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New Computer Cyberist Best Practices

NOTE: This article discusses general best practices and is not intended for operational instructions.

“Sometimes it is the people no one imagines anything of who do the things no one can imagine.”The Imitation Game


Cinematic Opening — Bletchley Park, 1943

Bombs shake the windows. Cryptographers slam typewriter keys like machine-gun fire. Alan Turing sits silent amid the chaos, not replacing broken machines—but building a better one.

Because sometimes the problem isn’t the code.

Sometimes the problem is the machine you’re running it on.

Fast-forward to today. Your business isn’t decrypting Axis communications, but every minute lost to a slow computer, every crash before a client meeting, every “we’ll replace it next quarter” delay… is a silent form of sabotage.

And unlike Turing, you do know the solution.


Secret Nobody Admits in IT

Here’s the truth most IT pros won’t say out loud:

The biggest conflict in technology is upgrading systems.

  • IT has no budget authority
  • Accounting thinks everything is too expensive
  • Everyone waits until machines die and business stops

Meanwhile:

  • Every device has a warranty expiration
  • Every hardware component has mean time between failure (MTBF)
  • Every OS and software has a published support lifecycle

Those dates—not feelings—should dictate upgrades.

The only time you replace systems early is when you’re buying innovation that materially improves business.

Everything else is gambling.


Workstations: Only Exception (Sort Of)

Yes, you can try to squeeze an extra year after warranty if the OS is supported—but:

Who volunteers to work slower?

Yesterday my workstation randomly powered off. Diagnostics were fine. Troubleshooting got me nowhere. Thankfully, we had a spare and I finished the meeting from a cube.

That’s how fragile “we’ll wait another year” really is.


Your Workstation Replacement Checklist

Things nobody teaches, but everyone needs:

🔹 Before You Swap

You shouldn’t store files locally—but if you did:

  • Drag Desktop + Downloads to OneDrive
  • Copy Teams custom backgrounds from:
%APPDATA%\Microsoft\Teams\Backgrounds\Uploads

Then unlink OneDrive (not suspend it).

🔹 After You Swap

Devices must be removed from:

  • Active Directory
  • Entra / Intune
  • Cisco Umbrella
  • (optional) Local MDM or endpoint security

Finally, wipe the machine with DBAN so no digital scavenger gets PII.


Disposal: Don’t Hoard a Bonepile

Old monitors, printers, and systems turn into a dusty graveyard of “we might use that someday.”

Instead:

  • Schedule Salvation Army pickup
  • Earn a small tax deduction
  • Devices get refurbished and reused

Everyone wins.


Specs We Recommend for 2026 and Beyond

If you want a machine that flies vs. limps:

✔ Intel i9 AI-enabled processor ✔ 32GB RAM ✔ Dual video cards (3 monitors) ✔ SSD — Windows 12 will crawl without it ✔ Infrared cam for passwordless login (Windows Hello) ✔ Windows Pro or Enterprise (NEVER Home)

Some people prefer ultrawide monitors. Great—until that one panel dies and you’re toast.

True story: Years ago, my VP Sheryl Flake asked, “What am I going to do with two monitors?” I laughed: “Double the work.”

Three years later she asked for a third. Today she can’t live without them.

Productivity is compounding.


Employee Perk: Give Old Machines (The Right Way)

If:

  • The OS is still supported
  • The hardware is sound
  • BitLocker is enabled
  • You remove it from your network

…you can give it to employees to improve remote productivity.

They keep it even if they leave. Just make it clear:

It’s not for gaming, side hustles, or someone’s Etsy empire—it’s your backup work machine.

With Intune you can:

  • Lock
  • Wipe
  • Remove corporate data
  • Decommission on exit

Zero drama.


Windows 10: Midnight Deadline

While everyone slept, Windows 10 reached end of support.

If you want to keep an older machine another year, you need:

ESU — Extended Security Updates (And it’s not cheap.)

But now you know the acronym when your vendor starts talking in circles.


Cinematic Closing — Machine That Changed the War

In the final scene of The Imitation Game, Turing’s machine is dismantled and locked away—not because it failed, but because its time had passed.

Every system, no matter how brilliant, has an expiration date.

If you wait for death to replace technology, you’re not preserving budget—you’re sabotaging mission outcomes.

The machine may not be breaking codes.

But it’s enabling someone to do work no one imagined.


Because sometimes the smartest thing you can do with technology… is simply buy the new computer.


👉 Take the 1-minute quiz to see if you’re taking an expensive gamble on your IT and your business. Then schedule your Cyber Risk Analysis.

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