Not a hot take (unless I am also a hot taker) - somewhere around the mid 2010s it seems, we didn't need to be upgrading every 2-3 yrs which is nice. I type this on a 13 yr old Alienware laptop. My gaming rig (i7-6700, gtx 1080) runs Arc Raiders "ok" enough). My phone is 8 yrs old (Android 8.1).
I've also hit that stage in my life where my frugalness has outpaced my dislike of e-waste and sending things to landfill, so if it still works, Ima keep using it.
@elly
Lukewarm take at best... I guess I still would've had my GTX1060 if it hadn't died on me. My RTX3060-sporting laptop will be with me as long as it lives.
@elly RTX 5090 is the minimum requirement for the average windows kernel anti cheat malware
@elly i’m still on a rx580 and it still plays most of what i wanna play. stuff not being available for linux due to EAC or other malware is a larger issue than processing power for me xD
> I bought a Google Pixel 6 back in 2022, it still has a great camera, performance and whatnot. Why would I want to replace a perfectly working phone just because it's ~4 years old?
I'm also on a Pixel 6 and it's been pretty good, but it's going to stop getting security updates in a few months so I think I'm about due for an upgrade... not to mention the battery life has degraded a lot over time...
But yeah I agree with you for 99% of use cases
@elly That's a pretty cool project, I plan to keep using #GrapheneOS though. And like I said, there's other reasons I want a new phone anyway, the end of security updates is just one of the main ones and the EOL date is a convenient "deadline".

with ~76% of battery life left@elly I wouldn’t call any of that old, it’s newer than every computer I have.
My main laptop is a ThinkPad T440p (~13 years old, with i7-4700MQ, 16GB DDR3L, and a 500GB SATA SSD (Samsung 860 EVO that’s at least 6 years old although not in constant use during that time)), and I would compile Linux on it.
I do have some newer computers but they’re still all older than 2020:
Both of the working smartphones I have (PinePhone and OnePlus 8T) are from 2020. I don’t see why anyone would need a faster SoC than the Snapdragon 865 on a phone, it’s mainly restricted by the shitty operating system (Android). I think part of the reason people upgrade phones so often is a combination of phone manufacturers only providing a few years of updates and difficult-to-replace batteries.
(Also it must be LPDDR3 not DDR3L in your KOHAKU, that SoC doesn’t support DDR3L)
@tezoatlipoca @elly made me realize my phone is also 8yo now. I’m honestly not sure how newer ones are supposed to be better, and I don’t even like my phone (don’t buy xiaomi, gals. bad idea)
…my phone is literally older than my youngest brother…
I totally agree that we are way past the point where you NEED to upgrade for doing your things, and I totally agree it's not sustainable in the long run, but I kinda understand the reason why some people upgrade their hardware often. It's nice to have new things, bigger numbers and so on!
@elly I’m on a laptop from 2021 with a broken fan and I’m still able to do 90% of things I want to do. nobody can tell me it’s essential to get the latest tech, especially if it’s a big PC type build.
…I mean, I do want to replace that fan at some point so I can play minecraft again. Not that I checked whether I can, I just assume it’s too much for it to handle without a fan.
as for the future? if my laptop’s chinesium shell does finally crumble enough for me to stop wanting to use it, I kinda want something with HDR next. It’s getting harder and harder to find a laptop with reasonable specs though
@elly
>except for Celerons or cheap ARM SoCs
hot take but even those can be / are fine imo, it all depends on the usecase
@elly Considering the performance difference between a 3060, 4060 and 5060, I wouldn’t classify that as old in the same way I might compare a pre-zen or possibly zen 1 AMD cpu to a zen4+ and newer processor. Obviously workload makes a big difference in these cases though and I do frown on people judging on age/usability.
@elly 30-50 feral rust-analyzers: is there someone you forgot to ask? xD
Absolutely true that HW from even 10 years ago is perfectly fine for lots of use cases but when you compile a lot, perf boosts add up. I upgraded from a perfectly good 5850U laptop to an X1E-80-100 one and it's like 2x faster in multicore.. And the X2EE is already sounding like a very-nice-to-have with a whole extra GHz of boost and 6 more cores… unfortunately RAM crisis tho x_x
@tezoatlipoca @elly just sucks that I'm forced to run the Nvidia closed source drivers if I want to have any gaming performance on the 10xx cards. I have two laptops one with a 1050 mobile one with a 1060 and that prevents me from switching both to Chimera Linux 🤬
@weirdtreething I want this to Just Work, but modern software is kind of an L. my partner's Pixelbook Go on Fedora eats 6GB (of 8) basically just idling KDE Plasma. starts OOM killing after a handful of Firefox tabs
back in my day I went thru uni w 4GB and upgrading to 8GB was super comfy
@elly but also when was the last time you used a windows device? They shove so much bloat into your gullet that you need small powerplant to run a laptop.
@elly I have a conspiracy theory. This is engineered into people. Let's call it obselecence through social engineering
@_r @elly @tezoatlipoca my phone is also from 2017 😭
The problem there isn't the age, but that I literally cannot buy anything newer without downgrading and I have to take care of software updates myself, since Siny stopped supporting it in 2019.
@weirdtreething same! I suspect it has to do w memory leaks after not rebooting for 30days but dunno 🤷♀️
@elly I code and play games rarely. The main factor for me is compilation time, everything else feels same. I use i3-6006(8gb ram) laptop interchangeably with ryzen 3500x desktop, however when it comes to compilation of huge projects, I do it on my desktop, but it is slow nonetheless. 22.5 min(IIRC) for arm-unknown-linux-gnueabi toolchain in crosstool-ng, it would take hours on my laptop. I do this not often luckily.
Bevy(Rust) game was compiling with release profile 1+ hours laptop.