Stone's class started back in August or so and he just recently caught up with me and said the students completed their first round of builds! These computers will be assembled and disassembled by every class as a teaching tool. Currently, there are enough computers for groups to work on together across multiple class periods! If you live near local schools that have computer education classes, you should consider asking them if they have any use for your retired hardware! Something that's 4 years old and worthless to you might be brand new to them. We're looking forward to upgrading them again in the future!
From Cats to kids, you guys are fucking awesome! We need more people like you in this world! Merry Christmas to you and the whole GN team! Much love from Salt Spring Island, BC, Canada. o7
This is a great idea! Have stacks of old servers and PC parts. Hasn't been worth the time to sell. But there are lots of underfunded schools near me so here we go
Mr.Stone was THE best teacher I have ever had. Helped me build first PC waaaay back in the day. Had him for Comp Engineering 1, 2 SaS programming, AP Comp Sci, and Independent study. He is the GOAT. These types of things matter because I remember seeing those cool ass PCs in class and being inspired to build one. Gamers Nexus yall are real ones for this.
Our dumbass high-school admins got rid of the computer lab when I was in 9th grade I think(2002ish). Around the same time as the shop class. Home economics was long gone. But there was something poetry related in every English class all 4 years.. It's almost like they didn't want us to know how to do anything useful after graduation. All that to say, I envy your education under P Stone.
He seems like a great teacher. I had an awesome computer teacher back when I was in high school too (he didn't even teach at my high school, but he held evening and summer courses through other programs) and he changed my life and shaped my future career. This guy reminds me a lot of him. It's great you and others have someone like that in the community to learn from!
@@EhEhEhEINSTEIN That sucks. I found that all my "industrial arts" classes were beneficial to me in my professional life. Even someone who graduates from Stanford might find themselves working for a 20 person startup and building cubicles, cleaning the bathroom, doing shipping/receiving.
@@alexedwards6509Despite Micro Center being a location that would increase the probability (as well as a few other variables that would increase probability), it's still pretty crazy and surprising just how many people did recognize him. Perhaps even more did, and didn't want to interrupt filming, or were not added to the video itself as well.
As a current student of Mr Stone, this was great to watch! He is one of the best teachers that I have ever had, and extremely enthusiastic. Earlier in the year, we got to do a full laptop tear down, and the GN mod mats worked great. This year he has been extremely excited about building the new PCs, and I am as well. If you ever get a chance to have him as a teacher, take it, it is worth it.
I'm actually curious, what's been the experience with working with the 4000 series Ryzens Steve provided? Is there an emphasis on learning the difference between an APU and a traditional CPU? Learning about manufacturer differences in BIOS is a really neat angle, too. I also do disagree with Mr. Stone about one thing at around 6:33 or so - with just *how many* AM4 systems are in the wild at this point, and with AMD apparently still planning to release AM4 parts in The Year Of Our Lord The Baby Jeebus 2024, knowledge of and experience with pin-grid arrays is going to be relevant through to, like, 2030 or so at the earliest. It sounds like you all do get to learn about LGA and PGA, though, if you have a few old Intel Coffee Lakes in the lab!
@@gintozlato1880 you're only looking at one piece of the pie, getting rid of new old stock is worth far more than any advertising.. not having profit loss items taking up space that could instead be filled with profitable items is gold to a retail store. some of those 730's and 710's had probably been there for years.
Here's what I learned from this video: Steve donated $2500, 3 trays of CPUs, Rented biggest SUV he could find, spent 6 hours driving just one way, spent another 4 hours in the store. Conclusion, Steve = awesome person ❤
Mr. Stone is such an amazing teacher!! I took his Computer Engineering 1, 2 and independent study class in high school. He is the primary influence for me discovering my passion, turning my education around, building my first computer, and eventually perusing and completing B.S. degrees in both Electrical and Computer Engineering from NC State (Go Pack!). I’ve now been working in the industry for 4 years, and love it! I’m very grateful for his influence on my life, and I’m confident that other students will get the same experience that I got. Thanks Mr. Stone!!!
Accidentally becoming a store employee is such a mood. I don't push my way past actual employees to give input or anything, but if I see somebody struggling to figure out what they need I'll usually ask what they're looking for and then end up helping them outfit a whole computer, or figure out what minimum spec they need to do their job.
This is truly a thing. I've done this for random folks too - hell, once I ran into my realtor at Best Buy when I was popping in for a cable, and helped her pick a new work laptop. I think it's awesome that Steve and GN are so recognized by the community of PC enthusiasts when our a.oung is, that Steve took the time to answer questions, and that Stone was totally cool with it, rolled with the whole thing. Can I just say, I remember him from the explody power supply testing, and he needs to be on camera more 😁🤣
Yup, it's a thing. I assistant managed an independent HiFi store all thru the 90s before transitioning to IT in the early 2000s, and I _still_ automatically drop into "customer service mode" whenever I'm in our local BB and I see someone looking lost in the hardware aisles (or the TV section)! 😆
I've been at Best Buy with a Blue Shirt on was asked questions about a Blu Ray player and answered. Took me a few seconds after the person walked away and realized they probably thought I worked there at least initially. Also fun to occasionally strike up conversations with people when you're both looking at similar things.
Damian is my go to MC employee when I go to Microcenter at the Parkville location. I even email him ahead of time so he has the parts I need ready to go or check stock for me before i do the drive. Great guy!
Public education is so underfunded and the tech classes are among the most important for our younger generation to have and understand. Thank you Steve, Stone, and everyone who contributed to this. Absolutely awesome.
Right? Dude specs out a computer class for 2 grand and gets REFUSED?! 5k got him the next few years worth of teaching materiel and if you divide that with the hours of teaching you get out of them it comes out next to NOTHING.
Makes you really wonder where all that money goes considering the US spends more per student per year than every country in the world except Luxemburg. We spend twice the OECD average.
Confession: The first time I ever came across a GN video, Steve struck me as overly cynical, unduly pessimistic, and unnecessarily sarcastic. That was a couple of years ago. Since then I've learned enough about this field to appreciate that the industry has earned every ounce of his ire, and enough about Steve himself to see that my judgement was premature, to say the least. This video has brought my understanding of the man, his motives, and his mission full circle. He's a rare treasure and we're lucky to have him.
At this point why doesn't microcenter just offer to have you do a meet and greet combined with an in person charity drive for Stone's classroom or Cat Angels
@@Jay_the_Caffeinator i don't know how big that store will be... but in the event of such a meet and greet with Steve in this newly opened store... they will probably need a bigger boat... uhm... store ;)
I went back to college for a Network Administrator degree after working on computers for over 2 decades and building hundreds of computers. I still had to build a $500 pc in class to show that we could do it. The teachers got all the parts, but we had to pay for them, and had us build them. They told us we had all class period, 4 hrs, to build them. I said ok what am I going to do with the other 3 hrs and 45mn. The teacher looked at me with a deer in the headlights look and said "are you serious?". I then told him how many PC's I had already built and he said, "I guess if yours boots, go home". To which I said "deal!". 15mn later I walked out of class with a new cheap PC that I donated to a friend and did home work for my CCNA classes. Was a great experience and I got to help some other students with their setups. I have tried many times to get companies that I work for either doing IT or Support to buy computers that we in the IT/Support can build so I can show co-workers how to build them, and they are all denied. Apparently they think Dell PC's are better... :( Another great video Steve and crew!
People such as Patrick stone are part of the reason many of us were interested in the field of computers. I wasn't the best student. but i had one teacher Mr M! He was truly a good man. He gave me a chance and had me soldiering simple circuit boards, more complex engineering projects , as well as the good ole computer class. I'm in my 40s now but looking back that teacher really made it interesting for a lot of us!
14:20 Steve offering component advice to MC customer looking to upgrade his PC. Steve: "What's your budget?" Customer: "I was looking to stay under 5". Steve: Hundred!?! 😅LOL
You can get a great PC upgrade for that. (Asuuming no case, no pheriphials, no monitor) You just need to get an used GPU, as the prices for new ones are insane.
Steve comes up with some many angles for new content. Most other tech-tubers are getting a little stale with check out this new product that you can't afford. Steve brings us to the everyday computer teacher or to the company that actually makes the products. Thanks, man, for enlightening the masses.
My mother was a Teacher (now retired) who ran her small rural school's Computer Lab, and she had to do all this extra work just to get grants to build out minimum spec computers for the labs. I didn't know Patrick did this, it's cool to know he's inspiring kids to learn more, it's a really good job field to get in these days. Computers, not teaching. 😬 Sadly, most of our schools are underfunded and teachers put in all this charity work essentially just to make sure everything is smoothed over for the kids. You can walk into a manufacturing job with a high school diploma in my area making about 50% more than someone who teaches, who obviously needs a college degree. 🙄
Two things that keep teacher wages low are the idea that it's "pink collar" work so the people doing it have the drive already so don't need paid much, and also the idea that "those who can't, teach" Those two things are so stupid, I wish funding would increase but other departments don't want cuts and the people don't want higher taxes so that's where things fall short Private places excel in the salary department but even then it really isn't high enough in my eyes, and the cost to entry is prohibitive to most people sadly
That second part is true though.@@sandwich2473 Even if they could do the job at first their skill will fade quickly teaching entry level stuff year after year. I can only base my perspective based on public education and college. College level educators are a slightly different situation, depends on the field and if they are adjunct or not.
to quote a stranger on the internet for his metaphor, the 5 grand "slapped Stone's gear back into neutral." that heartbeat pause of him trying to process is just priceless
I know! I replayed that a good half dozen times. Like, he's fingering the stacks of (fake) bills, hearing Steve say, "2500, match," but it's not until Steve specifically says that he has 5 grand to load up on tech for the classroom that it truly hits him.
Only at the portion where they're picking out motherboards, but I see the look in his eye where he's really making every dollar matter because this is statistically such a miracle for an educator.
A video where steve is a microcenter employee for the day and answers customer questions would be amazing. Im sure new builders could learn alot from watching his interactions.
It wasn't 30 seconds before Damion said he was glad that you were buying all the 710s and 730s that I was thinking about how those cards would have likely never gone to anything if it wasn't for you guys! This was really cool to see!
Steve and the rest of the GN family, thank you all so much for what you do. You’re a beacon in the “techtuber” space and more importantly you’re an example of decency and integrity for your community. Merry Christmas to you all, good luck in the new year and i can’t wait to see what you accomplish next year!
That's a genuinely good guy right there, stopping and helping a whole bunch of customers for no other particular reason then he can. A joyous Festivus Steve, hope it's a good one for you.
This is another reason I like buying from your store. Supoorting stuff like this. I never would have gotten any kind of training or education in school on stuff like this. I was lucky enough to have a math/physics teacher in high school who also was a computer buff who taught us programming too, and that's how I ended up going into IT. I was also glad to hear that MicroCenter announced they are opening a Charlotte location so you guys don't have to drive 6 hours anymore.
I totally agree, is the only TH-camr I support with Patreon and purchasing merchandise from the GN Store. Their ethics and integrity are impeccable, and worthy of support.
Same man, I am part of the "when youtube used to be 5 stars" era and lots of people that I was subscribed too was shilling out products, but Steve and his crew is the only ones where I bought their coasters because they are authentic! Cheers Steve
Steve taking a moment to talk to fans, even during a video recording, is a prime example of why Im always gonna come back to this channel. Genuinely one of the few TH-camrs that I feel is here for the fans and the people
Carolina boy right here. Bought a signed tool kit earlier this year. We need more computer technology classes in our schools. Steve, I love you bro. Thank you.
Wow. Just...wow. I've been building my own PC's since the 80's. That someone is teaching this as part of a computer curriculum is bonkers to me - bonkers amazing, that is. Clearly it's time for me to go to the GN store and see what you have that I haven't already purchased (I already have two giant mouse mats and two tool kits, among other stuff) because clearly supporting you help you do good things for others. Very happy to watch this on Christmas. Also, I don't leave for home until tomorrow, and there is a microcenter 14 minutes away from here - I might have to stop and buy a few feet of different colour shrink tubing 😂
Yes, GamersNexus not only has wonderful journalism ethics, but the charities they support are fantastic too. They are the only TH-camr that I would buy merchandise from, and become a Patreon supporter. proud, Hail Snowflake!
Buying expensive TV speakers for a guy with 3 houses is almost the same as buying hardware for children to understand PCs and learn how to assemble one :)
When Stone told you it was a great way to spend a Saturday, I understood how he felt. Damian also appreciated helping equip a classroom of high school students. It's not often that he gets to help make schools better.
This one hit close to home for me! As an educator, especially in IT, this is what's all about! Projecting your passion and sharing your knowledge with your students is one heck of a feeling! Big Ups to Stone, Steve, and the GN Crew!
Awesome work Steve and GN team. And good on Micro Center for their contribution. That's some good PR for the price, probably better than a little ad spot in a video. This is how we keep interest in PC's alive for future generations. I didn't know Patrick was a teacher as well, a real hero. He was like a kid in a candy shop in that store.
As someone who grew up in NC, I'm glad to see people like Patrick teaching highschoolers tech. The only tech class my high school had was still teaching people how to use Palm Pilots when they were very much already irrelevant. High five to Patrick and Steve (and Microcenter) for doin this, hope those kids appreciate the education they're gettin
That employee is SMART!! He understood what they were wanting to do and maximizing the return on money spent. And he was NOT scared to give advice on the lower end drives. I would liked to have seen them be able to spend even more. Microcenter could send prebuilt budget systems to classrooms to encourage both kids and parents to make the trip to one.
I am so lucky there is one near me. They built my computer because I was lazy and it cost me less than what I was pricing out to build myself. And they even emailed me a couple of times to make recommendations to my build that saved me money.
Those kids are so lucky to have such an awesome teacher, and Steve, you keep making it so easy to support GN when you keep doing awesome stuff like this that is making a real difference, both to the kids in Stone's class and the random strangers you helped out.
The whole GN team is so humble and sweet. You don't need to show all of the interactions that you have with people or how much you donate to the various charities that we know you do... This video is so wholesome and would not be complete without it. The sheer fact that you're (Steve) is so widely known throughout a state 6 hours away from your HQ is awesome. I hope to see you in my local Micro Center sometime to fanboy it up like the first dude.
I’m pretty new to PCs in general, and really loved seeing the diversity of people that can be found in a microcenter. Old, young, professional, gamer, and everything in between. Loved this video. Keep up the fantastic work GN!
my comp-sci teacher was a legend for sourcing parts, i remember using a basic test of chromixium back in 2016-2017 and dual booting ubuntu and window's with creating a 20 system sever all ourselves, seeing super advanced med tech for vain finding: he encouraged us all to explore computer science and what it could do, all with systems from 2005-9 that couldn't even run windows 7 we need more teachers like them in this world. Thank you for supporting them! and happy holidays to all
this is AWESOME!!! being a student of stones, i'll be happy that we don't have to deal with systems that randomly decide to not work anymore! also, we started the school's computer club this year, so hopefully we can use some of the older equipment. thank you!!!!!
Y'all, this one really hits home. The computer lab at the high school I attended was integral to me getting anywhere in life, let alone what it could do for students in the intervening 24 years since I've been. this is a real wakeup call.
Everything about this video made me smile, from getting upgrades for the class to the way you guys interact with fans you run in to. As a public school teacher I can totally empathize with the pain of spending hours coming up with a careful budget using cheap things to improve the student experience to be told "Nah, we are going another direction" by admin. Outstanding work.
I'm very, very thankful to be so close to a Micro Center. They've saved my ass a few times when building PC's for friends. It's super convenient to have a store so close that has everything you could ever need if I or any of my friends/family members ever have a catastrophic issue.
While other influencers grab money from any opportunity, it is really wholesome to hear, there are people who actually care about the future, and giving money to the ones who really need it. Thank you Steve!
It's always nice to throw money at people who know what they're doing and absolutely min-max the value from the donations. He clearly doesn't take the money for granted, and squeezes every last cent out of the total, which is great to see and it's clearly money well spent and will go a long way. Great video and would love to see some follow ups from this if possible!
I cry a lil bit when I realize a lot of people don't have easy access to a Microcenter. The place is truly magical, really nice people and cheap parts.
That is nice of you Steve. Good man. I also appreciate that you are cool with the fans, and help people with the, "hey can I get your opinion" type of questions in both Micro Center videos. You make great content, and obviously that is why you have the following you do. Oh, and I really appreciate the integrity you show with people trying to buy your opinion, and calling out companies that are scamming people. Again, you are a good guy. Thanks
100%. I guess I'll have to tell you to ignore my comment on the other MicroCenter video. :) Anyhoo, your comments towards Steve & team were the most honest and nonetheless the most accurate. They're such a great people, praise.
I always appreciate your advocacy for public education, workers in the tech industries, and otherwise donating your time and resources to causes for good. Your commitment to consumer-first reviews is what attracted me to your channel at the beginning of COVID and has kept me coming back. Spending Christmas alone at work, you guys gave me the warm fuzzy feelings today. Happy holidays to your whole team, and one last good on you Stone for being a teacher in a rough public education world. Much love to you all ❤
I definitely owe my career as a network engineer to enthusiastic teachers like Patrick. A teacher at my high school (20+ years ago) taught a hands-on computer repair class (loosely following a CompTIA A+ curriculum) and an advanced class where some of his students would take tickets from the school district's ticketing system for hands-on IT experience under his supervision. I know multiple people who took the spark from that teacher and turned it into a great IT career. I happily supported your last fundraising drive and I'll definitely do it again when they need it in the future.
Haven't even been watching this channel for long, didn't know about it, been watching for long enough to feel inclined by your actions to grab some merch, but anyone who gives freely to the education system like that deserves all the help they can get, so now I'm subscribed AND a member. Love this channel and hope I get to be a part of it for a long time.
What an amazing teacher, working with What he has and still making a lesson out of the parts he's given. Great approach getting different vendors' products as well to show everyone a horizontal comparison.
I am so glad there are about 5 to 6 microcenter near me in NY. Sure, each is approximately a 30-minute to an-hour drive, but I can't complain; it sure beats the 3+ hours some people have to do, and yes, Microcenter is what RadioShack used to be before it abandoned the DIY section. Out of all the stores, this one is a must-have for PC builders, Electronics, and DIY enthusiasts. This video was so wholesome. Love it. Thank you, Steve and Gamer Nexus, for bringing out an excellent video to close the year on a good note.
When the donated CPUs are better than your current CPU...oof. But, awesome for the students and Patrick to receive newer inventory to help teach and build with! Keep up the amazing work guys! Happy holidays!!
This was a great way to get the future leaders into computers as a whole. It's great to see people giving back to those kids so they can have some fun and learn quite a bit in an ever changing industry.
still remember taking a computer class where we learned on old sff dell optiplexes (proprietary parts everywhere), im sure this experience is gonna be a lot better than what i dealt with 😂
This was awesome to see, great way to spend some time on Christmas! Steve, you and your team are top notch, just fun, real, down to earth people who just genuinely want to help. I just have one question, can we clone about a million more Patrick Stones? :P This world is so chaotic, seemingly bleak for the youth of today, but it's great to know there still are dedicated, passionate educators who just want to help students become the best they can be. Happy holidays, and looking forward to more great stuff like this in 2024! Thank you!!
That was super impressive. I know that there are a lot of teachers/instructors out there that are truly passionate about passing on their knowledge to the next generation. It was great to get to meet one of them. These young ones are truly blessed to be taught by Mr. Stone. Steve, you,, Microcenter, and Mr. Stone have just ensured that at least 20 students will take the torch and show the world their love for PC building, engineering, and operation. They will make a positive impact on the world.
So happy to see you guys in my neighborhood! Glad the locals gave you a warm welcome! Welcome to Balmer, hun! Love when you guys just go talk to people at Microcenter. Happy holidays, GN.
Your content is why I started buying exclusively from microcenter and making a sometimes 6 hour drive each time to do it. My last build I actually had them put it together and it's what I'm typing on right now 4 years later. I can't recommend them enough and the fact you guys are making a new generation of PC builders possible is beyond awesome. Shout out to Microcenter Chicago for always giving me awesome help thru 3 pcs.
High-schoolers learning to build custom PCs on all those diverse motherboards is the best thing ever! Teary-eyed knowing how much this haul will mean to the kids. Great job GN x Micro Center!
That's so awesome. I had a vocational class in high school and we got a budget to purchase and build PCs. It was a good experience and started a life long love of PC hardware, computer networking and eventually a carrier. Glad that kids are still able to get this kind of experience and teaching.
It's awesome to see that some people in business don't want to waste money, product, time, energy, etc... and make the world a better place in they're own way; And I'm not even talking about GN in this sentence; They do this everyday. Thank you GN for helping make people more knowledgeable.
This is so cool to see. Growing up I was fascinated with PC stuff and strived to learn everything that I could, scrounging every bit of information I could from magazines and the ads in them, even. It took years and only after the internet could I truly get the full picture. It would have blown my mind in inspiration having like 25 computers in the classroom and being able to see and explore all the components and learn about them from a specialist. This surely is going to be inspirational to many students and will set them in their awesome future careers. Cheers!
I always wear my GN hoodie to microcenter on the 0.00000001% chance he happens to be there lmao Always love the charitable content and is one of the many reasons why GN is so awesome
Glad I'm not the only one who feels like we skipped a few years during the human malware event. These videos always make me sad that this is what Frys could have become if they didn't get run into the ground. It would be fitting if Microcenter was able to move into one of their classic locations near me that are still abandoned. Merry Christmas guys, this is the perfect video to release today. Those are some lucky kids to have Stone teaching a class that should be offered at every public high school at this point. Thanks for being the voice of reason keeping us sane as we sail into a new year... seriously, how is it 2024??
@@milklordnomadic The Micro Centers I have been in were much nicer than the Frys I visited in Austin Texas way back in the middle 2000s and the service is also a lot better . I do remember buying a high end coffee grinder at Frys on one visit...Why did they think that was an item to branch out into?
@@thomasneedham1512 Yeah they had those isles of random electronics but you could get some pretty damn good deals before Amazon and such was taken over by overseas sellers. They definitely made some weird decisions but I think dropping the ball on their website and online orders is really what did them in. Plus their unmarked open box scandels (which burned me a couple times) and questionable floor management wasn't helping the situation... Damn shame. There's really nothing like Frys in its prime but Microcenter is about as close as it gets.
@@milklordnomadic Yeah man, I don't think we'll see any store with a vibe quite like Frys again... It was definitely crazy at the time but looking back on it now really gives you perspective on just how wild it really was.
@@thomasneedham1512 Fry's satisfied a certain niche that is hard to describe. Micro Center is more like a revived CompUSA. Fry's was like a warehouse version of that, combined with a Radioshack, and yes, weirdly a home goods/convenience store all-in-one. Especially when I was working in Access Control, it was extremely useful having the ability to stop in and grab whatever length or type of cable or connector, as well as related equipment. This was incredibly useful when too far from a specialty electronics or access control shop. It was also much more convenient to test enthusiast AV equipment there, than pretty much anywhere else. They also rarely had the type of obtrusive advertisement I actually picked up a 240hz LCD from the wild looking Fry's in East Dallas with the rodeo motif the day before they all closed, without realizing! Weird place
Steve is such a good man, near Christmas decides to give 2.5k to upgrade students hardware, then proceeds to get micro center to also spend 2.5k of their marketing budget, then he goes to store and gives micro center employees a rest by taking over so that they can enjoy a coffe together just before Christmas time ... What a legend you are Steve ! Ahhh and also spending some time with fans at the store ! 😊
Still blows my mind that Microcenter finally decides to come to NC, but picks Charlotte over Raleigh/Research Triangle (NC's tech hub). I mean, come on! Tech Jesus is here! 😂
This is such an amazing project and "sponsorship" :) Awesome idea! That dude before the entrence is a real, certified hype beast. Immediately made me smile, what a wholesome dude. ^.^ "And I accidentially became a store employee" should be a youtube series of techtubers "taking over" a tech shop for a day, just cuz. x) The sprint for the last $50 was funny - never thought of a x1 sound card...but hey, why not, its a neat accessoire I guess. But geniuely a nice piece of kit for dedicated sound work. And what else are you gonna plop in the remaining empty holes anyway. xD By the way, the music used here is such a bop. Where can I listen to the full versions respectively? So nice! Great video and great vibes, thanks Steve!
Stone's class started back in August or so and he just recently caught up with me and said the students completed their first round of builds! These computers will be assembled and disassembled by every class as a teaching tool. Currently, there are enough computers for groups to work on together across multiple class periods! If you live near local schools that have computer education classes, you should consider asking them if they have any use for your retired hardware! Something that's 4 years old and worthless to you might be brand new to them. We're looking forward to upgrading them again in the future!
From Cats to kids, you guys are fucking awesome! We need more people like you in this world!
Merry Christmas to you and the whole GN team! Much love from Salt Spring Island, BC, Canada. o7
This is a great idea! Have stacks of old servers and PC parts. Hasn't been worth the time to sell. But there are lots of underfunded schools near me so here we go
Jesus is also Santa Claus who would've thunk!
Merr Crimb GN team and community
" Something that's 4 years old and worthless to you" HEY, talk nice about my 8600K :-/
20 builds on a $5000 budget that's $250 per build!! How do you make that work?? 🤔
Mr.Stone was THE best teacher I have ever had. Helped me build first PC waaaay back in the day. Had him for Comp Engineering 1, 2 SaS programming, AP Comp Sci, and Independent study. He is the GOAT. These types of things matter because I remember seeing those cool ass PCs in class and being inspired to build one. Gamers Nexus yall are real ones for this.
That's awesome to hear that you took all those classes!
I definitely get the "cool teacher" vibe from Mr Stone.
Our dumbass high-school admins got rid of the computer lab when I was in 9th grade I think(2002ish). Around the same time as the shop class. Home economics was long gone. But there was something poetry related in every English class all 4 years.. It's almost like they didn't want us to know how to do anything useful after graduation.
All that to say, I envy your education under P Stone.
He seems like a great teacher. I had an awesome computer teacher back when I was in high school too (he didn't even teach at my high school, but he held evening and summer courses through other programs) and he changed my life and shaped my future career. This guy reminds me a lot of him. It's great you and others have someone like that in the community to learn from!
@@EhEhEhEINSTEIN That sucks. I found that all my "industrial arts" classes were beneficial to me in my professional life. Even someone who graduates from Stanford might find themselves working for a 20 person startup and building cubicles, cleaning the bathroom, doing shipping/receiving.
I love how Steve can't even drive 6 hours to a Micro Center without being noticed now.
To be fair, if there is one place where you could guarantee Steve would be recognised, it would be Wonka world for computer nerds
I'm honestly surprised he went all the way to Baltimore. There are a few Microcenters around here that are closer than that lol
@@TheLeftistOwl The closer ones did not have the amount of low-end parts we needed.
@@GamersNexus ah. That makes more sense. Great to see you were in the area!
@@alexedwards6509Despite Micro Center being a location that would increase the probability (as well as a few other variables that would increase probability), it's still pretty crazy and surprising just how many people did recognize him. Perhaps even more did, and didn't want to interrupt filming, or were not added to the video itself as well.
As a current student of Mr Stone, this was great to watch! He is one of the best teachers that I have ever had, and extremely enthusiastic. Earlier in the year, we got to do a full laptop tear down, and the GN mod mats worked great. This year he has been extremely excited about building the new PCs, and I am as well. If you ever get a chance to have him as a teacher, take it, it is worth it.
I'm actually curious, what's been the experience with working with the 4000 series Ryzens Steve provided? Is there an emphasis on learning the difference between an APU and a traditional CPU? Learning about manufacturer differences in BIOS is a really neat angle, too.
I also do disagree with Mr. Stone about one thing at around 6:33 or so - with just *how many* AM4 systems are in the wild at this point, and with AMD apparently still planning to release AM4 parts in The Year Of Our Lord The Baby Jeebus 2024, knowledge of and experience with pin-grid arrays is going to be relevant through to, like, 2030 or so at the earliest. It sounds like you all do get to learn about LGA and PGA, though, if you have a few old Intel Coffee Lakes in the lab!
@@SpaceDrake But if AMD plans to release AM4 parts in The Year Of Our Lord The Baby Jeebus 2024, will those AM4 parts be a Micro Center exclusive?
@@sammiller6631 Nope! The 5700X3D (and, by rumor, the 5500X3D) will be general-release parts, which is part of what's surprising.
@@SpaceDrake I just built a VMware cluster out of AM4 parts. It's the best platform for the buck and still going strong!!
MicroCenter really got their money's worth on this one. Way to go, Steve!
this is gonna look real good on their years end report
To me it seeems the video underperformed by quite a bit, so probably not.
@@gintozlato1880 holiday, there's a reason I watched it at 1am
@@gintozlato1880 you're only looking at one piece of the pie, getting rid of new old stock is worth far more than any advertising.. not having profit loss items taking up space that could instead be filled with profitable items is gold to a retail store. some of those 730's and 710's had probably been there for years.
Especially with the temporary employment part.
Here's what I learned from this video:
Steve donated $2500, 3 trays of CPUs, Rented biggest SUV he could find, spent 6 hours driving just one way, spent another 4 hours in the store.
Conclusion, Steve = awesome person ❤
Mr. Stone is such an amazing teacher!! I took his Computer Engineering 1, 2 and independent study class in high school. He is the primary influence for me discovering my passion, turning my education around, building my first computer, and eventually perusing and completing B.S. degrees in both Electrical and Computer Engineering from NC State (Go Pack!). I’ve now been working in the industry for 4 years, and love it! I’m very grateful for his influence on my life, and I’m confident that other students will get the same experience that I got. Thanks Mr. Stone!!!
Steve is literally Santa Claus. Who would've thought.
Give it a couple years and the GPU launches will at least give me enough white hairs!
Steve will most likely have a video tour series about Santa's Workshop soon
Steve "Santa Tech Jesus Claus" rolls right off the tongue.
@@GamersNexus Well I can see you're already getting there. ;)
The Jesus gig wasn't workin' out in today's overly-commercialized society~
Stone exudes so much competence. I hope his students realize how lucky they are.
Microcenter dude's boss like... You sold the unsellable GPUs??? Yup, GN Steve bought them. 😅
"A long-haired heavy metal angel came and saved me from despair"
Should have chopped another 20 percent off the 730's price, just for getting rid of them! Store manager could have done =it.
@@thomasneedham1512fr tho, something as trash as the GT 710 and the 730 should cost $30 MAX.
@@thomasneedham1512bigger tax write off
Accidentally becoming a store employee is such a mood. I don't push my way past actual employees to give input or anything, but if I see somebody struggling to figure out what they need I'll usually ask what they're looking for and then end up helping them outfit a whole computer, or figure out what minimum spec they need to do their job.
This is truly a thing. I've done this for random folks too - hell, once I ran into my realtor at Best Buy when I was popping in for a cable, and helped her pick a new work laptop. I think it's awesome that Steve and GN are so recognized by the community of PC enthusiasts when our a.oung is, that Steve took the time to answer questions, and that Stone was totally cool with it, rolled with the whole thing. Can I just say, I remember him from the explody power supply testing, and he needs to be on camera more 😁🤣
Yup, it's a thing. I assistant managed an independent HiFi store all thru the 90s before transitioning to IT in the early 2000s, and I _still_ automatically drop into "customer service mode" whenever I'm in our local BB and I see someone looking lost in the hardware aisles (or the TV section)! 😆
I've done this many many times!
I've been at Best Buy with a Blue Shirt on was asked questions about a Blu Ray player and answered. Took me a few seconds after the person walked away and realized they probably thought I worked there at least initially.
Also fun to occasionally strike up conversations with people when you're both looking at similar things.
@@atmoverse yes! Same! And yellow, and black shirts now. Red seems safe still... 😂😂😂😂
Damian is my go to MC employee when I go to Microcenter at the Parkville location. I even email him ahead of time so he has the parts I need ready to go or check stock for me before i do the drive. Great guy!
The most charismatic and wonderful employee there!
Public education is so underfunded and the tech classes are among the most important for our younger generation to have and understand. Thank you Steve, Stone, and everyone who contributed to this. Absolutely awesome.
Right? Dude specs out a computer class for 2 grand and gets REFUSED?! 5k got him the next few years worth of teaching materiel and if you divide that with the hours of teaching you get out of them it comes out next to NOTHING.
Makes you really wonder where all that money goes considering the US spends more per student per year than every country in the world except Luxemburg. We spend twice the OECD average.
@@WilReidtextbook/"educational material" companies and kickbacks for the politicians who sponsor them
It's also the most corrupt branch in the government, we had that in the Philippines unfortunately.
it goes to waste on blks kids@@WilReid
Confession: The first time I ever came across a GN video, Steve struck me as overly cynical, unduly pessimistic, and unnecessarily sarcastic. That was a couple of years ago. Since then I've learned enough about this field to appreciate that the industry has earned every ounce of his ire, and enough about Steve himself to see that my judgement was premature, to say the least. This video has brought my understanding of the man, his motives, and his mission full circle. He's a rare treasure and we're lucky to have him.
So Patrick also teaches at a local high school. Now I respect the GN team even more.
Nice challenge for that Micro Center crew. I'd say say, they did a good job. Well done MC.
"Thanks, Steve" really sums this up best.
At this point why doesn't microcenter just offer to have you do a meet and greet combined with an in person charity drive for Stone's classroom or Cat Angels
That's a cool idea. Might try and work something out
Brilliant idea. I would donate to the cause.
@@GamersNexus Especially when the new Charlotte location opens up in Spring 2024.
@@Jay_the_Caffeinator i don't know how big that store will be... but in the event of such a meet and greet with Steve in this newly opened store... they will probably need a bigger boat... uhm... store ;)
@@GamersNexus that would be an amazing publicity deal for Microcenter and win win for the charity drive...
So much better than a typical sponsorship. Thanks Steve! Thanks Microcenter!
lol steve walking into a micro center is like tom cruise walking down a city street celebrity tier
I went back to college for a Network Administrator degree after working on computers for over 2 decades and building hundreds of computers. I still had to build a $500 pc in class to show that we could do it. The teachers got all the parts, but we had to pay for them, and had us build them. They told us we had all class period, 4 hrs, to build them. I said ok what am I going to do with the other 3 hrs and 45mn. The teacher looked at me with a deer in the headlights look and said "are you serious?". I then told him how many PC's I had already built and he said, "I guess if yours boots, go home". To which I said "deal!". 15mn later I walked out of class with a new cheap PC that I donated to a friend and did home work for my CCNA classes. Was a great experience and I got to help some other students with their setups. I have tried many times to get companies that I work for either doing IT or Support to buy computers that we in the IT/Support can build so I can show co-workers how to build them, and they are all denied. Apparently they think Dell PC's are better... :( Another great video Steve and crew!
People such as Patrick stone are part of the reason many of us were interested in the field of computers. I wasn't the best student. but i had one teacher Mr M! He was truly a good man. He gave me a chance and had me soldiering simple circuit boards, more complex engineering projects , as well as the good ole computer class. I'm in my 40s now but looking back that teacher really made it interesting for a lot of us!
14:20 Steve offering component advice to MC customer looking to upgrade his PC. Steve: "What's your budget?" Customer: "I was looking to stay under 5". Steve: Hundred!?!
😅LOL
Lol yeah maybe 10 years ago 😂
You can get a great PC upgrade for that. (Asuuming no case, no pheriphials, no monitor) You just need to get an used GPU, as the prices for new ones are insane.
Steve comes up with some many angles for new content. Most other tech-tubers are getting a little stale with check out this new product that you can't afford. Steve brings us to the everyday computer teacher or to the company that actually makes the products. Thanks, man, for enlightening the masses.
While whinus is up north buddy, he could open his box of faith (as is tradition) and send some of those internet monies down to NC
My mother was a Teacher (now retired) who ran her small rural school's Computer Lab, and she had to do all this extra work just to get grants to build out minimum spec computers for the labs.
I didn't know Patrick did this, it's cool to know he's inspiring kids to learn more, it's a really good job field to get in these days. Computers, not teaching. 😬
Sadly, most of our schools are underfunded and teachers put in all this charity work essentially just to make sure everything is smoothed over for the kids.
You can walk into a manufacturing job with a high school diploma in my area making about 50% more than someone who teaches, who obviously needs a college degree. 🙄
Two things that keep teacher wages low are the idea that it's "pink collar" work so the people doing it have the drive already so don't need paid much, and also the idea that "those who can't, teach"
Those two things are so stupid, I wish funding would increase but other departments don't want cuts and the people don't want higher taxes so that's where things fall short
Private places excel in the salary department but even then it really isn't high enough in my eyes, and the cost to entry is prohibitive to most people sadly
That second part is true though.@@sandwich2473 Even if they could do the job at first their skill will fade quickly teaching entry level stuff year after year. I can only base my perspective based on public education and college. College level educators are a slightly different situation, depends on the field and if they are adjunct or not.
Watching his eyes get big when he realized he had five grand to spend for the class was great.
to quote a stranger on the internet for his metaphor, the 5 grand "slapped Stone's gear back into neutral."
that heartbeat pause of him trying to process is just priceless
I know! I replayed that a good half dozen times.
Like, he's fingering the stacks of (fake) bills, hearing Steve say, "2500, match," but it's not until Steve specifically says that he has 5 grand to load up on tech for the classroom that it truly hits him.
Only at the portion where they're picking out motherboards, but I see the look in his eye where he's really making every dollar matter because this is statistically such a miracle for an educator.
Thanks!
A video where steve is a microcenter employee for the day and answers customer questions would be amazing. Im sure new builders could learn alot from watching his interactions.
It wasn't 30 seconds before Damion said he was glad that you were buying all the 710s and 730s that I was thinking about how those cards would have likely never gone to anything if it wasn't for you guys! This was really cool to see!
Steve and the rest of the GN family, thank you all so much for what you do. You’re a beacon in the “techtuber” space and more importantly you’re an example of decency and integrity for your community. Merry Christmas to you all, good luck in the new year and i can’t wait to see what you accomplish next year!
That's a genuinely good guy right there, stopping and helping a whole bunch of customers for no other particular reason then he can.
A joyous Festivus Steve, hope it's a good one for you.
This is another reason I like buying from your store. Supoorting stuff like this. I never would have gotten any kind of training or education in school on stuff like this. I was lucky enough to have a math/physics teacher in high school who also was a computer buff who taught us programming too, and that's how I ended up going into IT. I was also glad to hear that MicroCenter announced they are opening a Charlotte location so you guys don't have to drive 6 hours anymore.
I totally agree, is the only TH-camr I support with Patreon and purchasing merchandise from the GN Store. Their ethics and integrity are impeccable, and worthy of support.
Same man, I am part of the "when youtube used to be 5 stars" era and lots of people that I was subscribed too was shilling out products, but Steve and his crew is the only ones where I bought their coasters because they are authentic! Cheers Steve
@@dmoney2163Awesome. Just treated myself to a coaster + cobalt pint glasses set x4 for Christmas.
Steve taking a moment to talk to fans, even during a video recording, is a prime example of why Im always gonna come back to this channel. Genuinely one of the few TH-camrs that I feel is here for the fans and the people
Carolina boy right here. Bought a signed tool kit earlier this year. We need more computer technology classes in our schools. Steve, I love you bro. Thank you.
Wow. Just...wow. I've been building my own PC's since the 80's. That someone is teaching this as part of a computer curriculum is bonkers to me - bonkers amazing, that is. Clearly it's time for me to go to the GN store and see what you have that I haven't already purchased (I already have two giant mouse mats and two tool kits, among other stuff) because clearly supporting you help you do good things for others. Very happy to watch this on Christmas. Also, I don't leave for home until tomorrow, and there is a microcenter 14 minutes away from here - I might have to stop and buy a few feet of different colour shrink tubing 😂
Yes, GamersNexus not only has wonderful journalism ethics, but the charities they support are fantastic too. They are the only TH-camr that I would buy merchandise from, and become a Patreon supporter. proud, Hail Snowflake!
This is a better utilisation of $5000 than the entire “extreme tech upgrade” series.
Props to entire GN team!
I have been scrolling the comment section specifically looking for this comment.😂
Buying expensive TV speakers for a guy with 3 houses is almost the same as buying hardware for children to understand PCs and learn how to assemble one :)
@@LilianMoraru personally, I was more amazed by the HR person's "upgrade"
Charlotte Micro Center can't open soon enough! Great contributions, keep up the work, Stone, go Pack!
I've been a subscriber for a while, been around since the
25:27 The face of that little kid in the back before the scene cut was hilarious
When Stone told you it was a great way to spend a Saturday, I understood how he felt. Damian also appreciated helping equip a classroom of high school students. It's not often that he gets to help make schools better.
This one hit close to home for me! As an educator, especially in IT, this is what's all about! Projecting your passion and sharing your knowledge with your students is one heck of a feeling! Big Ups to Stone, Steve, and the GN Crew!
Awesome work Steve and GN team. And good on Micro Center for their contribution. That's some good PR for the price, probably better than a little ad spot in a video. This is how we keep interest in PC's alive for future generations. I didn't know Patrick was a teacher as well, a real hero. He was like a kid in a candy shop in that store.
As someone who grew up in NC, I'm glad to see people like Patrick teaching highschoolers tech. The only tech class my high school had was still teaching people how to use Palm Pilots when they were very much already irrelevant. High five to Patrick and Steve (and Microcenter) for doin this, hope those kids appreciate the education they're gettin
That employee is SMART!! He understood what they were wanting to do and maximizing the return on money spent. And he was NOT scared to give advice on the lower end drives.
I would liked to have seen them be able to spend even more. Microcenter could send prebuilt budget systems to classrooms to encourage both kids and parents to make the trip to one.
This is the 5000 usd extreme upgrade I really enjoyed watching! And the packing sequence at the end? Sublime.
We badly need Micro Center in the rest of the world.
I am so lucky there is one near me. They built my computer because I was lazy and it cost me less than what I was pricing out to build myself. And they even emailed me a couple of times to make recommendations to my build that saved me money.
no thx
lol we badly need Microcenter in the rest of the US. Lots of people in this country don't have one anywhere close to nearby.
@@greggmacdonald9644 Yeah now imagine not having access at all
yes please add one to Denmark (NOT in Copenhagen) we need it BADLY
Those kids are so lucky to have such an awesome teacher, and Steve, you keep making it so easy to support GN when you keep doing awesome stuff like this that is making a real difference, both to the kids in Stone's class and the random strangers you helped out.
The whole GN team is so humble and sweet. You don't need to show all of the interactions that you have with people or how much you donate to the various charities that we know you do... This video is so wholesome and would not be complete without it. The sheer fact that you're (Steve) is so widely known throughout a state 6 hours away from your HQ is awesome. I hope to see you in my local Micro Center sometime to fanboy it up like the first dude.
I’m pretty new to PCs in general, and really loved seeing the diversity of people that can be found in a microcenter. Old, young, professional, gamer, and everything in between. Loved this video. Keep up the fantastic work GN!
my comp-sci teacher was a legend for sourcing parts, i remember using a basic test of chromixium back in 2016-2017 and dual booting ubuntu and window's with creating a 20 system sever all ourselves, seeing super advanced med tech for vain finding: he encouraged us all to explore computer science and what it could do, all with systems from 2005-9 that couldn't even run windows 7 we need more teachers like them in this world. Thank you for supporting them! and happy holidays to all
Is that a Recurve bow on the wall?
Merry Christmas Steve & team. Hope you have a great day. Your one of my favourite channels!
Fun fact: We bought a curtain rod from Amazon and they sent that by accident. I asked if they wanted it back and the rep said "eh, just keep it."
@@GamersNexusamazing 😂
this is AWESOME!!! being a student of stones, i'll be happy that we don't have to deal with systems that randomly decide to not work anymore! also, we started the school's computer club this year, so hopefully we can use some of the older equipment. thank you!!!!!
Y'all, this one really hits home. The computer lab at the high school I attended was integral to me getting anywhere in life, let alone what it could do for students in the intervening 24 years since I've been. this is a real wakeup call.
Everything about this video made me smile, from getting upgrades for the class to the way you guys interact with fans you run in to. As a public school teacher I can totally empathize with the pain of spending hours coming up with a careful budget using cheap things to improve the student experience to be told "Nah, we are going another direction" by admin. Outstanding work.
Such a great cause! We need more people like Patrick in education
I'm very, very thankful to be so close to a Micro Center. They've saved my ass a few times when building PC's for friends. It's super convenient to have a store so close that has everything you could ever need if I or any of my friends/family members ever have a catastrophic issue.
While other influencers grab money from any opportunity, it is really wholesome to hear, there are people who actually care about the future, and giving money to the ones who really need it.
Thank you Steve!
It's always nice to throw money at people who know what they're doing and absolutely min-max the value from the donations.
He clearly doesn't take the money for granted, and squeezes every last cent out of the total, which is great to see and it's clearly money well spent and will go a long way. Great video and would love to see some follow ups from this if possible!
I cry a lil bit when I realize a lot of people don't have easy access to a Microcenter. The place is truly magical, really nice people and cheap parts.
That is nice of you Steve. Good man. I also appreciate that you are cool with the fans, and help people with the, "hey can I get your opinion" type of questions in both Micro Center videos. You make great content, and obviously that is why you have the following you do. Oh, and I really appreciate the integrity you show with people trying to buy your opinion, and calling out companies that are scamming people. Again, you are a good guy. Thanks
100%.
I guess I'll have to tell you to ignore my comment on the other MicroCenter video. :)
Anyhoo, your comments towards Steve & team were the most honest and nonetheless the most accurate. They're such a great people, praise.
"And i accidentally became a store employee"
Funny thing is, people would likely think it's his off day.
Welcome to MD . Heartwarming video.
Back to you steve
I always appreciate your advocacy for public education, workers in the tech industries, and otherwise donating your time and resources to causes for good. Your commitment to consumer-first reviews is what attracted me to your channel at the beginning of COVID and has kept me coming back.
Spending Christmas alone at work, you guys gave me the warm fuzzy feelings today. Happy holidays to your whole team, and one last good on you Stone for being a teacher in a rough public education world. Much love to you all ❤
I definitely owe my career as a network engineer to enthusiastic teachers like Patrick. A teacher at my high school (20+ years ago) taught a hands-on computer repair class (loosely following a CompTIA A+ curriculum) and an advanced class where some of his students would take tickets from the school district's ticketing system for hands-on IT experience under his supervision. I know multiple people who took the spark from that teacher and turned it into a great IT career. I happily supported your last fundraising drive and I'll definitely do it again when they need it in the future.
All around uplifting video. Kudos to GN, Patrick, AMD and Microcenter!
Haven't even been watching this channel for long, didn't know about it, been watching for long enough to feel inclined by your actions to grab some merch, but anyone who gives freely to the education system like that deserves all the help they can get, so now I'm subscribed AND a member. Love this channel and hope I get to be a part of it for a long time.
great initiative steve good to see such good work that helps in educating others
What an amazing teacher, working with What he has and still making a lesson out of the parts he's given. Great approach getting different vendors' products as well to show everyone a horizontal comparison.
5 grand is alot of money, but to get more kids into computers, it's priceless. You're legends Steve, Patrick and MicroCenter. Merry Christmas!
I am so glad there are about 5 to 6 microcenter near me in NY. Sure, each is approximately a 30-minute to an-hour drive, but I can't complain; it sure beats the 3+ hours some people have to do, and yes, Microcenter is what RadioShack used to be before it abandoned the DIY section. Out of all the stores, this one is a must-have for PC builders, Electronics, and DIY enthusiasts.
This video was so wholesome. Love it. Thank you, Steve and Gamer Nexus, for bringing out an excellent video to close the year on a good note.
Amazingly wholesome video, Steve. Thank you for helping the local high school, and it was heartwarming to see everyone being excited to see you.
For some reason seeing Stone so giddy for his students was so wholesome it warmed my heart. Thank you for doing this.
When the donated CPUs are better than your current CPU...oof.
But, awesome for the students and Patrick to receive newer inventory to help teach and build with! Keep up the amazing work guys! Happy holidays!!
This was a great way to get the future leaders into computers as a whole. It's great to see people giving back to those kids so they can have some fun and learn quite a bit in an ever changing industry.
still remember taking a computer class where we learned on old sff dell optiplexes (proprietary parts everywhere), im sure this experience is gonna be a lot better than what i dealt with 😂
tbf my kid is still gaming on a refurb sff dell optiplex, lol!
yeh dell is a mess, infact they recently stopped selling in the UK which is interesting
How many lacerations were reported? Well, it was a school so I'm guessing gloves were involved
I have to say that I didn't expect it but your video put a smile on my face. Seeing that guy greet you at micro center was very neat. Thank you
What a great Christmas morning surprise! Great work as always, but most importantly it was for the kids!
22:02 The camera person made sure the item was lined up nicely on the shelf when they left. Big respect.
This was awesome to see, great way to spend some time on Christmas! Steve, you and your team are top notch, just fun, real, down to earth people who just genuinely want to help. I just have one question, can we clone about a million more Patrick Stones? :P This world is so chaotic, seemingly bleak for the youth of today, but it's great to know there still are dedicated, passionate educators who just want to help students become the best they can be. Happy holidays, and looking forward to more great stuff like this in 2024! Thank you!!
That was super impressive. I know that there are a lot of teachers/instructors out there that are truly passionate about passing on their knowledge to the next generation. It was great to get to meet one of them. These young ones are truly blessed to be taught by Mr. Stone.
Steve, you,, Microcenter, and Mr. Stone have just ensured that at least 20 students will take the torch and show the world their love for PC building, engineering, and operation. They will make a positive impact on the world.
So happy to see you guys in my neighborhood! Glad the locals gave you a warm welcome! Welcome to Balmer, hun!
Love when you guys just go talk to people at Microcenter. Happy holidays, GN.
Your content is why I started buying exclusively from microcenter and making a sometimes 6 hour drive each time to do it. My last build I actually had them put it together and it's what I'm typing on right now 4 years later. I can't recommend them enough and the fact you guys are making a new generation of PC builders possible is beyond awesome. Shout out to Microcenter Chicago for always giving me awesome help thru 3 pcs.
lol “accidentally became a store employee” like every time you set foot in a microcenter
High-schoolers learning to build custom PCs on all those diverse motherboards is the best thing ever! Teary-eyed knowing how much this haul will mean to the kids. Great job GN x Micro Center!
I will never complain about having to drive an hour and a half to the closest Microcenter to me ever again lol. 6 hours is crazy
That's so awesome. I had a vocational class in high school and we got a budget to purchase and build PCs. It was a good experience and started a life long love of PC hardware, computer networking and eventually a carrier. Glad that kids are still able to get this kind of experience and teaching.
It's awesome to see that some people in business don't want to waste money, product, time, energy, etc... and make the world a better place in they're own way; And I'm not even talking about GN in this sentence; They do this everyday. Thank you GN for helping make people more knowledgeable.
that's awesome.....might not have ditched so much with classes like that when I was in school
Big kudos to Steve for always remembering to give back to not only the tech community, but his own team. Truly a stand-up guy.
This is so cool to see. Growing up I was fascinated with PC stuff and strived to learn everything that I could, scrounging every bit of information I could from magazines and the ads in them, even. It took years and only after the internet could I truly get the full picture. It would have blown my mind in inspiration having like 25 computers in the classroom and being able to see and explore all the components and learn about them from a specialist. This surely is going to be inspirational to many students and will set them in their awesome future careers. Cheers!
New found respect for Patrick, what a proper guy.
I stumbled upon this video and your channel. What an awesome video! You have a new subscriber.
I always wear my GN hoodie to microcenter on the 0.00000001% chance he happens to be there lmao Always love the charitable content and is one of the many reasons why GN is so awesome
Glad I'm not the only one who feels like we skipped a few years during the human malware event. These videos always make me sad that this is what Frys could have become if they didn't get run into the ground. It would be fitting if Microcenter was able to move into one of their classic locations near me that are still abandoned.
Merry Christmas guys, this is the perfect video to release today. Those are some lucky kids to have Stone teaching a class that should be offered at every public high school at this point. Thanks for being the voice of reason keeping us sane as we sail into a new year... seriously, how is it 2024??
I really miss my local Fry's. Micro-Center definitely does NOT have the same vibe and demographic, nor depth of sales haha
.
@@milklordnomadic The Micro Centers I have been in were much nicer than the Frys I visited in Austin Texas way back in the middle 2000s and the service is also a lot better . I do remember buying a high end coffee grinder at Frys on one visit...Why did they think that was an item to branch out into?
@@thomasneedham1512 Yeah they had those isles of random electronics but you could get some pretty damn good deals before Amazon and such was taken over by overseas sellers. They definitely made some weird decisions but I think dropping the ball on their website and online orders is really what did them in. Plus their unmarked open box scandels (which burned me a couple times) and questionable floor management wasn't helping the situation...
Damn shame. There's really nothing like Frys in its prime but Microcenter is about as close as it gets.
@@milklordnomadic Yeah man, I don't think we'll see any store with a vibe quite like Frys again... It was definitely crazy at the time but looking back on it now really gives you perspective on just how wild it really was.
@@thomasneedham1512 Fry's satisfied a certain niche that is hard to describe. Micro Center is more like a revived CompUSA. Fry's was like a warehouse version of that, combined with a Radioshack, and yes, weirdly a home goods/convenience store all-in-one. Especially when I was working in Access Control, it was extremely useful having the ability to stop in and grab whatever length or type of cable or connector, as well as related equipment. This was incredibly useful when too far from a specialty electronics or access control shop. It was also much more convenient to test enthusiast AV equipment there, than pretty much anywhere else. They also rarely had the type of obtrusive advertisement I actually picked up a 240hz LCD from the wild looking Fry's in East Dallas with the rodeo motif the day before they all closed, without realizing! Weird place
this is why I support GN on patreon. The entire team works their butts off.
Steve is such a good man, near Christmas decides to give 2.5k to upgrade students hardware, then proceeds to get micro center to also spend 2.5k of their marketing budget, then he goes to store and gives micro center employees a rest by taking over so that they can enjoy a coffe together just before Christmas time ... What a legend you are Steve ! Ahhh and also spending some time with fans at the store ! 😊
Still blows my mind that Microcenter finally decides to come to NC, but picks Charlotte over Raleigh/Research Triangle (NC's tech hub). I mean, come on! Tech Jesus is here! 😂
Damn you guys need a closer Microcenter, that's an insane drive.
This is such an amazing project and "sponsorship" :) Awesome idea!
That dude before the entrence is a real, certified hype beast. Immediately made me smile, what a wholesome dude. ^.^
"And I accidentially became a store employee" should be a youtube series of techtubers "taking over" a tech shop for a day, just cuz. x)
The sprint for the last $50 was funny - never thought of a x1 sound card...but hey, why not, its a neat accessoire I guess. But geniuely a nice piece of kit for dedicated sound work. And what else are you gonna plop in the remaining empty holes anyway. xD
By the way, the music used here is such a bop. Where can I listen to the full versions respectively? So nice!
Great video and great vibes, thanks Steve!