- Joined
- Nov 10, 2006
- Messages
- 4,666 (0.70/day)
- Location
- Washington, US
System Name | Rainbow |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Core i7 8700k |
Motherboard | MSI MPG Z390M GAMING EDGE AC |
Cooling | Corsair H115i, 2x Noctua NF-A14 industrialPPC-3000 PWM |
Memory | G. Skill TridentZ RGB 4x8GB (F4-3600C16Q-32GTZR) |
Video Card(s) | ZOTAC GeForce RTX 3090 Trinity |
Storage | 2x Samsung 950 Pro 256GB | 2xHGST Deskstar 4TB 7.2K |
Display(s) | Samsung C27HG70 |
Case | Xigmatek Aquila |
Power Supply | Seasonic 760W SS-760XP |
Mouse | Razer Deathadder 2013 |
Keyboard | Corsair Vengeance K95 |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
Benchmark Scores | 4 trillion points in GmailMark, over 144 FPS 2K Facebook Scrolling (Extreme Quality preset) |
imo, if it's behind a router/firewall and all it's doing is crunching, it'd only be vulnerable to some kind of man-in-the-middle attack or from another PC on the network. I don't think it's worth running AV, certainly not anything realtime.Probably a good idea, but I don't. Linux in particular there's no reason to install AV software; Windows its debatable. But I don't have AV on my laptop anyways (it's old and slow) and I figure that if the laptop can do without, so can the systems that have only BOINC and are never touched.
Worse case scenario, something malicious gets on it and you have to wipe/reinstall. If it's a dedicated cruncher, that shouldn't be too big of a deal.