Time is money, and my 5+ year old desktop is costing me a heap of it right now. The final straw has come when processing several terabytes of stealer logs which has taken forever. Meanwhile, Stefan has been flying through them with a massive NVMe drive on a fast motherboard.
So, in no particular order, here's what I need it to do:
- Read and write multi-terabyte files fast
- Run SQL Server locally for both development and querying of large data sets (the latter is especially memory intensive)
- Dev environment is largely Visual Studio, SSMS and other (less intensive) tools
- Run a gazillion simultaneous Chrome tabs 😛
And here's my current thinking:
- SSDs (Samsung 9100 PRO?):
- Fast OS drive big enough for Win 11 plus apps
- The biggest possible drive for processing the sorts of files described in the intro
- I'll probably drop an existing 10TB mechanical drive in, purely for storage
- RAM:
- As much as feasible without ridiculous costs (a lot of the data processing is done in-memory)
- Probably don't need pricier ECC memory
- Processor
- I've had Intel but am open to change (Threadripper seems to have got a lot of love lately)
- GPU
- Needs to drive two 2560x1440 screens plus one 5120x1440
- This isn't going to be used for gaming or hash cracking
And before you ask:
- Yes, it will run Windows, not Mac OS or Linux
- No, pushing all this to "the cloud" is not feasible
Suggestions, comments, questions and all else welcome, thanks everyone!




I'm going to buck the trend here and suggest looking at used datacenter grade 3D XPoint drives for storage, instead of going for oodles of RAM. Get several P4800X drives, put them in RAID0 in Storage Spaces, and 256GB of RAM ought to do it. Use those drives as the working set drives, and back up cold data on other consumer-grade SSDs or spinning rust in a redundant array. Beyond a certain number of cores, as alluded to above, you're not going to get much more perf. My suggestion: Core Ultra 7 265K (or Ultra 9 285K if you want a tiny amount more single-thread performance), 256GB DDR5 (prioritize latency over ultimate bandwidth), and a PCIe to U.2 adapter for the 3D XPoint drive(s).
Ultimately, I'd look at minimizing latency vs maximizing bandwidth for DB queries.