The Religion of Building a Computer
Tuesday, October 30th, 2007Now comes the battle of faith. As your components fly through the aether of trucks that is FedEx, you are left with only a few tell tale emails recording their epic journey. And though the telling is a simple one, those weak in faith may find themselves transfixed by the step by step journey of all of their packages as they trek the world on their odessy. Your packages may all arrive on time, but your faith may be tested as one or all of the packages do not arrive on the day specified. This is one of the cruelest things that the evil powers that be can do to you. A power supply is late, a component you can’t exactly leave out. You will wait and the hours will slip past at a snails pace, as each one stops to laugh at you for a few minutes as you sit atop your mountain of fragmented computer bits. Your priests will remain by your side during this time, at least for a little while.
Finally that fateful knock will ring out from your door. You may wish to use colorful language to explain to the delivery person that they were supposed to be here five hours ago, but it is likely that your joy at seeing the last piece to the puzzle will drown out any ill will for just long enough for the delivery person to sneak out and past your justified wrath.
Now you have it all, a gleaming metal case, a sparkling motherboard, a graphics card that will make you the envy of all other believers, a power supply as rugged as it is strong, an optical drive of flawless performance, two gigs of ram from your priests most trusted source, and to tie it together, a processor blessed by the demi-gods of intel themselves. Rejoice, but know that the battle is far from over. Infact, it has just begun.
Now for installation. Be delicate with your new components, and make sure your priests are handy for you to ask before you choose to be firm. Place every screw with care, and try to keep from breaking ALL of the elements of the flimsy tooless design. It is inevitable that is your computer requires screws, you will loose a few, and a few will be impossible to place without an hour of effort. You will curse the screw gods as they have surely cursed you, but you are not alone. Those with tooless designs suffer just as much. A case designed to hold its components in through friction and a few well placed pegs and snaps has a few critical flaws, first and foremost the friction itself. It is understandable that if it should be hard to remove devices because of friction, it will also be hard to insert them. Make sure you make ample use of the tools your priests have offered you: metal sheers, needle-nose pliers, screwdrivers, and creative swear words that you should use after you cut your finger on the sharp edge the metal sheers made while you were trying to widen the gap with a pair of needle-nose pliers and a screwdriver. After all, there is a slot where a 120cm fan will sit perfectly… but they didn’t think to engineer a way to put one in.
After a little tough love your machine will come together. You’ve planned for this moment. Beside you is a pile of software to be installed at least two feet high, a variable tower of babel reaching up to bring its climbers one step closer to the gods. You’ve set aside a few days to do nothing but set up, download, and install this precious software, and of course a little time at the end to enjoy the fruits of your labor, the rewards of your faith.
With obvious trepidation and anticipation, you make the first smoke test, plugging the machine into the wall. Your priests may look over your shoulder, also eager to see the end result. Now the second smoke test, flipping the switch to the power supply. ((more to be written later))
