RAM: Random Access Memory. This is what people usually mean when they talk about a computer's memory. ROM: Read-Only Memory. This can mean two things: the thing you put your DVD in on your computer, or a special chip on your motherboard that holds BIOS settings. Rem: a blue-haired anime girl that some people are emotionally attached to. Whether this is justified depends on who you ask. rum: an alcoholic drink popular around the world especially in the Caribbean islands. rim: the edge of something. For example, the top edge of a cup or bowl.
I mean I'm fairly certain she knows what all the PC parts are called and she's just mega trolling here, but the way she does it is so graceful and hilarious lmao
The way she talks about the pc parts makes it sound like she just threw everything together like the card thing goes here and the sticky pointy thing goes in the flat part lol
even then, there's plenty of ways to do it wrong and still get a technically functioning pc... like not spacing your ram and running it in single channel mode, or not properly applying thermal paste and tightening the heatsink down... Just doing that, the computer would still work, but it would run terribly. I've seen so many people say that they didn't know you had to enable the XMP profile on your ram, so they ran their 3200mhz ram at 2133mhz for years unknowingly.
@@Chuck_Huckler Could be worse. Could be RDRAM. Had to be installed so that the entire channel was populated, it was notoriously expensive due to licensing costs (proprietary), got unbearably hot, and you had terminators to loose. DDR/DDR2 were so much nicer to work with. Fun fact: The Nintendo 64 also used RDRAM, which is why it had a terminator pack if you didn't have the memory expansion installed.
@@Chuck_Huckler >I've seen nso many people say that they didn't know you had to enable the XMP profile on your ram Congrats you just found another one. BRB gonna go do that right now.
It's p clear that she's playing a character while also talking about a funny personal experience and like this shows all of my feelings on Hololive in one video. It's so blurry what's a character bit and what's the streamer being themselves out of fun, and that's not really a bad thing. Idk, I'd love to meet some of these people though. They seem fun, that's all.
@@Lance06Evo lmao. ngl i felt that too. poor me has a gtx 1050 after scrambling everything. and then we have a shark making the fan nosedive onto the GPU.
@@unknownstranger6558 as far as I'm aware most people just buy something that works from a system integrator and stick with it until it can't keep up anymore, and the people that build their own are more the enthusiast type
@@grilledflatbread4692 Since when has *intel* been a good source of advice? No, it's been tested. You can not add too much, any excess gets pushed out the side. Look at gamer's nexus's testing. Or LTT's. Or HUB's. Etc.
same. I recently built my first gaming PC and my one fear was that I would break a pin on my I9-9900KF which costed me like $400, so when I heard her say "CPU" I though she was gonna say that.
@@DroidRazer My brother bent some pins trying to clean the PC. I spend an hour trying to fix it. Fortunately it looks like God was on my side this day. I still have PC
@@TheRotundRodent but I9 Cpu's did not have any Pins you knew that ? i hope you know that only AMD was using that for the last years and Intel have another method
the thing about building a pc is, it's basically lego building because compatibility is barely an issue anymore, even someone with barely any idea what goes where can build it but ofc I'm not cancelling out that their chances of breaking the thing is still significantly higher than those with knowledge even if they have no experience.
PCs are pretty easy to make nowadays, but im not gonna lie i died a bit while watching this, i dont know what half the components to a PC are and if i had the money, i could most likely build one.
@Atheist Biologist That era growing up was so rough. I still don't do my own BIOS when I make one even for someone else cause of nightmare stories on the internet. Me, I think the thing that drove me nuts about hardware like a MOBO back in the day was you sometimes found hyper specific drivers or stuff like microsofts . net files would just not work properly and cause heating/electrical issues. And if you looked at a PC game on the back of the box it was often blatant lies on what you needed. Jurassic Park....trespasser was it? was unplayable for folks even with the literal hardware recommended. I can still get people getting overwhelmed by compatibility on stuff however. Absolutely! Despite the advances in tech with cell phones and gaming consoles the average person isn't the type to even once open their computer panel. I try to suggest first timers and repeaters programs like pcpartpicker and userbenchmark to help them understand what works together, why one thing is better then another, etc. then CPUID's HWMonitor program to help give them an understanding of what their pc is actually doing to a degree in terms of charges, cycles, etc. and to help find failing parts they mightve otherwise been unable to see.
"All over the glass... All over the glass." I dunno why but that killed me. And that's coming from a throwback who hates these stupid glass side cases.
as someone that is in a technical course on computer hardware i am proud of her building a computer is like being a gentle dom, its a balance putting enough force in, but still being gentle not to break your good -boy/girl- parts
Something similar happened to me when I built my first PC. Didn't screw the cooler tight enough, but it still held there for a couple of weeks without me noticing. Then one day I was just laying on my bed while my PC was idle, then I hear a random *thud*. Didn't give it much importance thinking it was some book or thing that fell off, until I got up and realized my PC was off. Then I checked it and freaked the fuck out thinking that: A) The graphics card's PCI-E port and the card itself might have taken damage (The cooler was kinda heavy). B) The CPU might have taken heat damage. I then went and screwed it right the next time and to this day my PC is still living happily. Remember kids, screw in with confidence.
if your computer survives these early damages its likely it will survive for a long time, these things are supposed to be all the same, yet with some people they break at the first chance, while mine survived static, me hitting it out of frustration, lots of dust, high humidity and high temperatures because brazilian 30c summer. while a few i've seen shit themselves because of someone looking at it
I did my own introductory build by salvaging and disassembling old PCs and then mixing some new parts to make my first self-built beginner PC. It gave me tremendous confidence boost, which led me to build a proper Ryzen PC as my main rig half a year later. UA-cam tutorials helps, but it helps you better if you have old PCs sitting in the store room. If you have LGA 775 or AM2 based PCs eating dust, they’re excellent platforms to practice with. Plus you can sell off those potato rigs once you’re done with it for some cashbacks.
"would you believe me if i say i built my own computer?" *Doesn't know the different between ROM and RAM *Doesn't know what parts called *Broke the heat sink ....but yes, sharks don't lie
I mean, she knew what everything was, able to describe it, which is absolutely not the case for someone who never opened a case. She probably has a problem with names but small details like removing thermal paste etc are kinda impossible to make up.
@@ChronosK That's usually the part where they're just knowledgeable enough to be dangerous... or at least to waste money on parts that look compatible, but really aren't. I know a kid who tried building his own gamer PC from scratch but could not get it to post. He called me up, afraid that he'd borked the expensive board he just bought. Little did the idiot know that the shiny new Ryzen CPU he selected doesn't have a built-in GPU (not that model, anyways) and won't support onboard graphics, so I told him to plug in that fancy new graphics card he spend his last paycheck on. Sure enough, it was that simple.
Gonna guess that it's the plastic motherboard AM4 bracket, and the standard Ryzen 2700x Wraith Prism cooler that comes in the box. The latch/clips can snap off, which is why 3rd party coolers use a backplate instead. The clips can require too much effort to clip on for beginners. If you watch an install video, or read the guide, it's not too hard to figure out, but ... the clips are a struggle for people, which is why a lot of replacement coolers use a solid backplate that supports more weight, but also has 4 screws/threads to tension down softly rather than forcing a metal spring & latch. The Wraith Prism, has a release arm to make attaching the heatsink easier ... But ... If you forget about the release arm, it's significantly harder to clip on, and could be forgotten ... sic. If "someone" forgets to open the release arm, you can break the plastic tab when trying to push the metal slot of the spring arm, over the plastic tab to hook it in place. Conversely, if you don't put the arm 'horizontal' to lock the heatsink down, it will lift and slide off because there's a spinning fan that will lift and rotate the heatsink, unclipping the large metal heatsink. The spring, is an M shaped piece of metal (sort of an n shape really) underneath the top fan, that pushes the whole heatsink down evenly. each side of the "spring" has 2 open rectangular tabs/slots attached to opposite sides of the heatsink, that latch onto the motherboard's plastic brackets. Usually you clip the Bottom first, then slip the second slot over the plastic tab, and press down on the locking arm, and that holds the heatsink in place with enough force to hold the motherboard by the actual heatsink.
@@Toliman. this is why I never used AMD coolers clipping on to the motherboard rather than just screwing down was a mistake of a design especially for beginners like myself.
3 months ago, I would've had no idea what she's talking about. Now that I'm going to college for this, I can experience the pain of her situation because I know exactly how it went down.
@@BlackEpyon It's IT stuff in general. The intro course also included parts of a PC and assembly and whatnot. It's mostly just to set up for the explanation of system configuration.
It's Ok my cooler mounts are attached with zipties since I snapped one, and the radiator attached with zipties to the case as well, since it didint fit inside
Most people who can't build their own PC is : 1. Afraid to try 2. Too costly if fail (poor) 3. Truly didn't know PC stuff at all Even though there's a lot of guide in the Internet right now.
When building a PC for the first time, I learn 2 things. One: The motherboard and pc case manuals are your best friend. Two: 80% of your building time is cable management and reading the manual
@@joshp4947 It's a lot easier now than it was in the 80's and 90's. Everything's plug and play now, and nobody needs to give a thought these days to what IRQs and I/O are being used that your new hardware might conflict with.
@@BlackEpyon That's why PC building today is referred to as "lego for adults." PC part picker basically takes the hassle of compatibility research and all its left is a fun time [with you're manual]. Cable managing is somewhat fun in its own way and helps with upgrades down the line.
Believe me, they're straight boneheads. I went into the equivalent of "stupid questions thread" for hardware issues because I couldn't boot properly - gave them my error screen and pc specs - and they just berated my choice of hardware. Turns out I'd plugged my HDMI into the mobo instead of the GPU (pretty daft), but for a set of so-called experts no-one picked up on it. Swore off visiting that dumbass board again.
I built my first and only gaming rig back in 2013. It's such a stressful thing to do the first time, I'm pretty sure it'll be the only time I ever do it. Still trucking along, still near-maxing modern games, but in desperate need of a reformatting, and I have no clue in the world how to do that.
This physically hurt me to sit through, because after she was like "it's fine, I fixed it", she immediately says she has it on the floor, which is the worst place for dust buildup
Gura: "I built my computer" also Gura: "what's that card under the fan? a Graphics card? Whatever it's called...." also, translation: she broke a metal clip putting the fan on her heatsink, got a new one, put on the fan wrong, and her fan fell onto her GPU.
"who's rem?"
*PTSD and background vocals intensifies*
Reminds of an anime character from Re:Zero.😂
aoowaaaeeueeueuuhhh
Witch theme plays
That got me good was not expecting that
ua-cam.com/video/DJR9CRkXpbc/v-deo.html
your welcome
"I'm so strong, I broke a piece in the process"
aw that's understandable
"you know that little square thing right"
*PANIK*
I thought she broke the CPU lol...
@@PinotNoir_ Mashed it down, bent all the pins.
I was screaming when i heard little square thing and break in the same sentence hahha
What is that actually called?
i thought she broke of some pins I was like NO SHOT she did that
Gura Tech Tips
Hey, Linus has dropped probably more things than Gura has.
@@originalscreenname44 linus is the king of dropping. None can surpass him.
Linus kek tips
*Plays ltt intro song*
*sip* Ahhhhh...
GTT Store dot com.
"What do you call the thing that Chrome likes to eat?"
Privacy?
"RAM?"
Yeah that too I guess
This comment is approved by the Linux users!
This comment has been made by the Tor Browser gang.
Privacy. lol I like that. Good one.
@@MaidLucy ahhh, I see you're a man of culture, as well. 😊
I swear to God, I will break out edge before using Chrime
"Would you believe me if I told you that I built my own PC with my own two hands?"
Not sure
"I broke a piece in the process"
Now I have no doubt
me being confused on how sharks have hands 😄
Yep
Anime logic
@@legendarycuber6944 Search "mako monster girl island"
@@LorandHungary no stop giving me ptsd
"my feet...all over the glass"
Someone's gonna want her case, used, at a thousand bucks
For a starting bid.....
I bet My left Net
There are two kinds of people. The other kind are the people that wish they were the case.
ew
I’ll take it
I would have lost my shit if saw my cpu fan nosedive into my graphics card.
same
i can't stop laughing, it's so real, yet so goddamn funny to think about. XD
The way you phrase it makes me laugh
I'd be screaming for a straight minute.
I lost my shit hearing someone had their heatsink nosedive on their graphics card. It's THE nightmare for any computer user.
RAM: Random Access Memory. This is what people usually mean when they talk about a computer's memory.
ROM: Read-Only Memory. This can mean two things: the thing you put your DVD in on your computer, or a special chip on your motherboard that holds BIOS settings.
Rem: a blue-haired anime girl that some people are emotionally attached to. Whether this is justified depends on who you ask.
rum: an alcoholic drink popular around the world especially in the Caribbean islands.
rim: the edge of something. For example, the top edge of a cup or bowl.
Facts
also ram: The act of slamming something/someone against a stationary object/subject
we really got one for each vowel lmao
@@michaelpatrick9257 also happens to be the sister of rem.
@@michaelpatrick9257 also a male sheep.
Still a better build tutorial than the Verge tutorial.
YEAH
well said
my PC costed my 1850 euros
when i built it i could not do mistakes like gura-chan :)))
Even our president fell in rabbit hole, no one can escape at this point
Don't forget your tweezers
Здравствуйте
😂😂😂😂🤣
Nobody:
Shark: "...so anyway, I put the cooling goop on the brain square."
Imagine that you're tech support, you get a call put through and the person on the other side of the phone explains the problem like this.
Oh... oh no
"Imagine"? My dude, by tech support client standards, Gura is being crystal frickin clear.
@@Tyranthraxus89 holy shit this is so true
As an Indian I hear stories like this a lot
Listen compared to the average customer, Gura is easy process.
Gura: **Builds own PC**
Me: **Press X to doubt**
Gura: **Broke a piece in the process**
Me: **Removes X to belive**
Is ez
“Manufacturers puts a plastic on your glass panel to avoid getting some finger prints on it while building”
Gura: Jokes on you! I use ma feet on it!
Normally you see a finger print here and there....
No. On gura's pc, nothing but full footprints.
You could say her case has a small footprint.
* Squeaky rubbing noises *
I read this with guras voice
Joke's on them, I don't give a fuck
I mean I'm fairly certain she knows what all the PC parts are called and she's just mega trolling here, but the way she does it is so graceful and hilarious lmao
Exactly what I was thinking
Ok, now I can never again think of a CPU and not picture it as "a square brain which you put goo on".
It's time for my PC's hourly cooling gel application.
A processor is just a rock that we flattened, put lightning inside and then tricked into thinking
"A square thingy that everyone is like 'ooohh it's so important'"
I liked Calli's tech talks more, now the whole case is called "the techtangle"
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
Her brain: "come on you know this!"
Her mouth: "what now?"
The way she talks about the pc parts makes it sound like she just threw everything together like the card thing goes here and the sticky pointy thing goes in the flat part lol
To be fair, that's pretty much how it is. As long as you can follow pictures in the instructions you can build a PC these days.
@@Xynth22 even without pictures there is so many guides on how to build a pc and possibly have a similar parts to build your own pc
even then, there's plenty of ways to do it wrong and still get a technically functioning pc...
like not spacing your ram and running it in single channel mode, or not properly applying thermal paste and tightening the heatsink down...
Just doing that, the computer would still work, but it would run terribly.
I've seen so many people say that they didn't know you had to enable the XMP profile on your ram, so they ran their 3200mhz ram at 2133mhz for years unknowingly.
@@Chuck_Huckler Could be worse. Could be RDRAM. Had to be installed so that the entire channel was populated, it was notoriously expensive due to licensing costs (proprietary), got unbearably hot, and you had terminators to loose. DDR/DDR2 were so much nicer to work with.
Fun fact: The Nintendo 64 also used RDRAM, which is why it had a terminator pack if you didn't have the memory expansion installed.
@@Chuck_Huckler
>I've seen nso many people say that they didn't know you had to enable the XMP profile on your ram
Congrats you just found another one. BRB gonna go do that right now.
_”who’s rem?”_
*_You have unlocked memories that you shouldn’t have done_*
And she didn’t get the joke 🤣
She should do a 3D PC-building vid, probably have better results than The Verge.
You're not wrong
Or she could play PC Building Simulator.
I wasn't ready for the shot at The Verge lol
I found this vocal guide already more comprehensive than the one The Verge did.
Anybody who knows what they're doing can do better thant he verge. Somehow beating him is an accomplishment.
It's p clear that she's playing a character while also talking about a funny personal experience and like this shows all of my feelings on Hololive in one video. It's so blurry what's a character bit and what's the streamer being themselves out of fun, and that's not really a bad thing. Idk, I'd love to meet some of these people though. They seem fun, that's all.
Alternative title: *Gura gives tech guys nightmares and PTSD*
I'm taking a cyber security class right now and yeah, that about describes it
As a tech guy this video near gave me an aneurysm 🤣
I was grabbing my head when i heard about the fan falling on the GPU....i'd probably would suffer a cardiac arrest if that happened to me
@@Lance06Evo lmao. ngl i felt that too. poor me has a gtx 1050 after scrambling everything. and then we have a shark making the fan nosedive onto the GPU.
@B Sorry rem i like emelia
"It makes noises sometimes but it works."
S a m e
"Who's Rem?" hit so damn hard, I wasn't ready.
Depression increases by 1000%
That was over 9000 meme play.
Uwhaaeeuuu
Who?
Who is Rem
I believe this makes her the third most PC-literate person in all of Hololive.
Who are the other 2???
@@sdragon21 Botan, who built her own PC the good way, and maybe Aki, who has played PC Building Simulator.
@@ChristianStout not roboco?
@@adas2051 Maybe, I don't remember. I know she has a custom PC, but it was built for her by a boutique builder in her area.
@@unknownstranger6558 as far as I'm aware most people just buy something that works from a system integrator and stick with it until it can't keep up anymore, and the people that build their own are more the enthusiast type
0:32
Gura: Who's Rem
Me: *_Uwhaaeeeuuuu_*
it should just be breakdown noises
Took the words right from my keyboard
Subaru: *HUH!?*
Ha ha ha haaaaaaaaaaaa....
*_Uwhaaeeeuuuu_*
"Yeah I build my own PC" *proceeds to forget the name of every component*
Never change Gura, she is so precious
the title should say “gura TRIES to talk about tech stuff” 😂
Gura: "who's Rem?"
Rem: **sad Rem noises**
Also Guwra “a… that was a joke I didn’t catch”
Why am I even reading the subtitles?
We've been conditioned as anime fans 😂
I didn't even realize I was reading them, or that they were there.
@B well well well. same. bro same feels weird tbh tho
Too much anime
It's natural order. Subtitles are to be read so you read them
This video can give any pc vet PTSD while also making them cry from the sheer wholesomeness
Gura: "Would you believe me if I said I built my pc?"
Me: No
Gura: *starts describing massive failings in her system*
Me: Okay, now I can believe you.
Gura: _built her own pc_
Also Gura: _quietly very and pretty much super bad at math_
Me: "Oh no... I hope the components surviv-"
Google Chrome be like: sorry rem, I like ram
Also gura said who is rem
guess she's too innocent to watch re:zero xD
This comment got 100 likes in a dayyyyyyy
@@dracotheshadowphoenix I doubt that she is innocent, but if we're talking about innocence of horror stuff, then yes I think that's quite possible.
@@emperor5228 meanwhile debut: "I want to play the most horrific horror game existing"
Make meme video using anime scene
"I broke a part when building"
oh ok
"You know that important square thingy?"
_OH OKAY_
I feel I may have just discovered the source of all the framedrops in her recent streams
@@TheTsuyuki Glad she didn't decide to just use toothpaste instead and melt her computer.
@@TheTsuyuki She is such a newbie it is possible she put too much. You need much less than you think.
@@grilledflatbread4692 "too much" is a myth.
@@vyor8837 The proper amount is roughly the size of a grain of rice, it is smaller than people think. Source: Intel.
@@grilledflatbread4692 Since when has *intel* been a good source of advice? No, it's been tested. You can not add too much, any excess gets pushed out the side. Look at gamer's nexus's testing. Or LTT's. Or HUB's. Etc.
Her: "rubs her feet on the tempered glass"
Me: "having a seizure"
Btw I don't even want to imagine what her cable management looks like.
"Cable _what_?"
When she said she broke something and then began describing the cpu, my heart sank.
At least its not a bent pin. I was gonna die.
same. I recently built my first gaming PC and my one fear was that I would break a pin on my I9-9900KF which costed me like $400, so when I heard her say "CPU" I though she was gonna say that.
@@DroidRazer My brother bent some pins trying to clean the PC. I spend an hour trying to fix it. Fortunately it looks like God was on my side this day. I still have PC
i honestly thought she broke a CPU Pin or a header.
@@TheRotundRodent but I9 Cpu's did not have any Pins you knew that ? i hope you know that only AMD was using that for the last years and Intel have another method
I got this in my recommended after two years. I remember watching this live. Time sure flies, this feels like yesterday.
I can only imagine due to Gura's shortness, she puts her feet on the on top of the cpu.
Yeah if 4" above a desk then she's about 5'2"
ow ow ow ow
that would burn
@@metallicarabbit Non-techies call the case the CPU
@@grilledflatbread4692 because cpu is short for computer lol
"It gets the job done" Ah yeah, legendary IT words one must learn by their own.
Gura: "Would you believe I built my own PC? Well I did!"
Also Gura: Doesn't know what a single part is called.
X: Doubt
Heatsink: Fell off
Video card: Fell out
PC: Overheated and shutdown
Yeah ok I guess I believe she built it hahahaha
Lmao I built mine and idk wtf they are called. Was a struggle
the thing about building a pc is, it's basically lego building because compatibility is barely an issue anymore, even someone with barely any idea what goes where can build it
but ofc I'm not cancelling out that their chances of breaking the thing is still significantly higher than those with knowledge even if they have no experience.
PCs are pretty easy to make nowadays, but im not gonna lie i died a bit while watching this, i dont know what half the components to a PC are and if i had the money, i could most likely build one.
@Atheist Biologist That era growing up was so rough. I still don't do my own BIOS when I make one even for someone else cause of nightmare stories on the internet. Me, I think the thing that drove me nuts about hardware like a MOBO back in the day was you sometimes found hyper specific drivers or stuff like microsofts . net files would just not work properly and cause heating/electrical issues. And if you looked at a PC game on the back of the box it was often blatant lies on what you needed. Jurassic Park....trespasser was it? was unplayable for folks even with the literal hardware recommended.
I can still get people getting overwhelmed by compatibility on stuff however. Absolutely! Despite the advances in tech with cell phones and gaming consoles the average person isn't the type to even once open their computer panel. I try to suggest first timers and repeaters programs like pcpartpicker and userbenchmark to help them understand what works together, why one thing is better then another, etc. then CPUID's HWMonitor program to help give them an understanding of what their pc is actually doing to a degree in terms of charges, cycles, etc. and to help find failing parts they mightve otherwise been unable to see.
"Sometimes make noise but it gets the job done."
Gura, if your child makes loud noises there's something wrong about it
Is Gura just an AI trying to learn words?
Doing better than Microsoft’s Tay AI so far
@@tu67v it’s hard to learn when you’re dead, RIP Tay
@@tu67v Tay learned great, that was the problem.
As a computer technician, this story keeps me up at night.
"All over the glass... All over the glass." I dunno why but that killed me. And that's coming from a throwback who hates these stupid glass side cases.
for me its kinda pointless. I inexplicitly realized after buying the parts I made a murdered out (full black) parts rig haha
What do you mean? I want to see my pc go into flames when I add a bunch of rainbow barf, that's like the best part to having a side panel.
Imagine being the glass tho( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
@@user_id ( ͡° ͜ʖ ͡°)
Its just worth if you got some light led and rgb which are expensive and even then in most cases it looks terrible
as someone that is in a technical course on computer hardware i am proud of her
building a computer is like being a gentle dom, its a balance putting enough force in, but still being gentle not to break your good -boy/girl- parts
feel you bruh
Something similar happened to me when I built my first PC.
Didn't screw the cooler tight enough, but it still held there for a couple of weeks without me noticing. Then one day I was just laying on my bed while my PC was idle, then I hear a random *thud*. Didn't give it much importance thinking it was some book or thing that fell off, until I got up and realized my PC was off. Then I checked it and freaked the fuck out thinking that:
A) The graphics card's PCI-E port and the card itself might have taken damage (The cooler was kinda heavy).
B) The CPU might have taken heat damage.
I then went and screwed it right the next time and to this day my PC is still living happily. Remember kids, screw in with confidence.
Screw with confidence, I rike your styre.
@@zekrinealfa1113 man, i saw a compilation reaction video of verge's pc build guide and that dude was hilarious
@@bobsmithy3103Bitwit, he actually got hit with a copyright claim from the Verge and that was a big asshole move on their part
if your computer survives these early damages its likely it will survive for a long time, these things are supposed to be all the same, yet with some people they break at the first chance, while mine survived static, me hitting it out of frustration, lots of dust, high humidity and high temperatures because brazilian 30c summer. while a few i've seen shit themselves because of someone looking at it
This is probably the best form of encouragement for you to build your own pc. Because if she can do it so can you.
Gura knows what everything is but not what they're called.
High wisdom stat, but dump stat Intelligence?
I did my own introductory build by salvaging and disassembling old PCs and then mixing some new parts to make my first self-built beginner PC. It gave me tremendous confidence boost, which led me to build a proper Ryzen PC as my main rig half a year later.
UA-cam tutorials helps, but it helps you better if you have old PCs sitting in the store room. If you have LGA 775 or AM2 based PCs eating dust, they’re excellent platforms to practice with. Plus you can sell off those potato rigs once you’re done with it for some cashbacks.
"would you believe me if i say i built my own computer?"
*Doesn't know the different between ROM and RAM
*Doesn't know what parts called
*Broke the heat sink
....but yes, sharks don't lie
well... she does have fins for hands so it should actually be a lot harder for a smol shark to build a PC
I mean, she knew what everything was, able to describe it, which is absolutely not the case for someone who never opened a case. She probably has a problem with names but small details like removing thermal paste etc are kinda impossible to make up.
To be fair, most people these days don't have much of a reason to know what ROM is.
@@ChronosK That's usually the part where they're just knowledgeable enough to be dangerous... or at least to waste money on parts that look compatible, but really aren't. I know a kid who tried building his own gamer PC from scratch but could not get it to post. He called me up, afraid that he'd borked the expensive board he just bought. Little did the idiot know that the shiny new Ryzen CPU he selected doesn't have a built-in GPU (not that model, anyways) and won't support onboard graphics, so I told him to plug in that fancy new graphics card he spend his last paycheck on. Sure enough, it was that simple.
@@gab4198 her model has human hands
Every minute further I go into this video it hurts me more and more
The image of an anime shark building a pc lives in my head rent free
She had me clutching my pearls with every description
We see the PC she built and it's made of cardboard, tape, and Christmas lights. I always imagine Gawr being shark-brain.
If we saw it I think it would give some PTSD. From lack of organisation. lol
This is one of the videos found on the golden plate in voyager to tell other lifeforms about our technical advancements.
This is hilarious and scary I just build mine and now my greatest fear is that when I use it this might happen 🤣🤣
Gonna guess that it's the plastic motherboard AM4 bracket, and the standard Ryzen 2700x Wraith Prism cooler that comes in the box. The latch/clips can snap off, which is why 3rd party coolers use a backplate instead. The clips can require too much effort to clip on for beginners.
If you watch an install video, or read the guide, it's not too hard to figure out, but ... the clips are a struggle for people, which is why a lot of replacement coolers use a solid backplate that supports more weight, but also has 4 screws/threads to tension down softly rather than forcing a metal spring & latch.
The Wraith Prism, has a release arm to make attaching the heatsink easier ... But ... If you forget about the release arm, it's significantly harder to clip on, and could be forgotten ... sic.
If "someone" forgets to open the release arm, you can break the plastic tab when trying to push the metal slot of the spring arm, over the plastic tab to hook it in place. Conversely, if you don't put the arm 'horizontal' to lock the heatsink down, it will lift and slide off because there's a spinning fan that will lift and rotate the heatsink, unclipping the large metal heatsink.
The spring, is an M shaped piece of metal (sort of an n shape really) underneath the top fan, that pushes the whole heatsink down evenly. each side of the "spring" has 2 open rectangular tabs/slots attached to opposite sides of the heatsink, that latch onto the motherboard's plastic brackets. Usually you clip the Bottom first, then slip the second slot over the plastic tab, and press down on the locking arm, and that holds the heatsink in place with enough force to hold the motherboard by the actual heatsink.
@@Toliman. this is why I never used AMD coolers clipping on to the motherboard rather than just screwing down was a mistake of a design especially for beginners like myself.
"It makes noises sometimes but it gets the job done!"
i say that when i repaired my car
lol, she's a brave one this shark, she had the courage to assemble her own pc without prior experience or someone to guide her.
3 months ago, I would've had no idea what she's talking about. Now that I'm going to college for this, I can experience the pain of her situation because I know exactly how it went down.
I've no idea why you'd go to college for that. I've been building PC's since I was 12, and the computers I started on are probably older than she is.
@@BlackEpyon It's IT stuff in general. The intro course also included parts of a PC and assembly and whatnot. It's mostly just to set up for the explanation of system configuration.
Build a pc the Gawr Gura way by voiding all the manufacturer warranties.
the gwar gara way
this hurts me, the heatsink nose-diving into the gpu, bruh
Gura:Who's rem?
Me: (witch theme song plays) 0_0
Rest well my sleeping beauty, may you find peace in the waking world
You know she woke up like a few weeks ago?
@@user-li5cr6wv5b oh? good to know! is it the webnovel? im still reading the light novel
@@nightray7854 yep, the last chapter of arc 6 wn.
upping the volume when Gura rubs her PC is exactly the kind of editing that I can appreciate
It's Ok my cooler mounts are attached with zipties since I snapped one, and the radiator attached with zipties to the case as well, since it didint fit inside
Sounds like a Linus build.
@Mastigos Wilkins
Excellent. Now charge $350 an hour service fee for assembly and open up your own PC building company.
@Lemur Monkey "electrician" syndrome, or what happens when someone who really knows what they're doing decides to build something just for themselves.
I think this is Linus' "incognito" account...
@Lemur Monkey I can’t tell if you’re being serious or taking the absolute piss right now. Either way, this comment reads like an Ork Mek’s diary.
I've seen many horror streams, but this one was the most terrifying one so far.
that enhanced feet sound..thanks lol
"I'll show you how to build a PC the Gura way!"
Me: So with extreme force?
when she said the heatsink drop to gpu i was like oh sheddddd be gentle lol but she said it was fine
My home server makes noises sometimes...
As long as the fan shaft is gonna at least somehow hold, I'm keeping it there lol
‘Who’s Rem?’
Not even she remembers!
"it took a nosedive and it landed headfirst on the graphics card"
me, watching this with hands on my head: OH MY FUCKING GOD...
Putting the CPU into the motherboard
*TERROR HAS INCREASED BY 999*
the shark has my level of knowledge of pc tech stuffs
Most people who can't build their own PC is :
1. Afraid to try
2. Too costly if fail (poor)
3. Truly didn't know PC stuff at all
Even though there's a lot of guide in the Internet right now.
Just because you can follow a guide, doesn't mean you know what the hell you're doing.
Just play PC Building Sim. It's not perfectly thorough, but it's a good foundation of knowledge
When building a PC for the first time, I learn 2 things.
One: The motherboard and pc case manuals are your best friend.
Two: 80% of your building time is cable management and reading the manual
@@joshp4947 It's a lot easier now than it was in the 80's and 90's. Everything's plug and play now, and nobody needs to give a thought these days to what IRQs and I/O are being used that your new hardware might conflict with.
@@BlackEpyon That's why PC building today is referred to as "lego for adults." PC part picker basically takes the hassle of compatibility research and all its left is a fun time [with you're manual]. Cable managing is somewhat fun in its own way and helps with upgrades down the line.
I lost it at the feet and glass part. Rip NNN
If this little shark gremlin can build her own pc I'm suddenly more confident in building my own.
Two years late for me learning how to build a pc and Gooba already knows how to build a pc
So proud of our smort shark
Oh my sweet summer child who hasn't seen re zero
Lol I can’t get over how adorable the freagin thumbnail is.
I was scared i thought Gura broke one of the pins
That's what my mind went to at first, but when she started saying the "fan thingy" I was like no way she will know what a bent pin is.
But I thought cpu pins went out of vogue once core came into play. Weren’t the last pinned CPUs Pentiums?
We don't need Linus Tech Tips, because we have Gura Tech Tips.
as someone who knows his PCs I'm shaking and crying rn this is worse than anything I've ever heard or experienced
CoOlEr NoSeDiVe REEEEEEE
Yeah I know that pain all to well
she is playing dumb guys don't feel too smart
@@technologicalwaste7612 No one should feel smart for knowing how to build a pc man, it's just painful to hear. I wonder if it really happened tho
@@Alexander-so8mk OP starts his comment with 'as someone who knows his PCs' lmao
When she said: *_RAMROMRAMROAMRAM_*_ Whatever is called chrome hungry for it_
I felt that.
"would you believe me that i build my own pc with my own 2 hands?"
well gura, you building a pc not a spaceship ok
I remember when it used to be.
Actually for who doesn't know a thing about it, it really looks like building a spaceship. I say that because that's my case lol
That glass must be feelling good down there
Your average conversation on /g/ in a nutshell.
Believe me, they're straight boneheads. I went into the equivalent of "stupid questions thread" for hardware issues because I couldn't boot properly - gave them my error screen and pc specs - and they just berated my choice of hardware. Turns out I'd plugged my HDMI into the mobo instead of the GPU (pretty daft), but for a set of so-called experts no-one picked up on it. Swore off visiting that dumbass board again.
@@core-nix1885 >asking 4chan for help
@@petervonfrosta2460 /sci/ isn't that bad for 'stupid questions', but /g/ is cringe and bluepilled
install gentoo
I've never seen someone know so little about PC building yet so make so a convincing case for them building their own PC.
jesus christ. my anxiety just went trough the roof hearing this horror story
A shark that hooks stuffs instead of getting hooked? Now I'm hooked.
*insert verge joke here*
"It make noises sometimes"
"ALL OVER THE GLASS" she was not wearing shoes
That entire story is terrifying
I built my first and only gaming rig back in 2013. It's such a stressful thing to do the first time, I'm pretty sure it'll be the only time I ever do it.
Still trucking along, still near-maxing modern games, but in desperate need of a reformatting, and I have no clue in the world how to do that.
This physically hurt me to sit through, because after she was like "it's fine, I fixed it", she immediately says she has it on the floor, which is the worst place for dust buildup
On a serious note though, Linus-Gura PC building session.
gura: "i built my own pc"
me: "as real as every shark fact"
she doesn't know tech stuff yet her process based on what she has told us is pretty accurate. Never seen anything like this
Gura: "I built my computer"
also Gura: "what's that card under the fan? a Graphics card? Whatever it's called...."
also, translation: she broke a metal clip putting the fan on her heatsink, got a new one, put on the fan wrong, and her fan fell onto her GPU.
Somehow I'm not surprise to hear that Gura broke a PC part when she was building her PC for the first time.