To be fair, that might just be due to disk caching. Modern OSes sure do like to cache their disk reads.Subnautica promptly slurps up every byte of spare ram and stays there... I should check and see if it still does that.
--Patrick
To be fair, that might just be due to disk caching. Modern OSes sure do like to cache their disk reads.Subnautica promptly slurps up every byte of spare ram and stays there... I should check and see if it still does that.
With the state of my living space, that'd be a good way to step on something and fall on something else and break a whole lot of somethings.
Oh, it wasn't a bluff, it was a failed diplomacy check covered by a critical charisma checkBluff check: Successful.
--Patrick
I had to go to European websites to get the repair manual for my sewing machine. :/ So yeah.
Can get a 1050 Ti LP to fill that role.Next step will be a new low profile video card and a bigger power supply..
Not really. There's only two slots available, and the 710 or 730 would leave room for a wifi card in case I struggle getting the ethernet working during the hackintosh project.
I was installing Win 10 so I could update the BIOS and have at least something running. The video card and PSU have to wait for paydayPlus the 1050 is not natively supported in macOS. I assumed you were skipping the project since you were installing WinX.
--Patrick
Seems that HH GT730's can be had for $70.I was installing Win 10 so I could update the BIOS and have at least something running. The video card and PSU have to wait for payday
I did the whole "move the user dirs off of C" on Win 8 or 8.1. No end of headaches. They really don't want you to do that, despite the whole "small SSD programs, big HDD media" idea. But it falls apart if everything starts dumping EVERYTHING onto C:Did a complete wipe and reinstall of my main desktop PC. Resets and Fresh Starts hadn't worked, so I just wiped the sucker completely and started anew. I think moving the entire user profile off of the C: drive had a bit to do with my issues. This time I'm leaving the profile on the C: and pointing all the visible data to the HDD on D:. As long as AppData doesn't eat too much space on the 120GB SSD, I should be good. Already seen a noticeable speed increase. Boot is much faster than before.
I've had zero issues with it, probably because I haven't let any program know that I did it. Just a handful of symlinks at the base subdirectories. Everyone thinks everything is in C:.I did the whole "move the user dirs off of C" on Win 8 or 8.1. No end of headaches. They really don't want you to do that, despite the whole "small SSD programs, big HDD media" idea. But it falls apart if everything starts dumping EVERYTHING onto C:
Next machine I build I think I'm just going to go spinning rust plus Optane for simplification purposes. Unless 1TB SSDs come down to more reasonable prices anytime soon, that'll probably be what happens.
Did you just move the pointers to stuff like the Downloads and Documents folders to the other drive (which appears to be the suggested method, IIRC. Just change it in the Location tab under the folder Properties), or did you move the entire user profile? That's the method I used the first time, and is the one that causes everyone issues further down the road.I did the whole "move the user dirs off of C" on Win 8 or 8.1. No end of headaches. They really don't want you to do that, despite the whole "small SSD programs, big HDD media" idea. But it falls apart if everything starts dumping EVERYTHING onto C:
Next machine I build I think I'm just going to go spinning rust plus Optane for simplification purposes. Unless 1TB SSDs come down to more reasonable prices anytime soon, that'll probably be what happens.
I did a guide on changing an install.ini file (or something) so that user directories (like C:\Users didn't exist) ACTUALLY went to the other drive, not leaving a pointer behind. That caused no ends of problems, and I do not do that anymore. I've looked at (but never done) the "hack" where you actually change the NTFS references so that C:\Users (and C:\ProgramData, which is where a lot of Apps install to) point to another physical drive/directory.Did you just move the pointers to stuff like the Downloads and Documents folders to the other drive (which appears to be the suggested method, IIRC. Just change it in the Location tab under the folder Properties), or did you move the entire user profile? That's the method I used the first time, and is the one that causes everyone issues further down the road.
SSHDs didn't exist yet when I built this PC.Guys, guys...that's what RST's Smart Response is supposed to be used for.
(Or Fusion Drive if you're on a Mac)
But yeah, manually managing SSD/HDD is the "poor-man's" method of doing the same thing.
--Patrick
When Cranky built his new computer, I convinced him to splurge on getting a 400GB Intel 750. That thing is fast, and I don't mean 500MB/s fast like most SATA SSDs, I mean 2.1GB/s fast. Using it is AMAZINGLY fast...but it's only 400GB. So we recently also installed 2x750GB 2.5in WD Red in an internal 3.5in RAID 1 enclosure so he can offload as much stuff as he wants from the 400GB "Fast" area into the 750GB "Safe" area without having to mess with the shared external 2TB RAID 1 USB box I have for all our important stuff.SSHDs didn't exist yet when I built this PC.
Once you account for the difference in clock speed, the single-thread (i.e., gaming) performance delta between the 2010 i5-2500k Sandy Bridge and the current 2017 Kaby Lake i5-7600k is merely +9.94%.I wanted to buy a new case and rebuild the 2500k box. PCMR says no, spend the money on a 1050ti instead.
Prices are about the same as the Mastercase Pro 5 I was looking at.
Supporting my comparison above, and also going into much more detail here:I wanted to buy a new case and rebuild the 2500k box. PCMR says no, spend the money on a 1050ti instead.