Thank you all for the advice so far. I was hoping for advice on technical specs. What should I be shopping for for a non gaming computer I'm hoping to last several years and not become completely outdated quickly.
I agree with others, if you aren't doing a lot of fancy stuff on your computer, you don't need a lot of bells and whistles. YET, at the very least get a computer with a SSD drive. That's the kind of drive (I think) that makes tablets and smartphones boot up and work immediately. They are also the technology used for removable flash drives, also called thumb drives or memory sticks. No more waiting 2 minutes for the PC to boot up to function.
If you can find one, a
dual SSD drive (for speedy booting up)
and (regular)
HDD drive is better. My info may be old as I stopped keeping up on this stuff once I bought my laptop, but in rare instances, especially now, SSD drives can be glitchy and it's harder to recover the stored data from it. It's the same whether it's a computer, flash drive or external backup SSD drive. Whereas, with the older, more reliable HDD drives computers had, most really good techs can usually get in there and recover your data, IF possible.
With a
dual SSD and HDD drive, the SSD drives does all the behind the scenes speedy work, (the C: drive,) meanwhile you keep all your personal files and data on the D: drive (the HDD drive.) So even if something happens to the C: (SSD drive) your data is still safe in the D: (HDD drive.)
Unless you find one at a great price, you can skip computers which advertise they are great "gaming computers." You will be paying for more than you need. It's like you need a good reliable Ford or Chevy car for your basic needs, and you are looking at Mitsubishi TURBO cars. If it's at a fantastic price, great. It won't hurt to have the extra stuff. But you won't
need it.
Since your current computer is 10 years old, it's probably only a few GBs total including all the operating system stuff, say 5GBs. Nowadays, most new computers will
start at a few
hundred GBs for storage, operating system and extra apps/programs installed. So, when we say pretty much any basic computer will do what you need, that's what we mean.
Even with not knowing what apps will be created in the future that you may later really want to add on in a few years, app developers are quite aware to keep the amount of bytes their app uses down to a minimum as we users will often delete apps that take up too much bytes, hard drive space, battery life, etc., to use, no matter how great an app it is. Another app developer will come along right after, creating almost the same app features AND it will use less bytes, space, energy, battery life, etc., and be the TikTok or Facebook of the day.
Memory is different than
Storage. Memory is what is used to make your computer run faster, especially if it's running many processes / programs at the same time. (Data) Storage is for all the files, pictures, data, you save on your computer.
The amount of memory your PC should have, a basic computer should already come with enough for your needs. However, as a PP said, the more memory you get the better. Many PCs will have the feature of being able to
expand your memory by buying an extra memory card for $30 or so (in the future) and sliding it into the extra
empty memory slot pre-installed.) Look for descriptions that say something like it has "32GB memory
expandable to 64GB or 128GB."
You can do almost all your shopping for computers online now. No need to go into a store and have a young, nerdy sales guy spew all of the tech jargon at you, overwhelm you with info, and you still do not know whether that's what you need.
Just post some links here of PCs you are thinking of and a DISer will tell you if it's a good computer for your needs.

We have a lot of DISers who love to tell other DISers what to do.
But, seriously, we can help.
