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I am old. I remember when pricewatch.com and tigerdirect.com existed. You wanted to build a PC, you were picking parts manually uphill both ways while wearing an onion on your belt.
18 0 ReplyThey used to print PC part catalogs... you know, on paper...
3 0 ReplyDarn kids these days with their PC Part Pickers putting their builds in a tidy list.
Back in my day, you went to Babagge's, CompUSA, Fry's, or the local small PC builder shop, and hope they had some decent parts in stock.
2 0 ReplyMicrocenter. They were always very well stocked. Well at least most of the time.
3 0 ReplyI love Micro Center. I wish they'd expand or offer online ordering and shipping.
1 0 ReplyThat's the first step to adding a bunch of third party sellers to their store and making it a pain to figure out what they have on hand locally. Looking at you pretty much every other big retailer.
0 0 ReplySigh. I'd disagree with you, but you're absolutely correct.
3 0 ReplyYeah, it sucks. It would be a cool idea but I have no confidence it wouldn't be enshitified almost immediately.
1 0 Reply
I planned a build 2-3 times but never pulled the trigger. What I had for school was always "good enough" but I enjoyed the planning process.
1 0 ReplyWait, what does the onion do in this scenario? That seems oddly specific.
0 0 ReplyIt was the style at the time.
It’s a reference to The Simpsons.3 1 ReplyHere is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=a6Dc7W6jXCo
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
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