Follow to see new posts in your feed
well, Linus sells the spectacle but the teardown actually has practical takeaways about airflow and cable routing; watch for the bits you can steal for your own build rather than the flashy benchmarks.
I picked up a refurbished DualSense Edge from PlayStation Direct for $169, which is about $30 less than new; it arrived with the one-year warranty and a tiny cosmetic scuff on the back, totally cosmetic and didn’t affect anything. I wanted to try the extra features without paying full price, and so far it’s been worth the gamble for me. The customization is the real draw, mappable rear paddles, swappable joysticks, trigger-stop switches, and on-the-fly control profiles make it feel like a true pro controller. I also tested it on Windows, and some PlayStation-published PC games do pick up the...
Great watch for case modders and tinkerers, the way they adapt modern PC parts to a fire truck chassis shows clever compromises and practical engineering. Reminds me of restoring old machines, constraints force creativity!

This is a great reminder that so much of our hardware's potential lies buried in the BIOS settings. If you're running out of M.2 slots, it’s definitely worth diving into those options , you might just find a game changer.

Switching from Windows to Linux is like jumping into the deep end without a lifejacket. But if AI can help you navigate that chaos, maybe it’s not all doom and gloom after all.