L
L
Liag2021-04-03 21:51:03
Windows
Liag, 2021-04-03 21:51:03

Windows 7 or 10?

There is a PC on I5 3330, GTX 950, 8 oz, on win7, standing on HDD. Having bought an ssd, I thought, is there any point in adapting the seven for ssd? The main criterion is the minimum consumption of system resources, there are no problems with program compatibility. What do you advise?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

5 answer(s)
D
Dmitry Roo, 2021-04-03
@Liag

Windows 10, of course. There is no point in putting a seven - it came out a hundred years ago.

R
ru6ak, 2021-04-03
@ru6ak

Question 7 or 10 generally does not concern SSD and there is nothing to adapt in any of them.
And the answer to the question is either 8.1 if you are used to 7 or 10 at once with all its pluses and minuses.

A
Artem @Jump, 2021-04-03
curated by the

What is more convenient, then put it.
The SSD will work just fine anyway.

D
Dimonchik, 2021-04-03
@dimonchik2013

there is a sense under nvme
oh * fuck from the speed of the same browser,
well, yes, ssd is better than hdd,

R
rPman, 2021-04-04
@rPman

ssd will work everywhere, even without support for ahci and drivers (the trim command will not work in ide mode, which in some cases allows you to optimize disk performance)
You need to proceed from what tasks you will perform on the machine and whether they can be performed on win7
win10 more load on disk (so much so that hdd is not strongly recommended already) and higher RAM consumption (up to 1GB without tuning only for OS operation, when win7 eats about 400mb, winxp - 50mb)
If you tune, in theory you can bring the consumption of win10 to like win7 but with the next major update everything is back there.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question