I have already stated my reasons for low power -> Not waste costly electricity + make it low noise/quiet + make it easier thermally to fit into the old Aptiva case I want to use. Dragon please don't reply or I will cut your tail. Unlike you, I did read your message carefully so I know what you actually think, I took note of it, believe it or not. Don't need more of it though.
Bitcoin mining ? No, not at all, I am not into bitcoin or crypto mining at all, never will. I keep the computer running 24/7 purely for availability. I want it ot be ready to go instantly no matter what time of the day or night I might want to. Just like I do'nt want to have to wait if I have an urgent need to go to the loo.. last thing I want is to have to boot and set up a computer and type a password and start an app before the loo will let me unload my stuff.
Just like you expect a light switch to be immediately available. I did try 15 years ago to compromise and gave the "sleep" or "hibernate" modes a chance...but it at least in Linux it does not "just work" on my Desktop, no matter what the H/W. Either does not work or works unreliably or sometime freezes or what not. It's just not reliable enough that I can contemplate using it, far from it. No, even 15 years later I I doubt it works today, Linux rarely solves problems, it only pretends they are working on it.. or sometimes they just say you are doing it wrong, it's a feature not a bug !
Last week I got a notification about a bug report I filed on Ubuntu... 15 years ago.
Personally, I'd rather run at far higher speeds and get more done, mine runs at 4 Ghz 125W TDP and will accept an overclock to 4.2 Ghz, but I'm happy to prolong its life, so I leave it at its native speed.
The computer I'm using right now, boots to Ubuntu 20.04LTS from cold in
30 seconds. Ubuntu isn't for everyone, but it
does work on modern hardware. Most of the software I use is available native on Ubuntu: MATLAB, MS Teams, Remmina, fsl*, psychtoolbox, various development environments, Kicad X-Plane 11. There is browser based Office for Outlook, One Drive, Word. This computer is set up dual boot with Win10 for Photoshop, Illustator, games and TE firmware updates.
On this hardware, X-Plane 11 has a slightly higher frame rate on Ubuntu 20.04 then it does on Win10. Not enough to matter TBH and I usually use X-Plane on the Windows side to keep games and work seperate.
Here is the hardware:
Asus Q370M-C Micro ATX LGA 1151 v2 Socket DDR4 x4 2666MHz VGA HDMI 2x DisplayPort -- Typical modern buisness motherboard.
Intel Core
i7-8700 16GB 2400MHz DDR4 PC4-19200 CL17 Dual Ranked x8 based Unbuffered NON-ECC 1.2V 1024Meg x 64
WD Green 240GB M.2 2280 SSD 3D Nand (Ubuntu)
WD Blue 512GB SSD for Windows.
Ubuntu ran on this hardware in January 2020 with zero issues. By then the Q370 chipset had been out for about a year.
May 2020 I added:
Palet GTX 1650Super graphics card and a 500W power supply. The open source drivers that come with Ubuntu are not very good. Installing the nvidia driver was a minor annoyance
Before the graphics card, the power consumption was quite low. Even with the card in it isn't bad unless I'm using the GPU.
* fsl is a collection of tools for analysis of MRI, fMRI and DTI data -- >
https://fsl.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/fsl/fslwiki