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I've been blessed with perfection

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lamphardwareiotcode-reviewworkspace
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  • H Offline
    H Offline
    honey the codewitch
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    55" 4k QLED monitor Ryzen 7 16-hw threads with NVMe and 32GB of RAM A custom built, convenient solderless hardware development platform I built specially for ESP32 boards, sitting under a brilliant little led magnifying lamp wired up via USB to my desk mounted backlit 11 port USB3x powered hub Interfacing with a backlit gaming keyboard just to keep a little ambient desk lighting even at 6am like now when it's otherwise dark here. It's finally everything I could have wanted - a computer I can't keep up with, a screen with more real estate than i even really need, where everything is as crisp as it is on my phone, complimented by a work desk where I can quickly wire up USB powered IoT widgets that I can actually see to build without bifocals - All the hardware above working brilliantly in tandem to give me a marvelous experience. I'm such a nerd that I get thrilled by something like this but oh well. My development lair is complete. I'm sure I'll find ways to improve on it eventually, but right now it's more than I could have hoped for. The last time I remember feeling that way about my dev environment was when I went from being a couch surfing teenager hacking on whatever i had available to working at the Microsoft corporate monster where I had a fancy professional workstation - a paycheck with a reliable place to sleep at night - and someone else to worry about IT. So I'm pretty excited about it.

    Real programmers use butterflies

    R D Sander RosselS K R 5 Replies Last reply
    0
    • H honey the codewitch

      55" 4k QLED monitor Ryzen 7 16-hw threads with NVMe and 32GB of RAM A custom built, convenient solderless hardware development platform I built specially for ESP32 boards, sitting under a brilliant little led magnifying lamp wired up via USB to my desk mounted backlit 11 port USB3x powered hub Interfacing with a backlit gaming keyboard just to keep a little ambient desk lighting even at 6am like now when it's otherwise dark here. It's finally everything I could have wanted - a computer I can't keep up with, a screen with more real estate than i even really need, where everything is as crisp as it is on my phone, complimented by a work desk where I can quickly wire up USB powered IoT widgets that I can actually see to build without bifocals - All the hardware above working brilliantly in tandem to give me a marvelous experience. I'm such a nerd that I get thrilled by something like this but oh well. My development lair is complete. I'm sure I'll find ways to improve on it eventually, but right now it's more than I could have hoped for. The last time I remember feeling that way about my dev environment was when I went from being a couch surfing teenager hacking on whatever i had available to working at the Microsoft corporate monster where I had a fancy professional workstation - a paycheck with a reliable place to sleep at night - and someone else to worry about IT. So I'm pretty excited about it.

      Real programmers use butterflies

      R Offline
      R Offline
      RickZeeland
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      I'm very pleased with my new LED nightlight with PIR sensor that turns on when I go upstairs early in the morning to my home office. No more stumbling around in the dark on the stairs! :-\

      H 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • R RickZeeland

        I'm very pleased with my new LED nightlight with PIR sensor that turns on when I go upstairs early in the morning to my home office. No more stumbling around in the dark on the stairs! :-\

        H Offline
        H Offline
        honey the codewitch
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        Technology is elephanting amazing. :)

        Real programmers use butterflies

        D 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • H honey the codewitch

          55" 4k QLED monitor Ryzen 7 16-hw threads with NVMe and 32GB of RAM A custom built, convenient solderless hardware development platform I built specially for ESP32 boards, sitting under a brilliant little led magnifying lamp wired up via USB to my desk mounted backlit 11 port USB3x powered hub Interfacing with a backlit gaming keyboard just to keep a little ambient desk lighting even at 6am like now when it's otherwise dark here. It's finally everything I could have wanted - a computer I can't keep up with, a screen with more real estate than i even really need, where everything is as crisp as it is on my phone, complimented by a work desk where I can quickly wire up USB powered IoT widgets that I can actually see to build without bifocals - All the hardware above working brilliantly in tandem to give me a marvelous experience. I'm such a nerd that I get thrilled by something like this but oh well. My development lair is complete. I'm sure I'll find ways to improve on it eventually, but right now it's more than I could have hoped for. The last time I remember feeling that way about my dev environment was when I went from being a couch surfing teenager hacking on whatever i had available to working at the Microsoft corporate monster where I had a fancy professional workstation - a paycheck with a reliable place to sleep at night - and someone else to worry about IT. So I'm pretty excited about it.

          Real programmers use butterflies

          D Offline
          D Offline
          Daniel Pfeffer
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          All you are missing is (a) a retractable lighting rod, and (b) an assistant called Igor. :D

          Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows. -- 6079 Smith W.

          H J 2 Replies Last reply
          0
          • D Daniel Pfeffer

            All you are missing is (a) a retractable lighting rod, and (b) an assistant called Igor. :D

            Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows. -- 6079 Smith W.

            H Offline
            H Offline
            honey the codewitch
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Well I do have a broomstick and a black cat. :-D

            Real programmers use butterflies

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • D Daniel Pfeffer

              All you are missing is (a) a retractable lighting rod, and (b) an assistant called Igor. :D

              Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows. -- 6079 Smith W.

              J Offline
              J Offline
              Jorgen Andersson
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              And a butler named Willikins.

              Wrong is evil and must be defeated. - Jeff Ello

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • H honey the codewitch

                55" 4k QLED monitor Ryzen 7 16-hw threads with NVMe and 32GB of RAM A custom built, convenient solderless hardware development platform I built specially for ESP32 boards, sitting under a brilliant little led magnifying lamp wired up via USB to my desk mounted backlit 11 port USB3x powered hub Interfacing with a backlit gaming keyboard just to keep a little ambient desk lighting even at 6am like now when it's otherwise dark here. It's finally everything I could have wanted - a computer I can't keep up with, a screen with more real estate than i even really need, where everything is as crisp as it is on my phone, complimented by a work desk where I can quickly wire up USB powered IoT widgets that I can actually see to build without bifocals - All the hardware above working brilliantly in tandem to give me a marvelous experience. I'm such a nerd that I get thrilled by something like this but oh well. My development lair is complete. I'm sure I'll find ways to improve on it eventually, but right now it's more than I could have hoped for. The last time I remember feeling that way about my dev environment was when I went from being a couch surfing teenager hacking on whatever i had available to working at the Microsoft corporate monster where I had a fancy professional workstation - a paycheck with a reliable place to sleep at night - and someone else to worry about IT. So I'm pretty excited about it.

                Real programmers use butterflies

                Sander RosselS Offline
                Sander RosselS Offline
                Sander Rossel
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                But can it run Crysis? ;p

                Best, Sander Azure DevOps Succinctly (free eBook) Azure Serverless Succinctly (free eBook) Migrating Apps to the Cloud with Azure arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript

                H 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • Sander RosselS Sander Rossel

                  But can it run Crysis? ;p

                  Best, Sander Azure DevOps Succinctly (free eBook) Azure Serverless Succinctly (free eBook) Migrating Apps to the Cloud with Azure arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript

                  H Offline
                  H Offline
                  honey the codewitch
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  What's that? It runs games fine, unless you try to run them at 4k. Then it gets like 20-30FPS depending on the game.

                  Real programmers use butterflies

                  Sander RosselS 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • H honey the codewitch

                    What's that? It runs games fine, unless you try to run them at 4k. Then it gets like 20-30FPS depending on the game.

                    Real programmers use butterflies

                    Sander RosselS Offline
                    Sander RosselS Offline
                    Sander Rossel
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    Not quite as funny if I have to explain[^] :sigh: I remember reading a review back in the day and my PC could probably run it at lowest settings. The requirements were so high it hurt its popularity, but then it became a meme and people are still talking about it :laugh:

                    Best, Sander Azure DevOps Succinctly (free eBook) Azure Serverless Succinctly (free eBook) Migrating Apps to the Cloud with Azure arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript

                    H 1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • Sander RosselS Sander Rossel

                      Not quite as funny if I have to explain[^] :sigh: I remember reading a review back in the day and my PC could probably run it at lowest settings. The requirements were so high it hurt its popularity, but then it became a meme and people are still talking about it :laugh:

                      Best, Sander Azure DevOps Succinctly (free eBook) Azure Serverless Succinctly (free eBook) Migrating Apps to the Cloud with Azure arrgh.js - Bringing LINQ to JavaScript

                      H Offline
                      H Offline
                      honey the codewitch
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #10

                      I don't know a lot about games. Or memes. :~

                      Real programmers use butterflies

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • H honey the codewitch

                        55" 4k QLED monitor Ryzen 7 16-hw threads with NVMe and 32GB of RAM A custom built, convenient solderless hardware development platform I built specially for ESP32 boards, sitting under a brilliant little led magnifying lamp wired up via USB to my desk mounted backlit 11 port USB3x powered hub Interfacing with a backlit gaming keyboard just to keep a little ambient desk lighting even at 6am like now when it's otherwise dark here. It's finally everything I could have wanted - a computer I can't keep up with, a screen with more real estate than i even really need, where everything is as crisp as it is on my phone, complimented by a work desk where I can quickly wire up USB powered IoT widgets that I can actually see to build without bifocals - All the hardware above working brilliantly in tandem to give me a marvelous experience. I'm such a nerd that I get thrilled by something like this but oh well. My development lair is complete. I'm sure I'll find ways to improve on it eventually, but right now it's more than I could have hoped for. The last time I remember feeling that way about my dev environment was when I went from being a couch surfing teenager hacking on whatever i had available to working at the Microsoft corporate monster where I had a fancy professional workstation - a paycheck with a reliable place to sleep at night - and someone else to worry about IT. So I'm pretty excited about it.

                        Real programmers use butterflies

                        K Offline
                        K Offline
                        kmoorevs
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #11

                        :thumbsup: Nice setup! I suppose it's only natural that we are all (well, most of us) working on hardware that gets better every year. Personally, I have nothing at all to complain about with an off-the-shelf tower (only upgrade being SSD) connected to twin 27 inch monitors. It's definitely the best system spec-wise I've ever had and best of all, it's the quietest system I've ever had. This is complemented with a 6 y/o laptop also with pretty good specs that I should be able to get another 5-6 years out of. IMHO, hardware improvements have plateaued to the point that even 10 y/o systems are still 'good enough' for most people. 20 years ago my desktop/laptop replacement cycle was around 2 years and now it's at least 10 years.

                        "Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse "Hope is contagious"

                        H 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • K kmoorevs

                          :thumbsup: Nice setup! I suppose it's only natural that we are all (well, most of us) working on hardware that gets better every year. Personally, I have nothing at all to complain about with an off-the-shelf tower (only upgrade being SSD) connected to twin 27 inch monitors. It's definitely the best system spec-wise I've ever had and best of all, it's the quietest system I've ever had. This is complemented with a 6 y/o laptop also with pretty good specs that I should be able to get another 5-6 years out of. IMHO, hardware improvements have plateaued to the point that even 10 y/o systems are still 'good enough' for most people. 20 years ago my desktop/laptop replacement cycle was around 2 years and now it's at least 10 years.

                          "Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse "Hope is contagious"

                          H Offline
                          H Offline
                          honey the codewitch
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #12

                          Yeah, this machine for me is intended as a 10 year device. My last "monitor" purchase was a 1080p 55" I got secondhand - in 2016** but I tend to throw about $1500 at a mid-high level system every 10 years, not counting the monitor, which usually gets upgraded independently, depending on a variety of separate factors that have nothing to do with the cpu. ** I prefer secondhand or display model large TVs because these things *often* fail 3-6 months in if they're going to fail, and maybe 1/3 of them I've encountered do. There's nothing I despise quite like trying to yank a 55" widget off of a wall to take it back to store, much less try to return it to an online retailer. I'd rather pay, even full price for a used one that will be good for another 10 years because it lasted the first year.

                          Real programmers use butterflies

                          M 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • H honey the codewitch

                            Technology is elephanting amazing. :)

                            Real programmers use butterflies

                            D Offline
                            D Offline
                            DRHuff
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #13

                            It is nice to live in the future!

                            If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • H honey the codewitch

                              Yeah, this machine for me is intended as a 10 year device. My last "monitor" purchase was a 1080p 55" I got secondhand - in 2016** but I tend to throw about $1500 at a mid-high level system every 10 years, not counting the monitor, which usually gets upgraded independently, depending on a variety of separate factors that have nothing to do with the cpu. ** I prefer secondhand or display model large TVs because these things *often* fail 3-6 months in if they're going to fail, and maybe 1/3 of them I've encountered do. There's nothing I despise quite like trying to yank a 55" widget off of a wall to take it back to store, much less try to return it to an online retailer. I'd rather pay, even full price for a used one that will be good for another 10 years because it lasted the first year.

                              Real programmers use butterflies

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              markrlondon
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #14

                              honey the codewitch wrote:

                              I'd rather pay, even full price for a used one that will be good for another 10 years because it lasted the first year.

                              The problems I find with second hand flat displays are: (1) The backlights fail. (2) They get damaged in transit. In an entirely opposite resolution to you, I've resolved only to buy brand new flat screens!

                              H 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • M markrlondon

                                honey the codewitch wrote:

                                I'd rather pay, even full price for a used one that will be good for another 10 years because it lasted the first year.

                                The problems I find with second hand flat displays are: (1) The backlights fail. (2) They get damaged in transit. In an entirely opposite resolution to you, I've resolved only to buy brand new flat screens!

                                H Offline
                                H Offline
                                honey the codewitch
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #15

                                I've never had any backlights fail on me, except one time with a laptop i dropped on the concrete. I've always bought flat panel TVs locally precisely because of the size and the fragility. I don't like the idea of shipping them. Even shipping PCs squicks me out (but not so much that I won't do it, though this computer was shipped to me with a partially glass case - i didn't know it was glass - and it came intact.)

                                Real programmers use butterflies

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • H honey the codewitch

                                  55" 4k QLED monitor Ryzen 7 16-hw threads with NVMe and 32GB of RAM A custom built, convenient solderless hardware development platform I built specially for ESP32 boards, sitting under a brilliant little led magnifying lamp wired up via USB to my desk mounted backlit 11 port USB3x powered hub Interfacing with a backlit gaming keyboard just to keep a little ambient desk lighting even at 6am like now when it's otherwise dark here. It's finally everything I could have wanted - a computer I can't keep up with, a screen with more real estate than i even really need, where everything is as crisp as it is on my phone, complimented by a work desk where I can quickly wire up USB powered IoT widgets that I can actually see to build without bifocals - All the hardware above working brilliantly in tandem to give me a marvelous experience. I'm such a nerd that I get thrilled by something like this but oh well. My development lair is complete. I'm sure I'll find ways to improve on it eventually, but right now it's more than I could have hoped for. The last time I remember feeling that way about my dev environment was when I went from being a couch surfing teenager hacking on whatever i had available to working at the Microsoft corporate monster where I had a fancy professional workstation - a paycheck with a reliable place to sleep at night - and someone else to worry about IT. So I'm pretty excited about it.

                                  Real programmers use butterflies

                                  R Offline
                                  R Offline
                                  Rage
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #16

                                  honey the codewitch wrote:

                                  55" 4k QLED monitor

                                  How far away are you sitting from your screen ? This seems to be ... huge. /edit : how is windows management done with such a monitor ? Can you split it as if you had two monitors ? When you maximize a window, does it take automatically half the screen or the total screen surface ?

                                  Do not escape reality : improve reality !

                                  H 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • R Rage

                                    honey the codewitch wrote:

                                    55" 4k QLED monitor

                                    How far away are you sitting from your screen ? This seems to be ... huge. /edit : how is windows management done with such a monitor ? Can you split it as if you had two monitors ? When you maximize a window, does it take automatically half the screen or the total screen surface ?

                                    Do not escape reality : improve reality !

                                    H Offline
                                    H Offline
                                    honey the codewitch
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #17

                                    I sit a few feet from it. :laugh: I'll be dead by 60 so i don't really care about my vision. Anyone that uses multiple monitors should be forced to anydesk into their own machine and try to use it remotely. All windows does (thankfully) to try and manage the size for me is set the font scaling to 300% After which i set it down to 150% It's only 3800+ pixels across. It doesn't need to be split. In VS Code, I just open two panels of code files side by side.

                                    Real programmers use butterflies

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