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How frequently does your workplace conduct a tech-refresh of PCs (desktops and laptops) and do developers get newer equipment more often?

Example:

  • Developers every 18 months
  • Rest of workforce every 36 months
  • Laptops every 24 months
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9 Answers

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Where I work each PC is refreshed every 3 years. It is the same time for developers or other R&D personnel. However, developers have access to more powerful equipment. So, when an administrative assistant get his/her computer replaced, it will be replaced with a normal model. When developers or other members of the R&D organization needs to replace their computers it will get replaced normally by enterprise models.

There is an exception clause, where non-developers or non-r&d could get powerful equipment, but it should be justified by at least two managers.

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I've worked for several organizations with similar schedules, so I'll just upvote your answer instead of saying "me too!" :) – ahockley Jul 23 at 14:34
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Gear is replaced on a 3-5 year rotation based on what you do. The Power users and Admins get their machines replaced every 3 years. We then trickle down those machines to people who are running older hardware but don't have a need to have a cutting edge machine. It's much cheaper to add two years to a hardware warranty than to buy even most of the cheapest of the low end desktops. After 5 years we retire most of the hardware, but keep some of it around as spares just in case.

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Typically, when they break.

With the work that most of the users are doing on them (Word, Excel, Power Point, I.E.), there's very little benefit in upgrading them all the time.

As for the developers, the compiling is such a small part of the change-compile-test cycle now, unless the application is pretty massive, you don't get much benefit.

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Five to Six Years.

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Where I work, most PCs are replaced every five years or so. Developer PCs are replaced more frequently - every three years. Most staff use basic applications (Office, Web, etc), but since developers are running the IDEs, Database tools, development servers, etc, they get preference for newer hardware.

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It seems to be a rolling target in our organization, depending on the current state of PCs, the amount of warranty left on machines and the requirements of the end users.

With Windows XP Pro machines there just isn't really much of a requirement to replace any PC that's < 5 years old for most employees of an organization. Developers don't get newer equipment more often unless there's some justification for it -- usually more RAM does the trick.

Typically any machine that has a significant problem once it's 3 yr warranty expires will be replaced. Other than that targetted replacement of the oldest machines seems to be the norm.

Exceptions can be made with management approval.

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I don't upgrade my systems on a schedule, but I typically replace them every five years. Sometimes I get even a little bit longer out of them depending on the user. I usually do "build to order" (BTO or "CTO") when I purchase machines, and I configure them with both the specific user's requirements and long life in mind.

I also run software way behind the bleeding edge. Just getting ready to roll out Office 2007, for instance. When you're not constantly upgrading software (when there's no compelling reason to), you don't find yourself having to upgrade hardware as often.

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For our standard user we are on a 5 year cycle, We aren't moving to vista (the current plan is to bypass it and go straight to windows 7, but not until at least spring 2010). Most of our users are still running Office 2003 and some are on Open Office. We upgrade the developers and a few superusers based more on need than any schedule.

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I work at a mom-and-pop ISP, and as such we don't really have a policy beyond "when it dies". This year, we managed to get some new LCD monitors. Most of our computers are pretty old (4-5 years), but I make sure we don't ask much of them either. My workstation doesn't do much beyond using the internet in the usual ways and connecting to our servers via SSH. I do, on the other hand need plenty of desktop space to multitask in and as such my monitor is quite a lot bigger than everyone else's. I used to have 2 17" CRTs on my desk.

The fattest software we use is Filemaker for our customer database. In fact, if it weren't for that, we could all be running Linux in here.

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