Got my computer 100% done (at least for a looooong while until I have to upgrade in the future) after building it for the first time 6 months ago, been adding onto and changing it ever since. Finally got a proper watercooling loop done, and it's amazing.
Right now I have to leave GTA V to download overnight, and tomorrow is GTA all day.
Forget, did I tell you about the computer troubles I was having when I started building?
Dont know if I did or not, but they're all fixed now, this thing is great, now if only I had the money for some great games
I pretty much play Cities Skyline, Skyrim, and Orion prelude
**** randomly doesn't work, I know the frustration...
One of my ram sticks randomly died and it took ages to get them replaced. Then my webcam randomly died, took ages to get it replaced. And today while filling and circulating the watercooling loop the pump randomly stopped working, or would work but be so weak it couldn't foce out a big ass air pocket that got stuck in one of the waterblocks. Eventually I just said **** it and put everything together, booted up the PC and it instantly flushed out every air bubble. Now it's working perfectly, except suddenly my windows isn't geniune (lel) and random folders/files on the SSD are taking ages to load.
It can just as well happen with a prebuilt, but then you've got moar warranties and stuff.
All the equipment I've had die on me like EVER has always worked perfectly at first, not sustained any physical damage or abuse, but just randomly dying.
But indeed, it feels more safe to have a computer build by people who do it for a living (and they've probably built thousands in their lifetime).
I hope they do, and an option to trade members items
because at this rate, my friends membership will run out before I get a bond, and my SS will be stuck in his bank
He wasn't dropping it down the ledge on purpose, you can tell because you see him trying really hard to hold it back. It was rolling down the ramp and he just wasn't strong enough to keep it from sliding off.
I used to move furniture and stuff for a living too, and we had 2 of these things. They didn't work as smoothly as the one above, and they were made from steel, not aluminum, making them heavy and not fun to pack upstairs.
its called a stair climber, they have mechanical ones as well but their heavy as **** ....
my company moved and our old building had **** ton of stairs in front, and they used one to take our industrial digital copier out, took them 20 minutes, but they used like half the effort and only took two guys
When i was working in archive some time ago, we used to have something like this to transport huge packs of files between floors(that archive was in very old building with lots of stair and no elevator). And guess who was retarded enough to fall over with this thing on stairs and scatter folders with files all over the floor? Yep, it was me.
Because I bloody disagreed with you and you went all, "Oh no can't have that"
Now, every time you post those goddamn LGBT ******** posts that I disagree with, I can't call you out for being a massive pretentious douche. Because I disagree with you.
The geometry of stairs in public buildings heavily regulated, and the average human leg and foot size isn't massively different anywhere. This would work for most stairs in the world
It would still ease the transition over the lip of the stair, you'd just have to apply pressure to keep it from dropping too fast once it rotated over.
They are designed to flip over the corners smoothly, which will work regardless of the length of each step. As long as the product isn't of a herculean weight you would be fine.
it looks so gentle, but the guy is all hunched over. if youre going up the stairs, you'll find that at every step your muscles get a jolt and that really ***** them up after a few times