- Joined
- Feb 18, 2006
- Messages
- 5,147 (0.75/day)
- Location
- AZ
System Name | Thought I'd be done with this by now |
---|---|
Processor | i7 11700k 8/16 |
Motherboard | MSI Z590 Pro Wifi |
Cooling | Be Quiet Dark Rock Pro 4, 9x aigo AR12 |
Memory | 32GB GSkill TridentZ Neo DDR4-4000 CL18-22-22-42 |
Video Card(s) | MSI Ventus 2x Geforce RTX 3070 |
Storage | 1TB MX300 M.2 OS + Games, + cloud mostly |
Display(s) | Samsung 40" 4k (TV) |
Case | Lian Li PC-011 Dynamic EVO Black |
Audio Device(s) | onboard HD -> Yamaha 5.1 |
Power Supply | EVGA 850 GQ |
Mouse | Logitech wireless |
Keyboard | same |
VR HMD | nah |
Software | Windows 10 |
Benchmark Scores | no one cares anymore lols |
Of course, enterprises usually prefer to own things instead of having them in a rent model,
...uh no they don't. Users prefer to own. But Enterprises have been moving away from ownership of nearly everything since the 90's.
Buildings: They used to build them, now they rent.
Office car fleets: Used to purchase, now they lease.
Employees: Used to be all full time, Now some Full time + lots of Contractors.
Servers: First it was Purchase, then it was Lease, then it was Virtualize, now they host on AWS, Google, or Azure.
Microsoft Licensing: Used to be perpetual, now its 3 years + annual True-Up. IE even on the enterprise office version they were paying based on the license model, not the perpetual.
Essentially Enterprises want to be able to calculate expenses against profits. When they have to purchase outright it created irregular cash flow. When they can simply pay a monthly fee, cash flow is pretty stable.
Users (for the most part) prefer one and done as far as payment as it is less draining on monthly finances and they can always schedule big purchases around holidays, birthdays, bonus time at work, etc.