So, my work machine was getting long in the tooth. Occasionally not booting and requiring me to jiggle memory sticks or tighten CPU cooler screws. It was a DDR3 machine with a Xeon E3 1230V2 with 8gb of RAM (and oddly enough an RTX 2060.) The fans were getting pretty loud, too.

I had a Ryzen 2600x and 16gb of DD4 from my home PC lying around, so I bought a cheap mainboard, tore the old one out of the case, attached all the hardware to the new mainboard - including the SSD with Mint installed - and BOOM! It booted first try without issue. Even going from Intel to AMD, DDR3 to DDR4. My mind is blown!

I can’t imagine how borked my machine would have been if I’d tried that with Windows.

Now, what do I do with a still-working Xeon and mainboard?!?

  • @UnderwaterbobOP
    link
    English
    32 months ago

    Linux is amazingly portable.

    So I’m discovering! I might just have to install Linux on my home machine, but I’ve been running Windows for so long, I really worry I’m going to break something in that case. I also do a lot of audio production with that machine, and software compatibility might end up being a big problem.

    • TurtlePower
      link
      2
      edit-2
      2 months ago

      I also do a lot of audio production

      Say no more. This is the one time I will ever say: use Windows. As someone who decided to get back into making music after switching to Linux, you do not want that heartache. I am so, so sad to see the complete lack of love for music production on Linux. I guess it’s due to the music industry being such greedy fucking cunts which doesn’t work well with FOSS.

      • @UnderwaterbobOP
        link
        English
        22 months ago

        I think I’d mostly be safe since I use Reaper and go light on the plugins, but I’ve got projects and files sitting around that are literally decades old at this point. Change is scary.