I'd put good SSDs as second only to big monitors and lots of them.

From: ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com [mailto:ozdotnet-boun...@ozdotnet.com] On 
Behalf Of Stephen Price
Sent: Friday, 12 July 2013 4:39 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: (friday off topic) Fast hardware

+10 for mechanical keyboards.

I got me one of these:
http://www.razerzone.com/au-en/gaming-keyboards-keypads/razer-blackwidow-ultimate-stealth-2013/

and one of these:
http://www.corsair.com/vengeance-k90-performance-mmo-mechanical-gaming-keyboard.html

Takes some getting used to and you people can hear you typing from the 
neighbours house. (Even your neighbour would hear it Grant... lol)

Hmm.. just reading there is a stealth edition (which I thought I had...) so the 
non stealth edition is probably even louder... unless I've just gotten the 
model I have wrong.

On Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 11:47 AM, Grant Maw 
<grant....@gmail.com<mailto:grant....@gmail.com>> wrote:
Another thing I have found that keeps me moving, albeit a lesser thing, is a 
decent keyboard. Particularly for us older fellows (I am looking at you Greg 
Keogh) who grew up on solid hardware instead of the flimsy plastic rubbish that 
gets sold these days, a decent keyboard boosts productivity off the wall. I 
just bought an Armour U9W wireless mechanical keyboard and it is the *best* I 
have used since my Uni days. It's heavy (you could belt nails in with it), 
feels great, is non-slip and has a range of over 20m. I can't imagine why one 
would want to be typing from 20m away - it's a bit like an art gallery in that 
respect (you never use it, but it's good to know that it's there).

Cheers

G

On 12 July 2013 13:32, Stephen Price 
<step...@perthprojects.com<mailto:step...@perthprojects.com>> wrote:
Totally agree. I've taken work laptops and put my own SSD hard drive in them in 
the past (without asking for permission usually. They hire me trusting that I 
know what I'm doing, and I know that it will mean I won't be sitting about 
waiting for stuff to happen).
I did some benchmarking on build times and found that I could do a build in 
about 5 to 10 minutes. The rest of the team were taking 15 minutes per build. 
Companies really need to wake up and realise a few hundred dollars will save 
them immeasurable volumes of wasted time. AND keep their staff happy. Arguably 
their best resource. So worth it.

On Fri, Jul 12, 2013 at 9:18 AM, Preet Sangha 
<preetsan...@gmail.com<mailto:preetsan...@gmail.com>> wrote:
About 2 years ago I opted to purchase a laptop that was the fastest I could 
afford but not paying stupid money.

My work these days is mostly heavy database work so every gram of performance 
helps. It has a Sandybridge I7 and 16G of Ram. The key thing that sold me this 
laptop was that it supports 2 x sata III hard drives.These I replaced with a 
RAID-0 pair of fast SSDs.

Anyway the point of this email is not that I'm boasting but that I cannot ever 
imagine going back to working on slower hardware ever again. The experience of 
not waiting to rebooting the machine, opening apps like visual studio or 
rebooting virtual machines in mere seconds (in fact  I built a new Windows7 VM 
in about 6 minutes from scratch) .

If I can recommend anything to fellow dev,s especially those that do the paid 
time consultancy, is that please don't cripple yourself with bad tools.

--
regards,
Preet, Overlooking the Ocean, Auckland





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