via users writes:

On Wed, 2019-10-09 at 22:08 -0400, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> My C++ compiles are getting longer. It's time to get new hardware,
> but I'm having some difficulty finding Fedora-friendly hardware,
> that's slightly above average grade, such as dual CPU and spinning
> rust (I haven't gotten quite aboard the SSD train, with its built-in
> expiration date).

You should probably tell people more of your requirements, if you're
after recommendations.  Such as do you need a sound card, graphics
card, will on-board do?

My requirements are not very stringent. Onboard video and audio will do, as long as it works out of the box with x.org, and has reasonable compositing and can keep up with full screen video playback. Dual 1GB NIC, a pair of SATA drives, and then as many cores and RAM as I can get, hopefully 12 cores at least. I guess what I'm really looking for is some place which offers a wide selection of hardware that I can match up to within my budget. But all the places that I looked seemed to be limited to 5-6 models, and quite limited customizations options. I end up with either having my only video choices be the latest and greatest Nvidia chipsets that only work with their binary blobs (no thank you), or all the 12+ core options are ridiculously overpriced Xeons; or they seem to intentionally hike up their prices by having no storage options other than high capacity SSDs, for storage.

Dell came pretty close, if slightly pricy. They actually have a workstation that they certify RHEL for (but ship with Ubuntu). I would've overlooked having to overpay for Xeons (no AMD options), except that I looked at their manual. Their motherboards have button cell batteries. Maybe I'm off base, but who still puts button cell batteries on their motherboards? Dell can't just pay a few more cents for proper NVRAM? So they go with button cells, to keep the lights on for the BIOS settings. This is obviously intentional; this is their business product, clearly the reason for that is to have the CR2032 go flat in a few years, and lose all BIOS settings; but who cares since they expect that business will replace their hardware every three years. Still, this is just plain silly.

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