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On Thursday, 27 May 2021 22:05:07 BST Walter Dnes wrote: |
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> It was nice to have a newer "hot backup" (XPS8940) to switch over to |
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> quickly when an older machine started locking up occasionally. Now I |
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> need a "hot backup" for the newer machine that I ordered last October. |
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> Dell Inspirons seem to top out at 12 gigs ram, so I'm looking for an XPS |
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> model in order to get more ram as the bloating of linux continues. All |
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> current XPS models seem to have 256G or 512G M.2 PCIe NVMe Solid State |
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> drives in the base configuration. Questions... |
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> |
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> * do NVMe drives function well under Gentoo (driver issues, etc)? |
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> |
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> * how long do they hold up (wear and tear)? |
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> |
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> * can I simply disable them if I run into problems? |
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> |
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> If someone can suggest an alternate supplier to Dell, that ships to |
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> greater Toronto, at similar prices, I'd be willing to take a look at |
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> them. |
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I'll leave others to comment on NVMe drives, I've not had any experience with |
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these. |
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|
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Dell used to satisfy a sweet spot between price and performance, compared to |
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other more expensive mass producers. I have not purchased any of their |
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products for some years now. I found the choice they offer to customise some |
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components was great, but as soon as you asked for something different in ways |
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that matter to horsepower (CPU, RAM or graphics) the price offering stopped |
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being attractive. Funny enough, the component which failed just after the |
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warranty expired was not CPU, RAM, or graphics, but the PSU. |
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Having suffered similar kind of failures with other mass market box-shifters |
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I've learned my lesson. Have you looked at building your own box? The bang |
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for your buck should go farther, because for the same money you should be able |
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to get better components. |