Ten years ago certain people suggested that I stop using enterprise software and hardware, and use consumer stuff, since it had a shorter compatibility cycle etc.
i took your advice, and David was kind enough to set me up with his excellent, cutting edge stuff.
End result is 10 years later, my video card is still running, though it eats tons of power, and is 10 times slower then what I just put in the box.
The motherboard was also heavy duty, and has survived as well.
I just moved everything into a new version of the case.
The point is also that without competition, Intel hasn't been upgrading chips, etc.
End result is 10 years later, I'm still running Windows 7 Ultimate, on a chip that is still half as fast as cutting edge stuff right now, and plenty adequate for what I do.
So, even though I service a couple Windows 8 machines, I haven't worked with 10 Home, etc.
This HP was pretty amazing, because it sucked as badly as some of the stuff from the 90's, yet at the same time, the specs, i5 8th generation 12 gb ram, most indicated that it would run 10 quickly and well.
Such was not the case.
This analogy doesn't really make sense to me because there is tons of information freely available in both audio/video and written form that provide you with ample feedback to make a good decision on a piece of computer hardware. In addition to that, if you happened to buy a piece of hardware and experience it first-hand, you can simply return it with little to no consequence. You can't do any of this with a woman. Well...maybe some if one were to specifically pay for companionship but the consequence is that you'll likely be out of a significant amount of money.I approach this sort of like trying to find a woman you like. If you don't bother talking with women in general, when the one you want pops up, it's like a job interview, you suck, and don't get it, because you get nervous.
But, if you practice interviews, dating, whatever, when the job, or woman comes along you really want, you recognize it, and are able to make the connection or get the job.
In my personal and professional experience I cannot agree with the statement that HP made quality stuff. With the small exceptions of their HP ProCurve Networking equipment and their enterprise Blade Server C7000 chassis and servers. Many of their rack servers are bloated and slow and plain annoying to use as are the majority of their past consumer-level desktop stuff.Also, HP has in the past, made quality stuff. The 4000 series printers are still going strong, 20 years later, and they have retained value as refurbished products because for various reasons, HP printers now offered, pretty much are terrible.
My concern is HP is so clueless that they actually have such terrible components, and startup procedures. It's sort of a thing where they make a product, and expect to sell it, no matter what, and the consumer is stuck with it.
I find that sad, and negotiating this mire of shit to find a quality product is a challenge, since most companies don't make value, high quality, 17.3 inch laptops.
I never thought i would be using a Chromebook, by Acer, as a standard for performance, buiild quality, etc.
Not to belabor the point, but it is a consumer grade HP... Why would you even consider one of them let alone buy it?
As for Windows 10, I'm personally finding as time goes on, the experience of booting/running Windows 10 from a HDD (especially 4500rpm laptop drives) is becoming worse... It's like MS don't test their stuff on older equipment or slower HDDs to see what the performance impact of their "new" features are...
I only recommend looking for a laptop with SSD as a minimum these days. (having NVMe is better though).
I don't recall that suggestion but I also feel like your definition of enterprise hardware/software may not be properly aligned with the market. I'm sure that could be a debate on its own. In the past 10 years Intel has upgraded its chips and made significant advancements. If they had more competition perhaps us as consumers would have seen more advancement but to think that in 10 years little has happened isn't really true.
Those hardware specs with a Core i5 and 12GB RAM actually will run a computer quite well. There are many systems on the market that use the i5 because it's a great balance between budget and performance. Whatever HP did to fuck that up is 100% on them and not on the specs of those chips or Windows 10 for that matter.
This analogy doesn't really make sense to me because there is tons of information freely available in both audio/video and written form that provide you with ample feedback to make a good decision on a piece of computer hardware. In addition to that, if you happened to buy a piece of hardware and experience it first-hand, you can simply return it with little to no consequence. You can't do any of this with a woman. Well...maybe some if one were to specifically pay for companionship but the consequence is that you'll likely be out of a significant amount of money.
In my personal and professional experience I cannot agree with the statement that HP made quality stuff. With the small exceptions of their HP ProCurve Networking equipment and their enterprise Blade Server C7000 chassis and servers. Many of their rack servers are bloated and slow and plain annoying to use as are the majority of their past consumer-level desktop stuff.
Overall there are more review sites and YouTube channels these days that you should be able to easily fall into a decent laptop without much effort. Then head over to Slickdeals and look for good prices.
Use the free version?Spybot Anti-Beacon is apparently no longer free. Any suggestions on a replacement?
Don't be such a cheap bastard. Why don't you buy it if you want it?Anyway to get a free copy of Windows 10 to copy onto a Dell laptop?
Seems they imbed the activation code on the motherboard?
The process c:\windows\system32\svchost.exe (E5-2690X2) has initiated the restart of computer E5-2690X2 on behalf of user NT AUTHORITY\SYSTEM for the following reason: Operating System: Service pack (Planned)
Reason Code: 0x80020010
Shutdown Type: restart
Comment:
Well I have taken to doing that now. The jobs are only a few days long. I'll have to remember it to toggle off though.Have you set Windows to pause updates during your job? Granted, that only works once a month.
If you're on Pro, you should be able to set updates to be delayed for 30 days. If you check before starting, you should, theoretically, be good for a month.
As a last resort, you can set your connection as metered and then set update to not automatically download over metered connections.
It's on a network and needs to access resources on it. I realize I could still take it off the internet, but I shouldn't have to nor do I want that hassle.Why would a computer used for video production be connected to the internet continuously?
Apparently I'm missing something.