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Even on a newer machine (new purchase), I would be careful of what you get (& how that compares to what you may have).
Talking low end machines, but what one would "expect" to be fairly powerful (or maybe I expect too much)?
As in like basic OEM desktop boxes (Dell, HP), 8 GB RAM, i5 8500's, HDD, Win10 ($400 price range).
IMO, they run poorly. I'm new to Win10, but there is a ton of (to me) crap going on (in addition to all the "monitoring" & reporting).
Maybe it has to do with 10? AFAIK, these are not the 'T' CPU's (lower power, performance).
Anyhow, my (now) ancient i5-750, 4 GB RAM, Win7 reacts better then these new "powerhouses". My Win7 is clean. All my machines are clean. (The XP I'm on now, is clean.)
I don't really know that I understand the "concept" of SSD - as in where or to whom it is beneficial. (I've never had one).
I can cold start any of my machines, to the desktop, without undo background crap going on, quickly.
While these new desktops may have the raw "performance" numbers that are better then my i5-750, they seem slower. They seem to take longer to get to the desktop (though that is not particularly a concern) & they do take longer to be in a "clean" state. And they lack that quick feel that I am used to (& that is with maximum Performance settings, except I do enable shadows on desktop icons).
So would "updating" my ancient i5-750 to a new i5 8500 be worth it at all? I'd say that's pushing it.
Would "updating" my (still old) i5-3570, 16GB RAM, Win7 to one of these new bargain boxes be worth it at all? No! -------------------------------------- BANK OF AMERICA.COM ONLINE BANKING SUCKS IN THE HUGEST WAY IMAGINABLE
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