I have a B450 motherboard, 16gb DDR4 3200 RAM, 1660 Super gpu and a Ryzen 5 2600 CPU. I don’t plan on updating the GPU this time, because I don’t play a lot of games that require anything more, I’m playing a lot of older titles currently. The problem is this also makes me feel like I shouldn’t update the pc at all.

I think I mostly just want to mess around with a decent home lab, but because I dont have an intended use case I’m struggling to justify. I also had parents who don’t like to spend money on this sort of thing and I’ve got their disapproving voices in my head.

The plan is to upgrade to a 5900XT and 64 gb of ram and probably run a lot of virtual machines in a little lab environment but I’m not sure how often I’ll have them all running so it could be overkill. The upgrade is about $700 all up too so not small but not too much. I know I’m extending the lifespan of a computer instead of e-wasting the entire thing but I’m still a little apprehensive.

Good idea or nah?

P.S. I run Linux Mint on all my machines if that somehow changes anyone’s mind or is somewhat helpful? Can’t let the arch users be the only ones to announce.

Edit: thanks for the replies. I went to bed so I’ll try to reply to people as today goes. Thanks for the ideas and the one person who asked if I was a sex worker, you’ve made me laugh and think.

  • rowinxavier@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    2 days ago

    I have a HP EliteDesk 800 G3 as a server at home. It is small enough to fit on my printer stand, it has two 4Tb HDDs for data in raid 1 and one 256Gb SSH for the OS and VMs to run from. It has 32GB of RAM and works really well. I have a few VMs for managing media, one for my personal jabber server (Open fire), another for calendar and contact sync, and Syncthing. I also have another 16GB of RAM unallocated so far which makes me itch for another VM to spin up, but so far I haven’t had something come to mind service wise. Because it is all off my main system I can do updates, change my HDD, take my machine with me, and I always know my server is OK. The same goes in reverse, I won’t bork my main system when doing server stuff. It is very handy and I find it useful to segregate things, but your situation obviously could demand a different approach. That said, I would recommend it instead of upgrading just because of the stability and segregation of risk.

    • JoshCodes@programming.dev
      cake
      OP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      2 days ago

      Hey I really appreciate you taking the time. That’s super well reasoned and I see the benefit of the approach. I’ll have a think!