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Computers

Current Computers

My flagship machines are those that I rely on for my day-to-day computing needs. For many years I relied on a single flagship desktop, and for a few I relied on a single flagship laptop, but in recent years I have adopted a ‘dual flagship’ arrangement where I have both a reasonably powerful desktop and a reasonably powerful laptop.

My typical upgrade cadence is that I perform a major upgrade to my flagship desktop when it is five years old, and then replace it entirely when it is ten years old. I replace my flagship laptop every five years. Of course I can adjust this schedule as-needed, and perform an upgrade early if a machine dies or late if it holds up better than expected.

Each hardware upgrade iterates my ‘revision’ number. For laptops, this is a simple two digit number (beginning with revision 01, as originally built). For desktops, revision numbers are prepended with an A (for revisions of the initial build) or B (for revisions following the major mid-life refresh).

Odyssey

Odyssey is my home powerhouse. It maintains my music collection, manages photos, edits videos, runs various operating systems in virtualization, and serves as my development machine for web and mobile applications. And I built it myself!

Nova

Nova
Nova

Nova is a mobile workhorse. It is capable of doing most of what Excelsior can do, but it can do it anywhere. It is a pretty powerful laptop that can keep up with just about anything I throw at it.

Other Machines and Peripherals

Computer History

Flagship Desktops

These are the machines that served as my main, day-to-day, stationary workhorse.

  • Excelsior (Intersanity Transwarp; Intel Core i7 4.1ghz; Windows 10)
  • Nadia (Power Mac G4; Motorola G4 733mhz; Mac OS X 10.3)
  • Maurice (Compaq Presario; AMD K6-II 266mhz; MS-DOS 7.1/Windows 98)
  • Ziggy 3 (Acer Desktop; AMD 486 90mhz; MS-DOS 7.0/Windows 95)
  • Ziggy 2 (Gateway 2000 Desktop; Intel 386 25mhz to Evergreen 486 75mhz; MS-DOS 6.22/Windows 3.11)
  • Ziggy (IBM PC-AT; Intel 286 6mhz; MS-DOS 5.11)

Flagship Notebooks

These are the machines that served as my main mobile workhorse. Generally they augmented a flagship desktop, although occasionally they stood on their own.

Servers

Not long after Melissa and I were married, we discovered that we had a need between the two of us for a server to back up our data, share files back and forth, and generally keep our home network under control.

Other Computers

Because I’m a nerd, it is rare that I limit myself only to my flagship machines. These other machines have floated in and out of my life as-needed, serving as backups, ‘coffee-table’ machines, and other ancillary purposes. Some are desktops, but most are laptops.

Scott Bradford has been putting his opinions on his website since 1995—before most people knew what a website was. He has been a professional web developer in the public- and private-sector for over twenty years. He is an independent constitutional conservative who believes in human rights and limited government, and a Catholic Christian whose beliefs are summarized in the Nicene Creed. He holds a bachelor’s degree in Public Administration from George Mason University. He loves Pink Floyd and can play the bass guitar . . . sort-of. He’s a husband, pet lover, amateur radio operator, and classic AMC/Jeep enthusiast.