The article fails to fully take into consideration the progression of hardware and technology.
Simply put, CPUs and GPUs are quickly reaching the point that they are outperforming the needs of the average user (including most gamers). You don't need a bleeding edge i7 to work on your spreadsheets or check your emails or to do hardcore gaming nowadays, about the only thing you really want top-of-the-line hardware for these days is for very heavy-duty professional work such as CAD and video editting. You could easily pick up a CPU from several years back and it would still run almost everything you do today fine, which is a testament to how far processing power has grown in comparison to how slowly the needs for such power has grown.
On top of that, PCs in general have always been built to last (besides those $250 friday night specials). Unlike smartphones/tablets which are honestly designed to "go out of style" in a few years, either by way of hardware failure or forced hardware/software obsolescence, PCs can easily last a decade or more depending on how well you take care of it.
Hardware and software that last and remain relevant for a long time mean lower numbers of "replacement/upgrade" purchases, which is part of what's behind the notion of "declining PC sales".
Simply put, CPUs and GPUs are quickly reaching the point that they are outperforming the needs of the average user (including most gamers). You don't need a bleeding edge i7 to work on your spreadsheets or check your emails or to do hardcore gaming nowadays, about the only thing you really want top-of-the-line hardware for these days is for very heavy-duty professional work such as CAD and video editting. You could easily pick up a CPU from several years back and it would still run almost everything you do today fine, which is a testament to how far processing power has grown in comparison to how slowly the needs for such power has grown.
On top of that, PCs in general have always been built to last (besides those $250 friday night specials). Unlike smartphones/tablets which are honestly designed to "go out of style" in a few years, either by way of hardware failure or forced hardware/software obsolescence, PCs can easily last a decade or more depending on how well you take care of it.
Hardware and software that last and remain relevant for a long time mean lower numbers of "replacement/upgrade" purchases, which is part of what's behind the notion of "declining PC sales".
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1Intel Core i7 2700K @ 3.5GHz (TurboBoost disa...16GB (4x4GB) Kingston HyperX DDR3 1600MHz @ 1...Nvidia EVGA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- N/A (custom-built)
- OS
- Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
- CPU
- Intel Core i7 2700K @ 3.5GHz (TurboBoost disabled)
- Motherboard
- ASUS P8Z68-V/GEN3
- Memory
- 16GB (4x4GB) Kingston HyperX DDR3 1600MHz @ 1333MHz
- Graphics Card(s)
- Nvidia EVGA GeForce GTX 1060 6GB
- Sound Card
- Realtek High Definition Audio (motherboard integrated)
- Monitor(s) Displays
- NEC Multisync EX231W
- Screen Resolution
- 1920x1080 @ 60Hz via DVI-D
- Hard Drives
- 2x Western Digital 1TB SATA3 Caviar Black Internal HDD // 1x WD 500GB USB 3.0 "My Passport Essential" External HDD // 1x WD 1TB USB 3.0 "My Passport Essential" External HDD // 2x WD 2TB USB 3.0 "My Passport Essential" External HDD
- PSU
- Corsair Professional Series Gold AX850
- Case
- Antec 300
- Cooling
- Air-cooling
- Keyboard
- Steelseries 6Gv2
- Mouse
- Steelseries Sensei RAW Glossy, Logitech M500
- Internet Speed
- DSL (AT&T)
- Antivirus
- Microsoft Security Essentials
- Browser
- Pale Moon, Mozilla Firefox 12, Opera 12, Chromium, IE9
- Other Info
- Virtual Machines (VirtualBox):
* Japanese Windows XP Professional SP3
* Japanese Windows 7 Professional SP1
