This is pretty much my PC atp, the only parts of it that are original are the side cover that has been sticker bombed over time and one of the ssds that was worth keeping for extra storage and is now my linux partition drive. Everything else has been replaced at some point including the case, which is the same model as the old one, just with the original side plate bc stickers. I have actually referred to it as the PC of theseus in conversation lmao
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For me it is when i change the CPU or when i reinstall on a new bootdisk.
This is just the Ship of Theseus.
Theseus' battlestation
according to microslop, when you change the mobo
Mobo because it's like the keel of the ship.
Although it falls to the same problem if you swap in the exact same mobo lol.
Ah yes, the classic Chip of Theseus problem.
PCtheus
The PC of Theseus!
Technically my my PC is the same PC I used decades ago. It started as a Pentium 3 with... 64MB of RAM if I remember, and something like a whopping 10GB hard drive. It's still the same PC of course, I swear!
I remember when I got a Voodoo 3d card with like 128mb of memory for my Pentium 233 WITH MMX. Played Ultimate Online like a boss.
Not very many Voodoo cards came with 128mb and only in the Pentium III/4 era. You may be remembering your total RAM.
If I had to limit it to physically, I'd say the motherboard. It's the only thing in the box that everything has to be compatible with. Everything else is the extension.
Personally, I believe in a machine spirit. It's a nebulous concept and it muddies the water here, but really the object is new when it no longer feels like the old. If I install a new is some day and my fans don't breathe the same, my lights don't blink like they did, or the chirp of my drives sounds alien, then I know I've lost the ghost and will have to learn a whole personality. Same is true for all my objects.
Personally, I believe in a machine spirit.
The machine spirits need to be kept pleased. Praise be to the Omnissiah.
The timeless "PC of Theseus" question. For me, it's when I replace the motherboard. Especially if it involves a new case.
IMO, it's when you replace the motherboard. It's the real heart of the machine; without it, all your other parts ain't doing shit. And since you can get by longer on the same motherboard while still leaving everything else to be upgraded, getting a new motherboard very often necessitates getting at least a new CPU and possibly RAM if you're making a generational leap that requires a new socket type.
I always thought of the CPU as the beating heart and the MoBo as the vessel/body.
At the same time: upgrading CPU often requires a new MoBo too, so I guess they are bound together anyways.
For the original question I'd say CPU + MoBo swap is a new machine. GPU and RAM are upgrades.
Definitely when I upgrade the mainboard + CPU, which usually also means new RAM. It's pretty expensive, you have to change several parts in one go and it's much more noticable in general usage than the GPU.
mainboard + CPU
To me thats the line. Unless you are like, a very active enthusiast, most people, once they get their CPU installed cooler installed, etc.. you probably aren't' swapping that out. Its pretty much a computer at that point.
As long as it's the same hard drive (or image), it's the same computer. New computer whenever it's a completely fresh install. I've had the same case since 2013ish. It's had a few new computers in it.
I upgrade my computer either when it's not working as desired or I come into some extra cash and wanna treat myself to a boost.
Sadly with the new memory and storage costs I'll probably ride this system out for ~10 years. (I pray she survives that long)
Replacing the motherboard.
I would've thought that too. But recently I had to swap a new mobo in after a failure and no other parts got done. Felt like the same PC just working again.
Yeah I think upgrading the mobo would be more accurate, when it's a big enough change that you need to replace RAM and the CPU as well.
I don't think I have upgraded a processor for personal use this millenia
When you have upgraded enough components that you can build another PC out of the old parts.
That's my qualification. It's a new computer when I'm just nicking a few bits out of the old computer, either leaving the old computer still functional or could be made functional again without too much trouble.
we got a hammer in my family thats over 1000 years old...
New mb, cpu, ram and videocard.
In my head, for basically no reason, the motherboard is "the" PC. It's the one large part that really sets the overall generation. I could swap my previous PC's motherboard into my new case, the thing is DDR4 RAM and an AM4 CPU would have to come with it.
Because I do shit like build a SFF PC with an ITX board in a small case, and then turn around and build a fairly standard mATX board in a mini-tower, a lot of the case, case accessories, and GPU are fitted to the system. It would actually be pretty stupid to put the parts of my last PC in my current case because they'd swim.
The case of PCeseus.
I used to keep one cd drive from the 90s in every built. Technically it could be understood as the same pc I just upgraded everything around the cd drive.
Last build I made I finally ditched it. I bought a case with bays just in case but I noticed that I haven't used it in the last 10 years so I just didn't install it.
The ship of theseus says hello
You have to decide what it is that defines the entity
The title of "my gaming PC"? Whatever which holds the title is that PC at any given moment.
Defined by some property? Desktop setup, game/file collection, hardware type (whichever has the hardware most suitable for the task, eg. the most capable PC being your gaming PC, etc)
Defined by substance/components? OS image, motherboard / CPU, or even just the case, etc...
You can even use all definitions at once with completely different choices in each, because your current gaming PC might become your next home server as you buy a new PC, then you move around some components like RAM, reinstall a device, make one a media center for your TV, etc...
When the hostname changes. So, never.
I'm definitely reusing hostnames when fucking around with my Raspberry Pis, too ...
When windows insists your key is no longer valid, because to many parts have changed and you better buy a brand new licence or link your old licence with you microsoft account. But of course you never did befor upgrading, so now you are stuck in an endless loop of trying to find the right buttons online to fucking link your licence to your account and get it approved for the upgraded pc, but it won't work and where did that one link go? And why won't micorsoft allow me to use my key oh god, oh no. Please microsoft!
Penguins are coming for me.
Weirdly, the case. If the case is the same, my brain doesn't register it as a new computer, but the case changing makes it feel new even if the only thing that changed is the case
After a CPU/GPU upgrade of more than two generations, each or combined, which usually necessitates a motherboard upgrade. Not always, but almost always.
Yea, motherboard is my metric. It's what defines the base system capability.
When it's a new build lol
And a new build means a new motherboard, at the minimum.
If I want hardware I can't plug into my existing MB, I just buy all new parts and build a new PC and give my old one to one of the kids or something.
On the other hand, if I want a big upgrade and I have a bunch of leftover parts, I generally throw them into a new case with a lower-end MB and lower end versions of whatever I kept in my old PC and wind up with a leftover "old" PC anyway.
But I rarely can afford to upgrade my computer. I already gave away my old PC to a kid who needed it and I'm just using my work laptop as my only computer. I owe myself a new PC, but it looks like I'm going to be spending over $5k by the time I have the money saved up for it. That's a spicy meatball.
I've noticed some good secondhand stuff recently. If you think like getting a project car; $50K brand new, but got this one for $10K, needs about $10K of parts and some love then it's ready to go.
I knew someone who had essentially replaced every single component in their old PC over and over again, which resulted in the guts of a (then) modern gaming PC inside an old 486 tower because everything still fit.
Is it the same computer?
For me it is the mobo + cpu + power supply since I do it rarely enough that I need all three. I usually do RAM at the same time, but sometimes expand it between upgrades. GPU is on a different cycle to spread out costs.
I used the same case for almost 2 decades, so it is definitely the innards that matter.
mobo if it has no soul, otherwise storage