So what? Its a gaming PC, who cares about updates? I have win7 SP1, and first thing I tune after install is disable auto updates.in 2020 microsoft stop supporting w7, same as windows xp in 2014
So what? Its a gaming PC, who cares about updates? I have win7 SP1, and first thing I tune after install is disable auto updates.in 2020 microsoft stop supporting w7, same as windows xp in 2014
I don't disagree with your general sentiment, and being able to exploit this vulnerability seems to require root access anyway, but the money isn't in bricking someone's PC, it's in being able to run it as part of a bot net that you rent out, or use for crypto mining. Or to threaten to brick in a ransomware scheme. Or for blackmail if they were able to find some embarrassing pictures or get lucky with taking over the webcam. Or to scrape your banking id and password.Yes, but when was the last time you heard of anyone's computer being completely bricked because of a virus? I personally haven't seen it happen since 14-15 years ago when a client got a bios virus which was easily swapped out at the time. These days, sure, viruses happen requiring a format and re-installation of the OS which is no big deal. But the thing is, viruses only happen when you jump into risky stuff. If you're going on risky websites or download risky stuff with your very important business computer filled with very important information, then you deserve to receive viruses that ruin it all for you. There's a reason why most ppl have multiple computers. There's your important computer which you keep offline for the most part, and there's the throw-away computer which does all the risky stuff and don't care about.
You can have the best hardware with no known vulnerabilities and still get owned by viruses. So what's the point in worrying about it in a CPU, especially when it's likely just going to get fixed in an update long before anyone ever get compromised by it?
Extended support ends in 2020, which means no more security updates. After that date I'd expect there will be a lot of programs ending support for the platform.I thought the support ended years ago? Or are you referring to the Driver support? If that's the case, we'll see about that. As long as the popularity with Windows 7 remains high, hardware manufacturers will have no choice but to continue supporting it. Besides, Windows 8 drivers are pretty much the same.
Yes. But 99% of the attacks out there are social hacking stuff, i.e. getting people to open and execute attachements from spam mails or executing programs from websites. Most viruses will use their access to the user account to do fun stuff, only a subset will even try to get admin/root access.A mild dose of reality: Getting hacked doesn't mean a person sitting at a terminal somewhere running scripts trying to break into your computer. Hackers these days ARE the viruses you get through email or downloading apps and web sites you go to. People don't hack computers anymore, programs do.
I play 7DTD on Linux and it works great for gaming.Lots of good advice here... Not really a lot I can add...
One thing though: Don't get Win7! You should deff upgrade to win10.
Yeah yeah I know... It's not as stable, and this and that annoys you, but Win7 is on its way out, so your gonna have to upgrade eventually anyway... Might aswell get used to it now...
OP tip:
Dualboot your favorit Linux OS and Win10.
This way you have a great operating system for all your computer needs!
And the crappy, bloted and slow one for your gaming...
DS4windows is the program ColdSteelRain is talking about.You can connect a PS4 controller to a PC if you install some software that fools the PC into thinking you've got an XBox controller. I'd looked into that a few years ago for my son, but never implemented it. That said, I don't know how well that will work. There's an option under controls to "allow controller", but everything seems keyboard/mouse oriented. I'd see if anyone has actually done that (maybe search the forums here.)
If you're in a real cash crunch you can try using the onboard graphics first, but I'd expect to be disappointed.
Well, gamers are not the world. Except for gaming and CAD practically everyone would be fine with onbard graphics, especially office PCs.Cuz it doesn't come with the onboard graphics. I specifically bought my 1600x because it didn't come with onboard graphics. I don't know why anyone would purposely buy APUs aside from mobile stuff and laptops.
And to add to that, AMD on board graphics is a far cry better than the Intel on board graphics.Well, gamers are not the world. Except for gaming and CAD practically everyone would be fine with onbard graphics, especially office PCs.
And even casual level gaming or gaming with mostly indie games will have no problems with a good onboard graphics unit.
But in the same note, AMD on-board graphics are a far dry from a dedicated GPU.And to add to that, AMD on board graphics is a far cry better than the Intel on board graphics.
True... but I have a daughter that plays 7DTD on a Intel chip with the "HD 4600" graphics (bought 4 years ago). It's not the best but it is playable. Just about everything AMD throws on their chips is better than that so it should be at least as playable.But in the same note, AMD on-board graphics are a far dry from a dedicated GPU.
Exactly, same here. Only the sheep care about constant updates.So what? Its a gaming PC, who cares about updates? I have win7 SP1, and first thing I tune after install is disable auto updates.
Who cares about Windows updates. As for program support, again, that's a matter of demand. You can't just end support for an OS alienating half your customers, that's just bad business.Extended support ends in 2020, which means no more security updates. After that date I'd expect there will be a lot of programs ending support for the platform.
You know, I hear this nonsense all the time with every new version of OS that comes out. It's annoying and always wrong. As long as there's driver support for an OS, then you're never forced into anything ever. My landlord still uses Windows XP on his music studio PC and has no issues with it at all. The only reason I can't use Windows XP anymore is because of the lack of stability in the X64 version and driver support, otherwise, I'd still be trying to figure out a way to make it work on some of my computers. But we don't have that problem anymore.One thing though: Don't get Win7! You should deff upgrade to win10.Yeah yeah I know... It's not as stable, and this and that annoys you, but Win7 is on its way out, so your gonna have to upgrade eventually anyway... Might aswell get used to it now...
Good build, aside from the PSU wattage being a little on the low side (I'm sure it would work fine... but the amount of constant stress on that PSU might kill it in just a few years), I usually recommend a minimum of 650 watts in any PSU, especially if it's only a Bronze level. Also, Ryzen is highly dependent on Ram performance, so 2133MHz ram would definitely hinder Ryzen's performance a bit. I'm not sure I would have recommended that ram. But aside from those 2 things, looks good.The best I can do with a limited time is:Ryzen 5 1600
ASUS Prime B350-PLUS ATX
G.Skill - Aegis 16G DDR4-2133
SanDisk - SSD PLUS 240GB
Seagate - Constellation ES ST1000NM0011 1TB 7200 RPM
MSI GeForce GTX 1050 Ti DirectX 12 GTX 1050 Ti AERO ITX 4G OC 4GB 128-Bit GDDR5
EVGA 450 BT 100-BT-0450-K1 450W ATX12V / EPS12V 80 PLUS BRONZE Certified Non-Modular Active PFC
Weird it said ColdGate lolGood build, aside from the PSU wattage being a little on the low side (I'm sure it would work fine... but the amount of constant stress on that PSU might kill it in just a few years), I usually recommend a minimum of 650 watts in any PSU, especially if it's only a Bronze level. Also, Ryzen is highly dependent on Ram performance, so 2133MHz ram would definitely hinder Ryzen's performance a bit. I'm not sure I would have recommended that ram. But aside from those 2 things, looks good.
Why argue with me on this point? I didn't make the rule nor am I the one making the final decision. Check their website and you will see the same information I posted. If the way they handled XP is any indication there will be at most a handful of free updates after that time and any company that wants to continue to use it will have to pay for updates (like some STILL do with XP, believe it or not). It is a far better plan to upgrade or move away from Windows entirely than to stick with Windows 7 after January 2020.Who cares about Windows updates. As for program support, again, that's a matter of demand. You can't just end support for an OS alienating half your customers, that's just bad business.
Wtf? How is that even possible? That's never happened before.Weird it said ColdGate lol
I think there's a miscommunication here. I agree, Microsoft will continue to do whatever they feel like doing because they don't care about their customers at all... never have. What I was referring to is things like gaming support, live streaming support, video editing support, photoshop support, etc... there will always be 100% support for the older OS so long as ppl are still using it. But as far as Windows updates go, I haven't updated mine in at least a year... couldn't care less. It runs extremely stable, has no errors or warnings in event logs at all and that's all that matters to me. As for driver support, well, that's where things could get a little sticky. The Windows 7 user base would need to still be pretty high for them to continue supporting us, which it likely will so long as Windows 10 continues to suck.Why argue with me on this point? I didn't make the rule nor am I the one making the final decision. Check their website and you will see the same information I posted. If the way they handled XP is any indication there will be at most a handful of free updates after that time and any company that wants to continue to use it will have to pay for updates (like some STILL do with XP, believe it or not). It is a far better plan to upgrade or move away from Windows entirely than to stick with Windows 7 after January 2020.
You realize that all of the same arguments were used for XP and 2000 years before, right?I think there's a miscommunication here. I agree, Microsoft will continue to do whatever they feel like doing because they don't care about their customers at all... never have. What I was referring to is things like gaming support, live streaming support, video editing support, photoshop support, etc... there will always be 100% support for the older OS so long as ppl are still using it. But as far as Windows updates go, I haven't updated mine in at least a year... couldn't care less. It runs extremely stable, has no errors or warnings in event logs at all and that's all that matters to me. As for driver support, well, that's where things could get a little sticky. The Windows 7 user base would need to still be pretty high for them to continue supporting us, which it likely will so long as Windows 10 continues to suck.