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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 4th, 2023

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  • Yeah I can see a treadmill being extremely boring. I usually ride and run outside, but I had to ride on a trainer for a couple of weeks because of an injury and it was just awful. I couldn’t wait to be done. But when I’m outside sometimes I’ll extend my ride for another 10km just because the weather is nice and I feel good, I’m (almost) never in a rush to finish.

    I don’t think I could run on a treadmill either, at least outside I have short goals to reach (ok now to the next lamp post…)


  • I cycle for adventure and experience, it’s also why I prefer gravel and offroad cycling to road. That gravel crunch in the forest, smell of the trees, sound of birds and absolutely no traffic is pure bliss. Ok sure there is some suffering during climbs, but the feeling of accomplishment when you finally get on top and the descent that follow are worth it.

    I join one gravel competition a year, but I go for the event, not to actually compete. I like riding with one friend, on paths where we can ride side by side and chat, and I don’t see a point in group road rides where you just stare at the butt of the rider in front of you the entire ride.

    In general I experience joy the entire bike ride, it’s like my therapy, a couple of hours without a phone, outside, just me and silence. I guess the fitness that comes with it is good too.





  • The only way to keep the current motherboard is 7700K, but that’s reall not worth the upgrade over 6700. You will need a new motherboard. You can get intel 12 and 13th gen or Ryzen 5000 and still use DDR4 RAM, but only if your RAM is at least 3200MHz CL16. If your RAM is slower, then you would’ve be getting the full potential of the new CPU. And in case you need to buy new RAM, you might as well get DDR5 since it doesn’t really cost much more than DDR4, and you can get Ryzen 7000 series CPU.

    If you’re getting intel 13th gen, make sure you pick the correct motherboard with the right RAM support, while CPUs support both kinds of RAM, the motherboard will only support the one kind it’s designed for.


  • Juat go for it. I’m running a 2080 with a 4K 1440Hz monitor and it runs ok, and when it doesn’t, I can reduce the details or enable DLSS or something. 3060Ti should be perfectly fine for 3440x1440.

    But then again it really depends on the games you play, if you’re currently struggling to keep 60fps at 1080p, then it’s gonna run worse on bigger resolution of course. And there are benefits of the larger display and higher resolution outside of games as well.

    Don’t get a 1080p 29", it’s gonna be overall smaller than two 24" monitors, an ultra wide 29" is the same height as 24", just wider, but not twice as wide.


  • Keep it in the PC as a secondary drive, you can move some gsmes to it which don’t really benefit from the SSD, or just move them so you don’t have to download them again.

    It’s also great for media storage, playing movies from SSD won’t be any faster, and if you keep your PC powered on, you can setup a plex server or a network share, and access the movies from the TV for example. You can also make backups of your data from the SSD to the HDD, it’s not as good as a backup in a separate computer, but it can still protect your data in case your boot drive goes corrupt (because of Windows updates), or simply if you delete a file by accident.





  • It will work fine, if it takes a few seconds longer to boot, it really does it matter with a server. But I’d still separate the OS from the data drive, since you can get a 120gb SSD for $10, it’s a no brainer really, in case you need to reinstall the OS, you can leave the data untouched.

    You can also backup data from the SSD to the HDD in case it fails.

    But for simplicity and if you don’t really care about possibly losing data, running everything from a single HDD will work fine, most stuff will get loaded in RAM anyway, and run from there, it’s not like you’ll be launching new apps all the time.