I'm toying with the idea, heretical though it seems.
To quote the official teh-devil-on-your-shoulder
Quote:
Do eeet! Don't eeeet now!
Although, now that I re-read that quote, he must have been typing with his phone. Unless, perhaps, doing 'eeet' would empoverish me to the extent that I'd starve.
Well, excitement wasn't quite as long lived as I'd hoped.
Probably won't fit a 3.5" and 2.5" drive, may have to ditch the optical drive, which isn't really an issue.
Bigger problem is the x16 slot is on the left, rather than right, which means my double width card probably won't work in x1 slot :C
Replacing the 3.5" drive with a slimmer 3.5" drive means I can now fit the SSD in.
Turns out the GFX card works fine in the other slot.
All good!
That's just how it sounds in Arnie's Austrian accent. Now - get to tha choppa!
It was the "don't eeet" that puzzled me.
Incidentally, I followed the advice and did "eeeet".
So now I have a little 120GB Western Digital SSD in my server along with shitabytes of storage all duplicated overnight.
So all the faffing around with water coolers and cpus and drives was quite fun after all and along the way I learned how Macrium Reflect Free edition has become much better of late. Now it's a really robust backup solution with scheduling and everything. And you can do something really cool that I've wanted for ages: you can schedule a clone so that if your boot drive goes bang, you can just change the boot order and carry on with the clone as though nothing happened. And I found out (again) how flaky peer to peer networking is with Microsoft and how hard it is for people who know a bit about networking to get it right. Unfortunately, I also found out that the mobo in my desktop PC that I thought of as a bit elderly and limited, is actually rather wizzy and has things like an M.2. slot I never knew about, and USB3 headers and all sorts of things I can't afford to go on playing with. Hey, Ho.
That's the thrill of own build/customizing, will the parts actually fit together?
The thrill of small form factor being smaller than I expected.
Smallest I've gone is mini-tower, and I have to keep sides off and my hdd outside the case to cope with overheating.
Are you in an equatorial country?
It gets pretty hot here, believe it or not.
How small is a small form factor? We have some teeny little boxes in work but I think they are mostly used to access servers over a remote desktop connection.
Can you just stick the SSD in there dangling around? Don't think I ever fixed mine in properly, it's just sitting bottom of the case.
Depends on the age and manufacturer.
The Ultra SFFs have no expansion and are the type of things you can VESA mount. I've got one at work (HP Elite Desk 800 G2 Mini) and it's a nice little unit, Core i7 6700, 8GB, 240GB SSD.
Normal SFFs usually have a couple of half height PCI/PCI-E slots. Maybe space for another drive in there. But not much room for expansion. Ideal for an office environment.
Are gaming enthusiasts a problem where you work?
Just stupid bloated spreadsheets that still sit "Calculating" for far too long even with that spec.
Been there, done that. I only have a Core i5 laptop for work, but quickly found 4GB of RAM insufficient and needed the 8GB. Sometimes when you're manipulating spreadsheets with several hundred thousand rows, and some complex calculations and a pivot or two, Excel can really grind and chew up plenty of memory. Especially if you have several different sheets open at once...
I know spreadsheets are essential for many business functions, in fact these days there are plenty of tools (the software sort as well as the staff variety) that won't work without them, but back when I was in a humble team of DBAs, we often wondered whether spreadsheets weren't being stretched beyond their useful capabilities. To be fair, this was mainly just after we'd been emailed an epistle by some "scrum-master" who had managed to embed powerpoint presentations into every cell.
IT managers love Excel because it makes them feel as though they are "proper" IT people.
I'm a super awesome developer who has been dealing with databases for two decades, but I still use spreadsheets because for a lot of things they're a fuck-ton easier to deal with.
There's plenty of tasks which they don't do well (including anything with multiple users), and a whole bunch of cases where they are frustratingly restrictive, but they're still a great option.
I'd also offer the argument that they are not so much stretched beyond their useful capabilities, but rather Excel/etc are produced by people that lack the vision and understanding of what could be done.