Additional major evidence holes:
1. Wu knows nothing about hardware in the 80s
In the 80s,
this was still the dominant home PC in the US (and it and its successor would remain the front-runners until 1989):
It had no hard drive compatibility by default and most of the time used disc or tape drives. The reason for the Commodore 64's supremacy was cost, compatibility with TV sets, and sheer, balls-out availability; the Commodore had massive production runs which
dramatically lowered its unit cost and made it marketable in electronics shops. The more-or-less comparable Apple II and Atari 800 weren't as powerful and also cost more. Even better, the Commodore had been around for over a decade and had a thriving market for literally everyone, making it one of the only platforms to emerge from the gaming crash of 1983 unscathed. It was common enough that everyone had one. If you didn't, you knew someone who did, or had one of its predecessors like the hilariously-named WANG, or the Commodore PET.
I bring this up because the 8086 wasn't anywhere near as prevalent or utilitarian. PCs as we know them didn't really start to take off until the early 90s with the likes of the IBM 286, with the 8086 being mostly the purview of veteran tech-nerds who either needed it for business or had the time/patience/autism to learn how to use the thing on their own. Wu provably barely knows what the fuck she's talking about in regards to
current technology. If you think Wu actually had the time or patience to use a 8086, I'll sell you ADF's totally-not-still-attached-to-him balls.
2. Blockbuster "Going Out of Business"
Blockbuster Video was at one point the largest rental place in the US. As a franchise, it started to die off around 2004, and was outright
dead by 2008. What killed it was the profusion of Redbox machines and the Internet; between Netflix, Hulu, YouTube, and more, Blockbuster's ridiculously inconvenient nature and steadfast attempt to only stock the newest movies led to it being DOA thanks to the Internet. The only rental places to survive the proverbial apocalypse were local mom-and-pop chains, which could stock pretty much anything, and
still do so; you can find them especially in rural areas.
So, about Blockbuster's use of laminators. It wasn't unique, a lot of video stores had laminated cards for membership. So what's the problem? Well, Blockbuster
was a franchise. That means when one fails, the assets other than the movies aren't sold off (the movies are, it's cheaper and easier), they're returned to the company, who helped acquire them in the first place. So all the cash registers, laminators, laser readers, etc all go back to the parent company as part of the closing.
This is also important because of the cost. A fairly-standard laminator in the 1990s went for around $2000-3000, minimum. Assuming Wu got it for 75% off, that means she still spent over 600 on the fucking thing if true, and I believe that about as much as I believe that Wu has a degree.
3. Revolution 60, it's Awards, and Similar Shit.
I've covered this. Countless times. The only people giving Wu's shitty game glowing praise are people Wu is personal friends with.
All in all,
@Norvic's reveal is a great example of just how divorced from

Wu is.