So, my work machine was getting long in the tooth. Occasionally not booting and requiring me to jiggle memory sticks or tighten CPU cooler screws. It was a DDR3 machine with a Xeon E3 1230V2 with 8gb of RAM (and oddly enough an RTX 2060.) The fans were getting pretty loud, too.

I had a Ryzen 2600x and 16gb of DD4 from my home PC lying around, so I bought a cheap mainboard, tore the old one out of the case, attached all the hardware to the new mainboard - including the SSD with Mint installed - and BOOM! It booted first try without issue. Even going from Intel to AMD, DDR3 to DDR4. My mind is blown!

I can’t imagine how borked my machine would have been if I’d tried that with Windows.

Now, what do I do with a still-working Xeon and mainboard?!?

16 points
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requiring me to jiggle memory sticks or tighten CPU cooler screws

How much vibration is the computer subjected to? Do you live in a limestone quarry?

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16 points

Worse. A classroom.

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4 points

Oh

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6 points

Do you live in a limestone quarry?

Hey man, it’s probably cheap rent.

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15 points
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Start a self-hosted server. You’re welcome to join !selfhost@lemmy.ml or !selfhosted@lemmy.world.

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6 points

That’s a great idea! I have an old HDD and a 300 watt PSU lying around somewhere. I suppose I could just mount it all on a board.

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2 points

Just keep in mind that it will not be power friendly

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15 points
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Free drivers to free drivers are easy. The only issues usually occur when you move from Nvidia to something else. Nvidia graphics drivers interfere with free drivers.

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14 points

Be sure to remember to Activate Linux after a motherboard switch!

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2 points

Remember to install the Activate Linux program to let it harrass you until you do!

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12 points
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I have swapped Linux SSDs with Mint and OpenSUSE Tumbleweed between an AMD desktop PC, an Intel desktop and an Intel laptop and never had any problems. They just boot up and work. Even the NVIDIA card in one of the desktops didn’t cause any real problems.

If you tried this with Windows, the OS would break, even if it booted at all, and the software licenses would all become invalid even if you could fix it up technically. You’d spend days fixing driver problems and teaching it to find its own partitions. Linux is amazingly portable.

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13 points

I know some of y’all like to bash Windows at every chance, but except for the activation it’s portable as well and the OS wouldn’t normally break. You can put your Windows SSD into other computers and it will boot just fine. This might have been different with Windows 7 and earlier versions, but as of Windows 8 it’s smooth sailing.

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3 points

That’s good to know. I suppose most of us not knowing this is a good indicator of the average age around here. I think the last time I installed Windows from scratch was 7…

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1 point
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2 points

You can boot windows from a USB stick if you really want. It’s even branded. “Windows to go”.

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3 points

Linux is amazingly portable.

So I’m discovering! I might just have to install Linux on my home machine, but I’ve been running Windows for so long, I really worry I’m going to break something in that case. I also do a lot of audio production with that machine, and software compatibility might end up being a big problem.

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2 points
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I also do a lot of audio production

Say no more. This is the one time I will ever say: use Windows. As someone who decided to get back into making music after switching to Linux, you do not want that heartache. I am so, so sad to see the complete lack of love for music production on Linux. I guess it’s due to the music industry being such greedy fucking cunts which doesn’t work well with FOSS.

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2 points

I think I’d mostly be safe since I use Reaper and go light on the plugins, but I’ve got projects and files sitting around that are literally decades old at this point. Change is scary.

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1 point

Outside of maybe not having the chipset drivers on newer platforms you can easily move drives from an Intel or AMD system or vise versa. And ever since Windows 8 Windows update will grab basically every single driver automatically for you. Activation is hit or miss unless you have a key in the bios, then it automatically activates itself.

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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).

Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word “Linux” in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.

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