My needs are simpler I guess. I use the eMachines as a standard Office PC, for email, ordering on Amazon, and quick searches. I sometimes use it to browse MacRumors or other forums. Works fine.
This Toshiba Laptop is even better, running Linux and having a lot of bloat taken out. Runs an older build of Chrome and Firefox and still works fine. I'd love if they both had disk access LEDs or made sound I could hear, since they can be frozen or busy doing intensive tasks sometimes and I have no clue if they're still busy or frozen or done. There's literally no visual cue on Windows 10 or Linux to tell anymore. I'd give a lot of $$$ to have an old MFM drive in there just to know if it's busy or not. I miss the actual sound of those especially at POST, with the memory counts and all. If they can make an MFM-to-SSD converter, why not the reverse for those of us who miss that classic PC sound?
SSDs are faster sure, but don't they suffer from a limited number of writes before they're EOL? Given how much indexing and write cycles are in modern OSs today, wouldn't that reduce the lifespan far more than even the worst 80s hard drive?
The only way I knew something was hung on my MacBook Pro was when the fans ran full hilt and got too hot to touch.
This Toshiba Laptop is even better, running Linux and having a lot of bloat taken out. Runs an older build of Chrome and Firefox and still works fine. I'd love if they both had disk access LEDs or made sound I could hear, since they can be frozen or busy doing intensive tasks sometimes and I have no clue if they're still busy or frozen or done. There's literally no visual cue on Windows 10 or Linux to tell anymore. I'd give a lot of $$$ to have an old MFM drive in there just to know if it's busy or not. I miss the actual sound of those especially at POST, with the memory counts and all. If they can make an MFM-to-SSD converter, why not the reverse for those of us who miss that classic PC sound?
SSDs are faster sure, but don't they suffer from a limited number of writes before they're EOL? Given how much indexing and write cycles are in modern OSs today, wouldn't that reduce the lifespan far more than even the worst 80s hard drive?
The only way I knew something was hung on my MacBook Pro was when the fans ran full hilt and got too hot to touch.