korell: Oh, a question on the SSD. What is the recommended usage?
Primary SSD for OS and drivers/device software, then all other programs, games and documents on the secondary drive (which in my case would be a mechanical)? Or do people actually start installing the games that they mainly play or commonly used programs on the SSD too?
Only I'm worried about the limited write cycles on SSDs,
Not so long ago, the only SSD that one could afford were 64/128GB, meaning you just had enough space for OS (64GB) and personnal folders (128GB). With 250 GB you can aadd some programs. The only thing to avoid is installing / desinstalling all the time if I understand well. I had a 64GB win 7 alone but replaced it with a 500 GB on which I have my OS, my non game long term programs ( openoffice, photo edition etc ) . My documents and pictures are on a specific drive ( as a matter of fact my former system drive ) . Then, aside from that I have 2x1Tb + 1x2Tb in HDD ( the PC is 6 years old and has gone through two "midlife" upgrades. Usually I do an upgrade after 2.5 / 3 years then change the PC after 5 years, here I intend to keep it till I can ). Limited write cycles is a potential issue, if you keep your SSD a long time. early SSD were said to have a useful life of 5 years, and that has gone up. For the ordinary user, that's now 10, 20 or (much) more years... For a business, constant use ( like trading algorithms ) , it might be as little as 6/12 months, just to be safe. In other words , life is conditionned by usage and maintenance practice applicable.
korell: So I will need a new Windows. Win7 seems too old now, especially with support ending in the not too distant future. Win8/8.1 is a no go as I've heard way too many negative things about it. So it will have to be Win10. I
Especially as Microsoft intends to force windows 10 adoption to Skylake users by mid 2017 ( no new update after then). I'm really p....off by the MS practice around 10, and, like many, I suspect it announces something nasty ( the advent of an OS by subscription for instance ). Now is this a reason to comply ? I would tend to say no, but you really need to know what's ahead...
korell: Now that is something I hadn't considered. Sure it would get me a good machine and save me the cost of the higher end GPUs, and then towards the end of the year I could then switch out the GPU for one of the new ones (provided they do deliver the performance increases and are reliable). However, it would mean messing inside my machine, which I'm not overly confident with (but I could always get help with that). But it is definitely another option.
To be economically worth it, you'd need to go for a relatively modest GPU now. Not a 970 ( that's still too serious money, to throw it away after 6 or 9 months .... ) , but a 960 or below, or maybe a cheaper Radeon R7. Changing a GFX is peanuts, just make sure there is enough space in the case ( hence my preference for reasonably sized coolers) , and that your PSU has the right set of connectors or is modular ( since some cards use 6 pin connectors, some 8 pins )