muddybloody yeah that might be something they’d have to consider, the processor is already a beast though so I don’t think a OC would be an immediate/end goal, would still be interesting to see if they can pull it off
Those crimps are actually readily available at any industrial hose supply shop. The crimpers are cheap and easy to use. Most importantly they are very reliable. You can use them on rubber, pex, vinyl...
Charlie M I really like that era aesthetically. When people were throwing whatever color (UV anyone) and cases they could at their hardware to give it style. Part of the appeal is the jank mods. A lot of these today are just neutral ikea’esque TG/RGB cases. Compare the C70 vs most of what Corsair makes today. Modern perf and efficiency in an 2000’s era aesthetic would be great
US, I agree with you; the IKEA-esque desidnges are too neutral and common. We need to dial it back to the 1997-2003ish era to produce some creative and unique designs that’ll still stand out and look great in today’s realm of design.
Linus can sell two old rigs to employees at discounts, auction off last year's top of the line build with a cpu and gpu refresh and easily pay for it. Besides ... They were literally about to take it apart.
4:50 Linus: "Okay I really do not understand what I'm looking at here" Also Linus like within .7 milliseconds: "Aah this is a splitter of some sort" Linus is really a quick learner
No need to call him a hypocrite, clearly he is well aware he won't put it back himself and is thus saying that it all hinges on his employees doing it for him. And that they wont.
Mac desktop computers never looked contemporary to their respective years. I mean look at the big, clunky, heavy, new Mac. You could fit all that stuff in a case of half the volume. The design of Mac products has always been derivative.
It looks like the most high-power IKEA rice cooker ever. Or an internet capable juice maker to squeeze juice packs you can already just squeeze by hand.
you are so right my guy, looks just like the imac desktops of the mid 2000s. Linus hasn't updated his wardrobe or hairstyle since the late 90's. No wonder he's impressed by the aesthetics of this rig. gotta say the form factor and specs are nice though.
14:01 you can see the pain in him, being like "oh no not this again, it's such a terrible segway" But you know what's even more terrible? Not checking out todays sponsor!
Hey Man im 37 long time console gamer ...just got my first entry level gaming rig ...i5 ...gtx 1060 3g 16 gig ddr4 ram ausues mther board ...and now your channel ...u the man bro keep doing ur thing ...really dig ur style bro ....computers are cool.....Jp your new fan from New Zealand common wealth brothers
X Fade - I knew that, but thanks! Just thought it was a funny thought. I have a weird sense of humor. I was thinking along the lines of a "Tool Time" NEED MORE POWER moment. (Hangs head in shame). Here in the states, 220 v. is used for A/C, Stoves, Ovens, clothes Dryers and the like, high power draw items.
Oetiker clamps is what you're looking for. Common on motorcycles and automotive applications. Superior hose clamps - although they can be the dickens to cut off. If you ever have to. You'll see similar clamps used on PEX pipe in plumbing applications (think Lowes, Home Depot). Good stuff.
Re: Opening an Windows Explorer window taking a while on even fast PCs, I read somewhere that it's coded in a really old way that hits a single file some hundreds of times instead of something more logical. Forget the source, but I'd love to see the Windows team do a Snow Leopard, just focus on these performance issues and bugs.
Yeah it takes a long time, especial if you work on making files and not just game. My C and D drive get crowded soon cause I make memes in photoshop and video editing, so it does take ages, while other stuff my i3 9100f completes in 3 secs.
I wonder if it's for backwards compatibility somehow. I can't imagine it being anything else, considering that they don't exactly lack the competence to make good systems.
I've heard about this, which look very similar: randomascii.wordpress.com/2019/09/08/taskbar-latency-and-kernel-calls/ It's about the taskbar menu being slow to popup. 230k reads, for 15Mb, just to show the menu... pretty bad.
@@CottidaeSEA Sometimes it's not about the competence, things are coded to a time and budget and aren't always perfect, meanwhile so long as it works it's rarely touched upon again in such a large OS.
@@tipoomaster Sure, and I know what that's like. Sometimes you simply need it to be functional and don't have time to improve it. It's likely considered to be a minor issue as well, so it's not something that is given priority. It basically requires a dev at Microsoft to have nothing to do for a while, then basically just stumble upon the issue, because it's not as if it's something you think about often. Either that or a shitload of complaining from customers, which won't happen as people don't care nearly enough for that to even be considered.
3:38 those are air line crimp clamps. Available everywhere. On every air hose here where I work. It is amusing when tech people are baffled/ amused with every day items most people see daily.
And he just gets to keep it for random, occasional VR usage. A $3600 machine. I know he gets tons of crap for free, but I don't know how you can discern value of things when everything is effectively free for you. He's not completely out of touch, but it just...just don't seem right lol.
That's what I see when I look at it, the perfect personal VR computer all it needs is a tweaked voltage and LLC all core 5.0 or even 4.9. I would also add a very strong magnetic handle at the top.
I’ve been pricing out small form factor builds with similar components and they’ve all been more. I could compromise on some of the components and get it cheaper but this still seems competitive and almost certainly the cheapest with that hardware and prebuilt.
Those hose clamps are more for automotive use. They crimp them and stamp the center to prevent the crimp from spreading. There's a special tool that they use that does this all at once.
Amazing! I want to see the custom electronics and weird adapters of this machine (yes, that PCIe adapter...). Maybe, a future video with the custom build in OTTO DIY?
i swear this is the ugliest case ive seen in a while. I know that some things look very different on pictures, opposed to what they look in reality but dude...
The building style connectors he was trying to think of look like Pinch Rings used for PEX style water and supply lines. I sell them all day long at work, they are impressive in their holding capabilities.
M.2 speed that's what makes it snappy. I think the only remaining drawbacks in data processing in our age are still our storage devices. And even among the m.2 levels, the read/write speed differences among different devices and manufacturers could still be huge.
Yay! Im glad Linus won the argument. Especially if that's going to be the vr machine. Those guys did such an amazing job making that look perfect, it'd be impossible to reassemble it the same way. Kudos to Linus for appreciating the hardwork and care others took. It really is an artistry and with something that beautiful and unique and complicated there is no reason not to compare it to a work of art.
Not wanting to take it apart because he likes it to much is a great stamp of approval! I mean, this the guy who took apart a Red camera so he could watercool it...
Hey Linus not sure if any one has mentioned it but I believe the clamps they used are called oetiker clamps. They have a really symmetrical way of applying pressure to fitting. I have seen them used mostly on water craft. Love your channel keep it up!
About a grand for a cool, well constructed and unique mini case, with an awesome whole-front reservoir, and a "premade custom" watercooling loop for a tiny formfactor build? That's honestly a great deal. Just building a loop with quality parts in one of these small cases, can easily run you a grand with costly and somewhat sub-par performing slim/small parts, and all the fittings you end up using because there's too little space for bending tube properly without kinking it.