These are my capital goods;
which I'm happy to say are my hobby crafts as well.
My displays comprise of two 23" Dell S2340L LED monitors and an old 14" Samsung LCD one, and my main input devices are the Corsair K70 keyboard, the Logitech T-BC21 trackball, and the Logitech K270 wireless keyboard & mouse.
These are plugged via an ATEN C5682 KVM into a Fujitsu Lifebook i3, Microsoft Surface Pro i5, and Acer Timeline i7, running Windows 10, Windows 8.1, and Windows 7 respectively, all x64.
The same input devices are bridged to an Apple Macbook Pro (Yosemite) and Mackbook Air (Lion), via ShareMouse through WiFi, both displayed onto the Dell monitors via the KVM.
Besides that, I still keep another older Acer Timeline i7 and Asus netbook, both running Windows XP x86 (with IE 6 & 7) for backward testing.
Since I don't develop much on Linux, Ubuntu 14 is simply installed as a dual-boot on the Fujitsu Lifebook i3.
All these are hooked up via a wireless router to two multi-function laser printers, a Brother MFC-7840N mono, and Fuji-Xerox CM-215FW colour, and connected to the net via a 1Gbps fibre broadband line.
Storage range from internal HDDs, to various external SSDs, thumb drives and memory cards; and these, in addition to online and cloud storage, on public and private servers.
While the Corsair gaming keyboard and Logitech trackball are really great for extended coding and graphics work, the wireless keyboard and mouse allow me to kick back, stretch out, and code easy, when necessary.
Besides PureBasic, development software include XCode, Visual Studio, Android Studio, CodeBlocks, and the trusty old NotePad++ for HTML, JavaScript, and PHP. And the indispensable development tools include Adobe PhotoShop, XAMPP, and FileZilla, among others.
I've personally not used a desktop system since 2014.
