Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2022/11/05
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Gremlins in your computer.? Hate gremlins.? A few years ago I decided to replace my 9 year old computer. ? I was going to just upgrade the guts of my computer and I have always done that on my own, but in looking around, decided (at the time) that we all were all going to die from Covid, so I splurged and bought from Puget Systems.? Keep it local in Washington.? Not cheap but I went whole hog.? I-9, 128 GB RAM,? Above average video card, SSD and the list could go on.? Then after I got it I added a few high capacity drives for photos and data.? You might check them out and see if they have a system that suits your needs.? They produce some truly quality computers so I am sure you would not be disappointed. Aram On 11/3/2022 11:25 PM, Peter Klein wrote: > OT but relevant: > My faithful, almost 10 year-old Dell Optiplex 980 is doing two odd > things. I do plan to replace it after Christmas, when (if?) > unload-the-inventory sales kick in. But in the meantime: > > 1. Whenever the power goes out, I have to crawl under my desk, pull > the CMOS battery, and put it back. I can't just hit F2 and fix the > configuration because the internal error checks kick in before "Press > F2 for setup" happens. They display lights on the PC front that Dell > does not document meaningfully. Once CMOS is reset, I find that the > date and time are forgotten, and more important, the disk > configuration forgets that it is a non-RAID AHCI SSD disk. Once I set > those two things straight, all's well. No, it's not the battery, which > reads slightly over 3v on my multimeter. And I've replaced the battery > twice, with the same results.? Everything else in the BIOS is as I set > it previously. > > 2. I cloned the original disk to an SSD a couple of years ago. Since > then, the PC runs significantly faster in general. But every so often, > there is a long hesitation when loading a program, or when switching > from one program to another. > > Gruesome details: Win10 professional (which was upgraded from Win7, so > the registry has all old installation remnants on it).? 8 GB RAM, 433 > GB Crucial SSD system drive with 268 GB free, 1.81 TB conventional HDD > data drive with 1.23 TB free. The latter has all my photos on it. The > motherboard doesn't have a fast/broad enough path to take full > advantage of the SSD, but it still helps. The SSD is trimmed and the > HDD data drive is defragged weekly. I back up my data to both an > external SSD and a conventional drive regularly. > > Questions: > 1. Anything simple I could do to improve things? > 2. Recommendations for a new PC?? I've not kept up with hardware in > the last few years. > > I wouldn't mind something smaller than an under-the-desk tower. I do > want 16 GB RAM. I don't need a "screamer" gamer's PC, but low end is > too low for me. Aside from the usual Web surfing, writing and email, I > do three things with the PC: > > * Photo editing, up to 24 GB Raw files. > * Music composition. Editing is not hugely resource intensive. > Playback is comparable to photo editing. I don't do video except to > occasionally trim the "dead air" at the beginning and end of a video > musical performance. > * Amateur radio.? Mostly digital signal processing, which is sometimes > heavy on the processor, not really taxing the rest of the system much. > And my log, which is a SQL light database. > > Thanks for any input. > --Peter > -- Aram Langhans (Semi) Retired Science Teacher & Unemployed photographer ?The Human Genome Project has proved Darwin more right than Darwin himself would ever have dared dream.? James D. Watson