Stella d'Oro
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Mar 26, 2026
It's easier now than it's ever been thanks to standardized parts and plug-and-play technology. There was a time when you would spend hours messing around with dip switches and jumpers and configuring IRQs to get all of your hardware working. Fewer parts in a new build, too. Anyone old enough to have built an AT form factor PC knows what a mess of ribbon cables and expansion cards it was, when literally nothing was on-board. How about upgrading cache by adding another chip to the motherboard?I feel like a lot of people get wary of building or working on their own PC because in their heads they liken it to working on a car or something, which is understandably a lot more complicated and in-depth. But mercifully, MOST PC parts have been heavily standardized.
The lifespan of the average PC is so much longer now that perhaps tinkering with them is becoming a bit of a lost art? In the 90s and early 00s you were seemingly always upgrading some part or another to keep up. Now? A 5 year old PC is still perfectly usable for anything other than AAA games. Microslop will pull support for the OS long before the hardware fails or becomes obsolete.
I also feel like there's been a technological dumbing down of the younger generations. I've had more than one genZ coworker less tech savvy than the average boomer. Maybe it's just the fact that they've grown up with everything being plug and play, point and click, turn it on and it just works. They've never had to tinker or dive deep into a configuration file to get something working. Even just getting online was a whole process at one time.
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