• A squeaker teaches how to build a gaming PC
    18 replies, posted
[video=youtube;3WvjDIhiQQE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3WvjDIhiQQE[/video] [video=youtube;m6SGVKwYvOQ]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6SGVKwYvOQ[/video] [video=youtube;sA1Z54CpeNk]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sA1Z54CpeNk[/video] [video=youtube;ZrufrsYv8dI]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZrufrsYv8dI[/video] [editline]17th May 2014[/editline] this was actually pretty informative
I was expecting something horrible but was pleasantly surprised. He was acting pretty professional and helpful. Even if he does kinda sound like a zombie at times.
Holy fuck the way he speaks and sounds. Looks like an android.
-snip-
I was expecting this to be terrible, but although he's lacking any emotion it's actually relatively helpful.
Seems to know his stuff. How did he get all that money? I couldn't afford my custom gaming PC until I was like 17 lol
[QUOTE=Electroholic;44833225]Seems to know his stuff. How did he get all that money? I couldn't afford my custom gaming PC until I was like 17 lol[/QUOTE] Rich parents? Not trying to sound snarky just probably parents who are pretty well off + birthday or something.
Did he ever teach his face how to do more than one emotion?
not sure why you guys are giving him such a hard time when he did better than many others doubling his age.
how kind of him
32 gigs of ram sure is more than i need, right? i mean, 4 gigs isn't getting old and tiresome :(
A tech savvy kid with long brown hair and robotic mannerisms. Holy shit, it's my long lost little brother. One day we will finally meet and rule the computerverse with our monotone voices and combined software and hardware knowledge.
[QUOTE=TextQUAKE;44833922]A tech savvy kid with long brown hair and robotic mannerisms. Holy shit, it's my long lost little brother. One day we will finally meet and rule the computerverse with our monotone voices and combined software and hardware knowledge.[/QUOTE] nerd
holy fuck mommys credit card overpowered
[QUOTE=Crash155;44833812]32 gigs of ram sure is more than i need, right? i mean, 4 gigs isn't getting old and tiresome :([/QUOTE] You never really *need* more than 8. I'd go 12 at most.
[QUOTE=redBadger;44836276]You never really *need* more than 8. I'd go 12 at most.[/QUOTE] This is true for games, but if the system is to be used for more resource-heavy applications I personally wouldn't go below 16.
This kid reminds me a lot of me when I was younger. I built my first PC around the age of 7. That was in 1995 in the age before the modern "throw it together and slap an O/S on and you're good to go" PC building days. The days of jumpers, dip switches, IRQ and DMA, Sound Blaster, 3dfx Voodoo, fdisk, parrallel ports, zip drives, and DOS. Ah, the memories...
My god that case is ugly.
[QUOTE=Rixxz2;44836354]This is true for games, but if the system is to be used for more resource-heavy applications I personally wouldn't go below 16.[/QUOTE] So many useless posts about this. Listen folks, this all comes down to what you *need*. For most games these days, between 4 and 8 will do you just fine. If you're just going to be doing some gaming, I'd recommend getting 8 considering that they're cheaper compared to buying 4gb and then 4 more later down the line. However, if you're planning on doing some simple video editing with a non-shit application (Adobe CS video editing software and Sony Vegas Pro, I'm looking at you guys), then 16GB will most likely be more than enough. How can I be so sure? Personally, I work at a local TV station, and most of the PC's we use for editing all have 8GB of RAM, however we're considering upgrading to 16GB to improve the render speeds slightly. One thing to note is that while some video editing software like the aforementioned utilize the GPU well (although they tend to be somewhat unstable, at least their previous generation was), other software suites may NOT. For instance, the multi-camera video editing suite "Edius", barely utilizes the GPU, and would much prefer a Matrix card and between 8 and 16 cores in your processor. There's a lot to consider in these areas, and you really shouldn't listen to what people say that "oh you'll only need this and this amount of RAM or these many cores or this GPU". Fuck that shit. Instead, I say that you go out, read the specifications of the products that you use, and look at what they require, and what they can utilize. Then buy accordingly. Preferably a bit more than what they require as a minimum, so you'll be able to follow up later versions without upgrading a lot of your PC components (things like FirePro or Quadro GPUs, SSDs, and high-speed cables may not come cheap if you're, say, a student).
Sorry, you need to Log In to post a reply to this thread.