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stackghost 2 days ago

I also have a few machines I'm attached to. When I was fresh out of school I got a job at a startup writing PHP and bought myself an (at the time) brand new Thinkpad X220 with a Sandy Bridge i7 inside.

My 9 year old has it now. The battery is toast but the machine still faithfully trundles along. It plays Rollercoaster Tycoon on Fedora Linux. We're building a robot together for her birthday, so I'll be trying to install the Arduino tool chain on it.

I'll definitely miss that machine when it's no more.

assimpleaspossi 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

Hmm. The desktop I'm using right now has an i7 in it and I do everything with it. Hmm.

wkjagt 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

Which generation? Just i7 by itself doesn't mean much. I think the newest are like 14th generation? The X220 is only 2nd generation ("Sandy Bridge"), about 15 years old.

assimpleaspossi 2 days ago | parent [-]

Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-3770 CPU @ 3.40GHz (3403.48-MHz K8-class CPU). I think that's Ivy Bridge. I just don't pay attention. I think it's a year newer with a smaller die.

wkjagt a day ago | parent [-]

Oh yeah that's not so recent either, but it helps that it's a desktop version. Yours has 4 cores, whereas for example my 7th gen i7 (Kaby Lake) laptop only has 2.It's about 10 years old, but still enough for everything I use it for. I am always impressed how much you can do with older hardware.

stackghost 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Not sure what your two "Hmm"'s are implying, but the i7 label has been reapplied to newer chips as time goes on, which is why I specified it was a Sandy Bridge-era chip.

ge96 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

Lumia 920 for me, obsolete but I keep one around