On Fri, Mar 5, 2021 at 11:21 AM D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk <
talk@gtalug.org> wrote:
| From: William Park via talk <talk@gtalug.org>
| No Raspberry Pi is going to match that.
| --William
|
| On 3/4/21 10:25 PM, Aruna Hewapathirane via talk wrote:
| > Model name: Intel(R) Core(TM) i3-4130 CPU @ 3.40GHz
As William top posted, that is still a perfectly repectable processor.
Much faster than any Raspberry Pi, as far as I know.
Yes it is but the Raspberry Pi OS I botted up in the Virtualbox is a lot more responsive than my actual system it is running on.
I am still trying to figure out the reason why ? If you ever had a Windows machine and you installed Linux on it then you know what
I am talking about. Same hardware just running Linux now instead of Windows and the increase in speed and performance has to
be experienced to be believed.
Why did you think your system was badly obsolete? It isn't. It's
limited in a few little ways.
Never said obsolete said ancient . I am happy with what I have and it was William Witteman who reached out and sent me the $:$$
when I was pulling my hair out many year sago because six hours had elapsed and my kernel was still not done compiling. I had a
Pentium II back then. So nothing wrong with my system I just need a Pi for different reasons.
- No support for NVMe SSDs (but SATA SSDs are fast enough)
I am scared of SSD's for a good reason. They have no early warning system. And when they decide to fail omg they fail so beautifully.
Beautifully equates to catastrophic unrecoverable as in dead in the water so uh-uh I will stick with my old hard disks. I can hear them rattle and
diskmonitor gives me so far very reliable indicators of disk health.
- Without a graphics board, it has trouble supporting UltraHD monitors
Quite happy with my ancinet Samsung monitor :-) don't need UltraHD just yet.
- fewer video CODECs are supported in hardware. This might make video
conferencing a little laggy.
True !
- slower than current CPUs, but not enough to be a veto for use
Still compiles the linux kernel in just over 30 minutes sometimes 20 minutes.
Why the heck did you think a Raspberry Pi would be a performance
upgrade?
Well like i said before the responsiveness of a given system is a very tricky thing. The Raspberry Pi OS running in Virtualbox is way faster
when I click the app opens real fast boom! This may not happen on the real hardware I have t wait and see once I get my hands on one.
Your system will have much faster conventional I/O.
How much RAM do you have? If your system has too little RAM, you can add
more. You cannot do that with a Raspberry Pi.
I have 8gigs RAM.
If your system only has a hard disk drive, you can surely boost the
performance by adding an SSD (but only SATA, not NVMe). There are
plenty of modest SSDs for a low price.
SSD for me is a no-no. Risk of failure with absolutely no prior indication is a risk
I am unwilling to take.
Here are a few examples. I have not carefully shopped for these.
I've only looked on Amazon.ca. This is only intended to show you the
landscape of the 2.5" SSD market.
If you are really really short of money, this would probably work:
<https://www.amazon.ca/TC-SUNBOW-Internal-Desktop-Advertising/dp/B073TVJPDT/>
- $29.99
Thank you Hugh very much appreciate all the digging and time you have spent on my account but
what I need right now is a paying project or some sort of stable work I can do remotely. I am not
complaining or bitching but 15 odd year snow in Toronto I am yet unable to securer any computer work.
All I have is a minimum wage call center position. Which I am happy with as I have friend's who have no jobs right now.
If anyone has any work that is within my limited skill sets please do send ?
- bottom tier brand: unknown reliablilty, but probably OK
It is a haswell processor so not a bad machine :-)
- only 120GB, but that is quite workable, especially if you keep your
HDD. I run full Fedora, without much local data, in 32GB.
Yes I am very much keeping my HDD.
- free shipping (good) but from China (slow)
- you can click on different sizes and get different prices.
Here's a better brand and larger drive:
<https://www.amazon.ca/Kingston-Digital-240GB-SA400S37-240G/dp/B01N5IB20Q/>
- $44.95
- 240GB
- good brand but, if I remember correctly, surprisingly slow for an
SSD
- free shipping available because cost is more than $35. Fairly quick
delivery
Here's a still better drive (faster, longer life, larger):
- $84.99
- 500 GB
- has DRAM which cuts down a lot of wear on the SSD and makes it
faster. I would *guess* that the other drives are DRAMless.---
Thank you very much for all the info Hugh.
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