If I go for a 5600g with a am4 wifi motherboard, i can keep my build within 45k.
But if I try to go for Intel 12/13 gen i5, or amd 7000 series, the motherboards are damn expensive. The buid will easily go up by min 30k. Does it really make sense to spend extra 30k odd for the latest generation.
The usage is just coding, Excel and teaching my kid about raspberry Pi etc. Nothing to do with video editing or gaming or even movies.
I can spend the extra 30k, but it needs to make sense. I don't simply want to throw money away for hardly any gains for my usage.
Ideally i would have wanted to go for the latest ddr5 etc so that it does get outdated soon. But do you think the massive delta between generations makes it logical to go for the latest gen.
I want the build to have 32gb ram and 1 tb ssd. As coding needs a larger ram at times. Will probably run Linux only.
But if I try to go for Intel 12/13 gen i5, or amd 7000 series, the motherboards are damn expensive. The buid will easily go up by min 30k. Does it really make sense to spend extra 30k odd for the latest generation.
The usage is just coding, Excel and teaching my kid about raspberry Pi etc. Nothing to do with video editing or gaming or even movies.
I can spend the extra 30k, but it needs to make sense. I don't simply want to throw money away for hardly any gains for my usage.
Ideally i would have wanted to go for the latest ddr5 etc so that it does get outdated soon. But do you think the massive delta between generations makes it logical to go for the latest gen.
I want the build to have 32gb ram and 1 tb ssd. As coding needs a larger ram at times. Will probably run Linux only.