- Joined
- May 2, 2017
- Messages
- 7,762 (2.80/day)
- Location
- Back in Norway
System Name | Hotbox |
---|---|
Processor | AMD Ryzen 7 5800X, 110/95/110, PBO +150Mhz, CO -7,-7,-20(x6), |
Motherboard | ASRock Phantom Gaming B550 ITX/ax |
Cooling | LOBO + Laing DDC 1T Plus PWM + Corsair XR5 280mm + 2x Arctic P14 |
Memory | 32GB G.Skill FlareX 3200c14 @3800c15 |
Video Card(s) | PowerColor Radeon 6900XT Liquid Devil Ultimate, UC@2250MHz max @~200W |
Storage | 2TB Adata SX8200 Pro |
Display(s) | Dell U2711 main, AOC 24P2C secondary |
Case | SSUPD Meshlicious |
Audio Device(s) | Optoma Nuforce μDAC 3 |
Power Supply | Corsair SF750 Platinum |
Mouse | Logitech G603 |
Keyboard | Keychron K3/Cooler Master MasterKeys Pro M w/DSA profile caps |
Software | Windows 10 Pro |
I liked the 8.1 UI on touch-enabled convertibles (8 was okay there too, but less flexible), but could never stomach it's "take it or leave it" approach to the start menu on the desktop. And I refuse to use a third-party app to replace the start menu - that's just too dumb. Having that grid of "touch-friendly" tiles spread across a 27" monitor made me dizzy. I love the W10 start menu, though. Far better than the W7 one. Other than that, my only long-term experience with the W8.x series was my partner's extremely buggy Lenovo Yoga, which we finally got refunded after three years, two motherboard swaps (both had faulty RAM, which baffles me to this day), one display swap, and one more "unrelated" service centre visit (they apparently didn't want to tell us what they fixed). That it came with an OEM 840 Evo-alike that never got a firmware update to alleviate performance degradation was just the icing on that laptop-turd cake. But while it worked, as I said, I liked the OS in that form factor. I also like W10 on my convertible Latitude 7390 And W10 pen support is amazing (in MS apps, that is - everyone else is way, way behind on that front). I started using W10 Insider Previews before launch on my old laptop (an old ThinkPad X201) and the positive experience from that led me to upgrade from W7 to W10 on my desktop almost as soon as it launched. That install even survived upgrading that PC from an ages-old Core2Quad platform to my current Ryzen, which to me about sums up the flexibility and stability of W10 in my experience. Switching the same install between platforms 10 years apart from different vendors, with only the GPU and storage carried over? No problem, just let me update some drivers at first boot. (I obviously still did a clean install soon afterwards, but it worked!)8.1 was perfectly fine for me, ever had any issues with it. That's why I refused to update to W10 up until late point when they've started to disable the "disability" free upgrade path.