| > Does it have to be DIY? Yes. Because only DIY allow your computer to be repaired at will. Go laptop or corporate and those get increasingly hard to fix. Not to mention if DIY market is healthy the non-DIY market is even cheaper. > But price per performance continues to improve. A 5050 If 5050 didn't beat a 10 year old graphics card it would be an even greater waste of sand. > Governments might want it, but that doesn't transfer to chip makers. If governments want it, there is money to be made. > Plus people could buy old datacenter chips for pennies on the dollar. Sure, but no one will be able to afford all the other amenities. Buying a server CPU isn't the issue. It's buying every other part of the server rack. Namely the board, the cooler, the memory and the storage. And housing and power for it. |
It beats the 10 year old high end. That's not necessary to avoid being a waste of sand.
But that's not the point. As long as you can keep getting better performance for less money, things are getting more affordable.
> Buying a server CPU isn't the issue. It's buying every other part of the server rack. Namely the board, the cooler, the memory and the storage. And housing and power for it.
Motherboards are looking at the smallest price hikes of all. Coolers are dirt cheap and a quality thermalright is less than $20. Housing for a server is about the same as a desktop and not changing. Half this list is nonsense.
Memory is going up a lot. But that's the one we started on. And you can get a reasonable amount for a couple hundred dollars, and acceptable storage for less than one hundred. Power isn't going crazy either.
And you didn't address how your threshold for "affordable" would exclude every year before about 2019. It's too strict.
> Because only DIY allow your computer to be repaired
Listen, if I can get a whole computer for $300 then I don't need repair. It's a real downside, but if the CPU and motherboard are soldered together and take each other out then it's like I doubled the risk they break within seven years. And after seven years I'd replace both anyway. So that's like a $50 penalty, not a disqualifier. And the mini PCs I was citing have detachable memory and storage.