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Couple Bonding Through PC Building

mikemuch writes "When his lovely girlfriend Glenda needed a new PC, Jason Cross, who spends much of the week assembling PCs with the latest gear to test for ExtremeTech, decided he would let her build it herself. She gave him her list of needs, he came up with a part list, and then watched as she did all the screwdriver wielding herself. Despite a DOA hard drive and some mis-connected wires, everyone was smiling when it was all finished. (Slide show here.)"

38 of 465 comments (clear)

  1. How is this news? by matts-reign · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Person puts computer together while boyfriend watches. Why is this on the front page of slashdot?

    --
    Waffles rock.
    1. Re:How is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      It's news because someone on slashdot finally got a girlfriend. CONGRATS!

    2. Re:How is this news? by Xiroth · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Yeah, this really comes across as slimey geek porn. I'm as sex-starved as the rest of the inhabitants here, but putting something like this up on the front page is just...ew.

    3. Re:How is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      This is /. Both are true.

    4. Re:How is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
      Person puts computer together while boyfriend watches. Why is this on the front page of slashdot?

      First, a self-professed geek (see author bio), has a girlfriend. This alone deserves several duplicates on slashdot front page. Second, astonishingly, she is not ugly. This would deserve to be on the NYTimes or FoxNews. Third, he manages to combine voyeurism and shiny new hardware - all this documented with color pictures !

    5. Re:How is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      Gee. Isn't it great that slashdot provides encouragement such as this? Now girls don't have to be afraid of putting a PC together! I hope slashdot will provide further encouragement by covering the first girl to attend University or do nuclear physics.

    6. Re:How is this news? by weighn · · Score: 5, Informative

      I hope slashdot will provide further encouragement by covering the first girl to attend University or do nuclear physics. Marie Curie was covered in this story last year. She did nuclear physics AND was the first female professor at the Sorbonne.
      --
      Mongrel News all the news that fits and froths
    7. Re:How is this news? by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Insightful

      A geek managed to watch and not interfere while someone with less experience than them assembled a PC!

      Have you any idea how difficult this is? We're all control freaks.

    8. Re:How is this news? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      For those who don't know, here's the wikipedia article.

    9. Re:How is this news? by Chrisje · · Score: 3, Funny

      Tss.... I mean, I understand the joke, I sure do. But I'm still a bit miffed.

      - I'm on /.
      - I'm a geek
      - I have a girlfriend
      - She is good looking and pregnant to boot
      - I caused the pregnancy
      - To top it off, she's a former HP-UX and Service Guard field technician and account support engineer
      - She did VMS maintenance for the Israeli army during the draft
      - She is currently an L2 storage software support engineer

      Why is this clown on the front page with his better half while I am not? My girlfriend could out-weld pretty much anyone's girlfriend on this forum. Is it because of the photos?

      It's just not fair!

    10. Re:How is this news? by joss · · Score: 4, Funny

      - I have a girlfriend
      - She is good looking and pregnant to boot
      - I caused the pregnancy

      You know, some people would consider getting married in the circumstances...

      --
      http://rareformnewmedia.com/
    11. Re:How is this news? by mh1997 · · Score: 5, Informative

      I will go as far as to consider registering the partnership at a civil notary...I will not, however, partake in ceremonies that have their roots in organized religion.
      Darn, even notaries have their toots in organized religion!

      NOTARII was the term given to shorthand writers who in the early days of the Christian Church reported the examinations and trials of the early Christian martyrs and confessors. They were employed to take down in writing the whole judicial process of the Roman judges against the martyrs, and to write out the circumstances of their examination and passion. The early notary recorded the questions put to the Martyrs and the answers they gave.

      The first institution of these NOTARII at Rome was under the Emperor Fabian. Notaries were also employed to take down the discourse of eloquent preachers. By this means many of St Chrystostom's sermons were preserved.

    12. Re:How is this news? by dprovine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I will not, however, partake in ceremonies that have their roots in organized religion. So no, I would not consider getting married.

      Marriage went on for centuries (maybe millenia) without organized religion's involvement. The early Christian church had no marriage services, and did not keep records of who was married to whom. That was a civil job.

      When the Roman Empire collapsed, the church took over registering of marriages and births because there was nobody else to do it. (That's also how the Pope ended up administering so much of Italy: the job needed to be done and no one else was around.)

      The notion that Christianity (or Judaism, or whatever) invented marriage is silly. Marriage (at least here in the USA) serves explicit legal purposes that have nothing to do with religion. There has been more than one case wherein I have gotten a mindless paper-shuffling droid to shut up and do his job by saying "I'm her husband", which cuts through rubbish like nothing else.

      I dunno what the legal situation is where you are, but I'd be astonished if there's a quicker way to establish in people's minds that two people go together than to say "We're married". Why do you think so many gay people want to get married? To get official recognition for their rights.

    13. Re:How is this news? by darthnoodles · · Score: 4, Funny

      I will not be lured into the naive and stupidly romantic gesture of telling everyone this will be "forever".
      I'll bet you're AWESOME at pillow-talk.
  2. reality by User+956 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    When his lovely girlfriend Glenda needed a new PC, Jason Cross, who spends much of the week assembling PCs with the latest gear to test for ExtremeTech, decided he would let her build it herself.

    This article doesn't read so much as "hey guys, it's possible for a girl to put together a PC", so much as it reads "Hey guys, look at my girlfriend. No, really, I have one. Let me show you her."

    --
    The theory of relativity doesn't work right in Arkansas.
    1. Re:reality by gowen · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This article doesn't read so much as "hey guys, it's possible for a girl to put together a PC"
      And even if it did, how patronising is THAT? This isn't 1870. In the past 150 years, women have discovered elements, invented whole new areas of mathematics, unravelled DNA, walked in space, become Prime Ministers and Presidents, run multinational companies, fought and died in wars, raced stock cars, and ... well, pretty much everything men can do except a very narrowly defined range of elite athletic performance.

      And the only reason it took so long is that we men did everything in our power not to let them.

      Now, we're supposed to wonder that a woman used a screwdriver without impaling herself through the hand?

      Pass.
      --
      Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
    2. Re:reality by QuantumG · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Not to be politically incorrect, but the fact is that the vast majority of women will not even attempt what this woman has, where-as the vast majority of men will.

      I'm sure every time someone puts up a blog about how they raised a barn on the weekend (complete with happy snaps) the people in the developing world think "yeah, so what?"

      It's not a question of capability..

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
  3. WTF? by gowen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Geek has girlfriend. Film at 11.

    Look, I'm sure this was fun, and all, but seriously... When did "Stuff that matters" become "Some guy's holiday snaps."

    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.
  4. Re:Girlfirend my ass... by nick_davison · · Score: 3, Funny

    Girlfirend my ass... OK, I know these things are confusing, your parents were probably embarrassed talking about it and you're a nerd so you didn't figure you'd need to know anyway...

    But, when the nice priest tries to "girlfriend" your ass, it's OK to call him a bad man.
  5. GAAAAH!!! by mark-t · · Score: 5, Informative

    She's using a power-screwdriver on a computer????

    For crying out loud, it's a computer case, not a swingset and not furniture... The point of the screw is to hold things in place, not to fix them so fast that they are going to be resistant to coming out.

    I was taught that you _ALWAYS_ hand-tighten screws on a computer case, and even then only just to the point that it just stops turning freely, because that way you won't accidentally strip the threads.

    1. Re:GAAAAH!!! by gujo-odori · · Score: 5, Funny

      My dad always hand-tightens screws on computer cases. Of course, most people need a power screwdriver to get them *out* after he's tightened them, but...

  6. what a shitty BF though.. by Indy1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    he made her install Vista. Shame to build such a nice box, and put the worst possible OS on it.

    --
    Lawyers, MBA's, RIAA? A jedi fears not these things!
  7. Interesting? Not really. by Merritt.kr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm a girl. I build and rip apart computers all the time. And every time I do, MY girlfriend is always bugging me to let her get in there with the screwdriver! Maybe I should write up a story and take some pictures: "The lesbian geek couple mess with computer innards!" Oooohhh.

    --
    It is no measure of health to be well adjusted to a profoundly sick society. - Krishnamurti
    1. Re:Interesting? Not really. by ypps · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Now we're talking! You could make a whole website around that idea, honestly.

  8. Let me be the first to say... by Kadin2048 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm a girl. I build and rip apart computers all the time. And every time I do, MY girlfriend is always bugging me to let her get in there with the screwdriver! Maybe I should write up a story and take some pictures: "The lesbian geek couple mess with computer innards!" Oooohhh. Useless without pics.

    --
    "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  9. Let's all take this as a reminder to by The+Iso · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Go to the Firehose and bury inconsequential stories.

    --
    "You don't need a weatherman to know which way the wind blows." - Bob Dylan
  10. Re:Today must be a slow news day.... by deltacephei · · Score: 3, Funny

    It appears to be the first story tagged under "relationships" and the second tagged as "romance." Next up look for "recipes", "ab crunches" and "what he REALLY wants in bed!"

  11. Windows Experience Index? by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Having seen this screen shot I had to ask, what is a Windows Experience Index? It seems this machine has a score of 5.6. Great, what's that out of Microsoft? 10? That's pretty crappy. Maybe it's out of six?

    So I googled for a bit and eventually found this page. Which says "The base scores currently range from 1 to 5.9." WTF? So it's out of 4.9 and you just add 1 for fun, is that it? I wonder if it's a linear scale or what.. maybe it's logarithmic.

    If this is how broken the business rules of their software are, I can only imagine how broken the implementation must be.

    Microsoft, you're a disgrace.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
    1. Re:Windows Experience Index? by Gadget_Guy · · Score: 5, Funny

      If this is how broken the business rules of their software are, I can only imagine how broken the implementation must be.
      Microsoft, you're a disgrace.

      I agree completely. This shows how vile Microsoft is as a company, by choosing this absurd scale without a nice round number as a maximum. Seriously, decisions like this show how the company should be broken up and have the workers sold into slavery - brothels for the women, while the men can be sent down mines in third world countries.

      Forget DRM, this arbitary scale of the Windows Experience Index is what will really kill off the operating system.

      It is so obvious that the scale should have had a maximum of 10, with the current level of computers sitting at around 1.5. And in many years to come when computer hardware has progressed enough to surpass 10, they should make it constantly play a looped voice saying "DOES NOT COMPUTE" while emitting smoke from the hard drive. This is the only sensible solution.

  12. Yeah honey, I listened to your needs, honest! by nick_davison · · Score: 5, Interesting

    She gave him her list of needs, he came up with a part list Her list ran:

    Run Word or another word processor for college stuff
    Heavy Internet surfing (multiple windows)
    Store and play plenty of music
    Store and manage big digital art files, including many-layered Photoshop files
    Operate quietly
    Play the latest games without turning details way down Dropping $400 on a GPU when gaming is at the bottom of her list then skimping on $100 of memory when she's trying to run large PSDs on Vista screams of a gamer who once again ignored what he was being asked to get in favor of what he thought was cool.

    2GB of ram will just about get Vista running with a little left over for smaller PSDs. The size PSDs she's talking about will be thrashing the hard drive to run. Doubling that ram up to 4GB, what's generally regarded as the sweet spot for Vista anyway, and dropping to a $300 graphics card would serve her far better for her main needs and let her still run pretty much any modern game with pretty decent quality settings.

    But, hey, he gets to reassure himself it's a sweet gaming rig with that quad core processor and the 8800. Just a shame that was lowest on her list of requirements and likely added after a few rounds of, "Are you sure you wouldn't like to play games? I know they're not your main focus. But surely you'd like the option, right?"

    Even ignoring that she plays Civ IV and Oblivion (both of which will run just fine on much cheaper hardware), he commits a cardinal sin amongst gamers too: He bought what he figured would be great for running a game in the future (Spore), not what was needed for her level of gaming now. Spore won't be out until sometime next year and probably late spring at the earliest from what they're saying. That $100 off the GPU now wouldn't cost her much right now, would get her the memory that would really aid her, and she'll likely want to upgrade to whatever the latest and greatest GPU is in a year's time for Spore anyway. At that point, it'll be pretty much guaranteed that $300 on nVidia's 9xxx series will beat $400 on the 8xxx series now and have whatever fun and exciting new features the 9xxx series has that nVidia worked with Maxis to get in to Spore.

    It's cool to share building their PC with your girlfriend/wife/mother/friend/anyone who wouldn't normally build one, giving them a real sense of ownership and achievement with their new PC. But fooling yourself in to believing they need what you think is cool, rather than actually listening to their needs, is a great way to undo a lot of that when they realize they got you something cool rather than built what was right for them.

    And, yes, this comes from a guy who sat there while his wife tapped on dozens of keyboards because she figured I'd make sure it simply worked and so the most important thing to her was the keyboard felt right. To me, that was crazy. To her, it was what mattered. So, crazy or not, I listened and made sure she got what felt perfect to her.
  13. A slap in the face of gender equality by zarkzervo · · Score: 5, Insightful
    My significant other plays video games, has a far better computer than I and she actually played Planetarion. I don't consider my story newsworthy.

    This is just another way of saying: "Hey, World! Here on Slashdot, we consider women far inferior to men when it comes to technology. We can't imagine girls interested in computers, so we will make it a headline whenever a girl tries something techy."

    Come on!

    --
    Insert `fortune -o` here
  14. Operating system by tokul · · Score: 4, Funny

    Friends don't let friends install Vista.

  15. Diggified? by nephridium · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm usually not one that compares slashdot with the digg, but seeing TFA I have to wonder whether this might have something to do with the firehose being recently opened to the everyone? As we know from all sorts of media, be it TV (24h "news" networks), digg, youtube etc. the most popular story isn't necessarily the most informative story (unfortunately quite the contrary).

    --


    And when you gaze long enough into the code, the code will also gaze into you.
  16. Vista Ultimate by brucmack · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the article:

    Operating System: Windows Vista Ultimate
    Glenda has been using my computer for months with Vista installed, and she likes it. Also, Vista is required for DirectX 10, which means she'll need it if she wants the games on her PC to look as good as the games on my PC. And if they didn't, I'd never hear the end of it. So Vista it is!

    Fine, she likes Vista. But why Vista Ultimate? According to Microsoft's own comparison chart, ultimate just gives additional backup, encryption, remote desktop, and fax & scan capabilities... none of which are apparently needed from her list of needs.

  17. Let Me Get This Straight? by ryanisflyboy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Building a computer is the best inter-gender activity this guy came up with? He is a true geek.

  18. Why is IT missing females? Articles like this one! by Tsu+Dho+Nimh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And you wonder why IT is so short on females. It's because of the condescending ... ooooh, look, they can even build computers ... attitudes. Try working around that atmosphere for a few weeks and you'll either quit or be arrested for going postal.

    The only hard part about building a computer - for females - is having some guy who thinks that his dick is an essential tool for building anything try to take over. It's no harder than, say, sewing up something with 17 pattern pieces. The instructions on recent mobos are easy to follow ... easier than the care tags on some clothing.

  19. Clap... Clap... Clap by fxPPC · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As a girl, I'd have to say "so what" about this posting. I built my own Hack-intosh from spare parts and I'm in the process of doing it again for a friend. I'm the network administrator for a hospital. Shock! Horror! She knows how to build computers. Please, can everyone just get over it. It makes my blood boil when I see a tech story on girls being able to do to same tech work as men. Guys can claim hard physical labor, but women are very suited for tech work. Tests show we're better at logic problems, our hands are normally slimmer, so we can reach into small places, and women are statistically better team players.

  20. Hogging the spotlight by Avatar8 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The article was supposed to be about the girl and her experience building the computer. Her comments took up all of 10% of the article. The rest of it was all the author's opinion of why he chose certain components. This smacks of an editor asking for a campy, personal bit and it gets interjected into the "How to Build a Mid-priced, Mediocre Gaming System."


    While I can appreciate Glenda's (the girlfriend) desire to experience this, I pity the pain she'll feel over the next two years and I hope she blames her boyfriend. Whenever something goes wrong, she'll question herself of whether or not she did something wrong. When she calls him to fix it, he'll likely push it off as "This is your computer; you built it." When it can no longer handle new applications or games since 2GB is the realistic minimum for Vista, she'll wonder why her boyfriend let her install it when she could have been appreciating the speed of this system on Linux or XP.

    Good learning experience. Here are the lessons:

    1. It is currently no cheaper to build your own system than it is to purchase a pre-built one from a reputable company. http://www.cyberpowerpc.com/system/cfgpd.asp?v=d (Plus you don't have to cut yourself building it.)
    2. One to three year warranties from said reputable company are priceless.
    3. When something goes wrong, you don't have to doubt yourself or pester your live-in PC support.
    4. Vista currently sucks. We'll see if SP1 fixes it.
    5. Inserting your girlfriend's brief experience of building a PC into your component choice opinion article does not make for worthwhile reading.

    Congratulations to Glenda for completing this task. Now you'll know better to take the easier, same-price route the next time.