F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Yes, you can sometimes enhance an older motherboard by adding new features through upgrades or modifications.

Yes, you can sometimes enhance an older motherboard by adding new features through upgrades or modifications.

Yes, you can sometimes enhance an older motherboard by adding new features through upgrades or modifications.

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GeorgePlaysFTW
Senior Member
261
03-08-2016, 08:17 PM
#1
Hello, new member. I wanted to ask about something that’s been on my thoughts. Sorry if it came across the wrong way. Can I keep my ASUS TUF Gryphon Z97 Armor Edition current with the latest features without buying a full upgrade? I’m not playing much anymore and my system runs smoothly for my needs. It would be great to maintain it in good shape. Maybe you have some tips on what to do or add to stay updated? I understand some might think about PCI-E cards, but I’d love your advice.
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GeorgePlaysFTW
03-08-2016, 08:17 PM #1

Hello, new member. I wanted to ask about something that’s been on my thoughts. Sorry if it came across the wrong way. Can I keep my ASUS TUF Gryphon Z97 Armor Edition current with the latest features without buying a full upgrade? I’m not playing much anymore and my system runs smoothly for my needs. It would be great to maintain it in good shape. Maybe you have some tips on what to do or add to stay updated? I understand some might think about PCI-E cards, but I’d love your advice.

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augustb19907
Senior Member
456
03-08-2016, 09:25 PM
#2
Yes, sometimes USB is an option. It varies based on the features you feel are lacking or required.
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augustb19907
03-08-2016, 09:25 PM #2

Yes, sometimes USB is an option. It varies based on the features you feel are lacking or required.

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_VoltsHD
Junior Member
7
03-09-2016, 12:33 AM
#3
What do you want to add?
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_VoltsHD
03-09-2016, 12:33 AM #3

What do you want to add?

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PlatinumTK
Junior Member
21
03-10-2016, 11:51 PM
#4
Tell us what you'd like changed. The toughest part of the forum isn't about fixing or improving computers—it's about convincing owners that their machines just need to work. Adopting the mindset that you must upgrade or keep up is mostly just marketing that companies have promoted since the 1950s. The anxiety of being "out of date" in technology. Just use your computer. Make minor adjustments when issues arise or needs appear.
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PlatinumTK
03-10-2016, 11:51 PM #4

Tell us what you'd like changed. The toughest part of the forum isn't about fixing or improving computers—it's about convincing owners that their machines just need to work. Adopting the mindset that you must upgrade or keep up is mostly just marketing that companies have promoted since the 1950s. The anxiety of being "out of date" in technology. Just use your computer. Make minor adjustments when issues arise or needs appear.

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Fred10244
Posting Freak
937
03-11-2016, 08:03 AM
#5
PCI/PCIe cards offer a solid foundation. What fresh developments are emerging? Overly complicated graphical BIOS interfaces aren't the issue. Recent updates mainly bring additional ports rather than major changes to motherboard specifications since 2006. Upgrading just for the sake of it isn't necessary unless your system requires more functionality. If your computer meets your needs, you're fine. Otherwise, consider a card to enhance performance.
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Fred10244
03-11-2016, 08:03 AM #5

PCI/PCIe cards offer a solid foundation. What fresh developments are emerging? Overly complicated graphical BIOS interfaces aren't the issue. Recent updates mainly bring additional ports rather than major changes to motherboard specifications since 2006. Upgrading just for the sake of it isn't necessary unless your system requires more functionality. If your computer meets your needs, you're fine. Otherwise, consider a card to enhance performance.

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K1ngVince
Member
157
03-16-2016, 03:46 PM
#6
The only missing component is NVMe storage, but if it's functioning properly now, upgrading isn't necessary.
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K1ngVince
03-16-2016, 03:46 PM #6

The only missing component is NVMe storage, but if it's functioning properly now, upgrading isn't necessary.

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Ayame2846
Junior Member
10
03-18-2016, 07:19 PM
#7
That board doesn't have a M.2 slot but it does support NVMe boot so that is something that could be easily added with a PCIe card. Though like you said if it's running fine there is no need to upgrade. The difference between NVMe and SATA SSDs isn't that big in normal use. Another thing mentioned in this BIOS update is support for a USB 3.1 (10Gbps?) add-on card, but for upgrading to that to make sense you'd need to have some USB devices that benefit from speeds faster than USB 3.0 5Gbps. Same thing for network cards, you'd need a network faster than 1Gbps for any 2.5Gbps or faster NIC to make sense.
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Ayame2846
03-18-2016, 07:19 PM #7

That board doesn't have a M.2 slot but it does support NVMe boot so that is something that could be easily added with a PCIe card. Though like you said if it's running fine there is no need to upgrade. The difference between NVMe and SATA SSDs isn't that big in normal use. Another thing mentioned in this BIOS update is support for a USB 3.1 (10Gbps?) add-on card, but for upgrading to that to make sense you'd need to have some USB devices that benefit from speeds faster than USB 3.0 5Gbps. Same thing for network cards, you'd need a network faster than 1Gbps for any 2.5Gbps or faster NIC to make sense.

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DittoJr
Junior Member
4
03-19-2016, 03:56 AM
#8
It doesn’t really affect this day for games either, since a decent SSD is only slightly slower than a high-end NVMe drive—just a few exceptions.
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DittoJr
03-19-2016, 03:56 AM #8

It doesn’t really affect this day for games either, since a decent SSD is only slightly slower than a high-end NVMe drive—just a few exceptions.