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Scott Prive writes: > Don't write off the cost of a new motherboard as too expensive. If you're > looking to avoid "legacy hardware" and you are upgrading your CPU... then > dump that motherboard. I'll second this sentiment. Old computer hardware is no longer worth keeping, unless you have a particular application which can use it as-is. The upgrade treadmill costs too much time and $$$ to be worthwhile. This has been true for at least a few years, but with the price drops of the past 24 months, we truly have arrived at the era of the throwaway computer. Maybe instead of paying a deposit on Pepsi bottles, we should be paying a chassis deposit on new computers: the supplier should be required to take the old one back and do something responsible with it, kinda the way oil-change shops have strict requirements for what happens to your old motor oil. At this point the computers around my house have gotten some serious age on them, in fact I think my email server is a 333MHz box, but they still work fine and as long as they don't need hardware upgrades, I just keep them going indefinitely. The minute you start talking about the complexities of one SCSI interface vs. another, it's time to chuck the old PC and start over. (I used to work for DEC-SHR, in the old SCSI-2 days--this stuff was a nightmare then and is even worse now.) You'll be far happier with a $400 Microcenter PC and an 3Ware controller off the shelf than with a pile of used SCSI drives. And you'll have more money left over afterward: I have a distinct memory of what happened when I jumped on the gigabyte-drive bandwagon at the end of 1992 and wound up spending a lot more to get everything overhauled than it would have cost to just throw everything out. Question for the group: I have a pile of old PC computer hardware which fills a bushel-basket. All of it's obsolete but it all works and it could be useful to someone. It's reminiscent of the old DEC-salvage shop to which I was so attracted back when I was 19 or 20. Where might I find a worthy place to donate this stuff for the benefit of today's teenagers? In fact I'd like to get it out of the house so I don't find myself tempted to go down the path proposed by Scott: dredging out an old chassis or hard drive trying to bring it back to life, sucking up weeks of time in the process...someone else could spend those same weeks learning something. -rich
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