Cooler didn’t arrive until after dinner. If I were twenty years younger I’d have stayed up all night. 😆

As I suspect a lot of people are doing, I’m going to keep using my existing graphics card until RTX 5000 series drops in January. Everything else is new, though. First build in seven years.

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18 points
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One of the most exciting times owning a computer for me is where you are right now. When everything arrives, and it’s still in all the fancy packaging, and you’re mapping out the build in your mind. I can’t tell from the picture, which CPU did you get?

Edit: can you believe HDD these days? I’m still amazed every time I pull an NVMe HDD out of the packaging. Absolutely mind-blowing. My first computer had an spinning drive connected through molex and IDE cables.

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14 points

My first computer didn’t have hard drive at all. 5.25" floppy drives.

My first PC with a hard drive used an ST-506 interface w/molex and data and control cables. 40MB. I couldn’t imagine ever filling the whole thing.

It’s all so much easier now.

Damn, I’m old.

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2 points
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Oh yeah, I meant the first computer I built myself from scratch. My actual first computer was a Commodore 64, and then an IBM clone 386, and eventually a powerhouse 486. It’s mind-blowing how far things have advanced, especially if you consider things like ChatGPT, which is essentially the Star Trek computer actualized in the real world.

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2 points

I would trust an answer that The Enterprise, DS9 or even Voyager’s cranky computer, gave me. I don’t trust LLMs not to lie to me.

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7 points

Yup pretty wild. We’ve come a long way. CPU is a 9800x3D.

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2 points

Very nice!

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5 points

I almost got pissed for about 5 seconds the first time I ordered a new SSD and thought they shipped me RAM. Mind completely blown. I was showing the thing to my friends for a couple of hours, just asking, “you know what a Hard Drive looks like? Check this out! That tiny thing is a freaking 2 TB SDD!”

My first computer was either the Mac 128k or the Apple ]|[

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2 points

FYI: HDD is short for hard drive. So calling an SSD a hard drive doesn’t make a lot of sense since they are by definition different things.

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7 points

Calling an SSD a hard drive makes sense but calling it a HDD doesn’t because HDD means hard disk drive and an SSD doesn’t have disks

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2 points
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Huh, I always thought it stood for hard drive device, which can be used universally. It’s still easier to type HDD on a phone keypad than hard drive though, which is why I used it.

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1 point
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Nah, just call an SSD an SSD (or solid-state drive if you got lots of time and like being overly verbose) or just storage device or similar synonym.

A hard disk drive is called that because it contains hard disks as opposed to earlier storage mediums which often had soft (or floppy) disks. Hard drive is just a shorter and easier way to say hard disk drive.

Hard doesn’t refer to the fact that the outer shell is hard, because of course it is.

So since SSDs don’t contain any disks, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to call them hard when they are in fact nonexistent.

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2 points

It would be HD if it was hard drive.

A hard disk drive (HDD), hard disk, hard drive, or fixed disk[a] is an electro-mechanical data storage device

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_disk_drive

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2 points

Don’t even try, that guy clearly gets off on being pedantic and hates to be wrong instead of trying to learn something new. Which is funny cause he didnt even know what HDD is short for.

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-1 points
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Why are you starting a new thread. Join the existing or something instead. This has been addressed.

Of course I know what HDD means. I work in IT. I just shorted it because it’s easier to understand, write, and say. I have already proved multiple times with multiple dictionaries that “Hard drive” is the same as “Hard disk drive”.

Either way it doesn’t matter, the point was that you shouldn’t call SSDs HDDs.

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2 points

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