How worried should US people be about "tariffs"? Should I invest in upgrading my equipment ASAP?
Basically title. I'm a digital artist in the USA and not rich by any stretch. In fact, somewhat in debt. (Aren't we all.)
I also try really hard to not be a mindless consumer. I use old equipment as long as I can, repair, refurbish, etc...
All this talk of upcoming tariffs has me worried that, rather than being able to get a day-job at newly opened US manufacturing for electronics or something, I'll instead be paying +60% more on like everything.
I know tech is a depreciating asset, but should I try to upgrade now to hold out for the next ~5 years or so?
I was considering hunting down a motherboard/cpu/RAM combo for instance.
Are worries about tariffs overblown?
Trying to figure out how to prepare as best I can with my meager resources before everything just...keeps getting worse.
I am getting paid for my digital art, it's not living money though. My spouse has a more stable income that enables me to keep trying.
Thanks in advance. <3
EDIT: Thanks a ton for all the helpful replies! I'm glad I'm not being overly paranoid.
Some of you have asked for system specs so here they are for the curious:
System Specs:
OS: OpenSUSE Tumbleweed
Mobo: Z590 Aorus Elite AX
CPU: i7-10700k @ 5.1 Ghz
GPU: Nvidia RTX 3090
Mem: 32GB DDR4 (forget the speed...3000?)
I want to be clear: I don't mean to sound too panicked and I'm more than happy to be content with what I have and see my blessings for what they are.
However, as I'm trying to break into being a 3D Blender artist and gamedev professionally, I'm trying to strategize whether standards will significantly increase and leave me behind in the next 5 years or so. (Game industry, not trying to do Hollywood VFX models on my home rig or anything lol)
I don't game so much these days unfortunately. And if I do, like 5% of my library is particularly demanding. 😂
I am not in the US, and I have no idea of how Trumps tariffs will work, but in general I would suggest that you look at what would get you the best bang for the buck now so you can power through the next four years.
Here is a bit of an unusual suggestion, if your computer fails and you are low on funds, look into getting a Raspberry pi 4, then you have a computer you can connect to a monitor, keyboard and mouse, so you can browse the internet and do some work at least.
Yeah that's what I'm thinking, although tech is a "depreciating asset", the work I can do with it is (potentially) valuable. I have a decent fleet of computers at the moment, old laptops with Linux, an old server, and my and my wife's main rigs.
Thing is I'm a 3D artist, so I wonder if even the current setup I'm blessed with could see me behind the curve in a few years time :(.
I skimmed the thread to try and see if you mentioned any specs of your current machine, but didn't find any.
If you are looking to build a new machine before the tariffs hit, there are two ways of doing it.
Go bleeding edge now or get a decent machine that you can upgrade further later.
I tend to go for the latter, as an IT guy I value stability of older components over the bleeding edge any day.
I built my computer back in August 2021, it has a Ryzen 5600x CPU Kingston DDR4 ram, a Samsung 980 Pro NVMe SSD for booting and a B550 motherboard to tie it all together.
It is a solid machine and I picked components that had been out for a year or so to try and get passed the most bugs snd lower the cost.
This is not the build I would recommend you, you should look into the current AM5 CPUs, Intel has had some reliabillity issues with the latest gen chips, so I'd go AMD at this point. The AM5 plattform supports the new DDR5 memory standard which will enable you to keep upgrading for longer.
I don't wanna sound desperate or anything because I know I'm blessed here. I only upgrade like once every 5+ years.
Prospectively I'm not looking at a brand new build, just a CPU/RAM/Mobo to maybe move to DDR5.
The current setup (minus the GPU) would be moved over to my server which is still running like...an i5-4460 on 16GB of DDR3. Not terrible but it's had to thrash on occasion. 😬 Haha.
Thanks for the heads up about Intel stability issues! I'll have to keep an eye out about AM5s.
I probably can't justify it before everything hits the fan, but y'know, it's good to keep my eyes out. :)