Every Computer Component Explained in 3 Minutes
VloĆŸit
- Äas pĆidĂĄn 8. 05. 2024
- Every famous computer component gets explained in 3 minutes!
Join my Discord to discuss this video:
/ discord
Subscribe and activate the bell!
đŒ Business Mail: operamp4@gmail.com
- TIMESTAMPS -
0:00 Motherboard
0:19 CPU
0:40 Hard Drive
1:04 RAM
1:41 SSD
1:54 Graphics Card
2:21 Power Supply
2:32 Case
2:48 Cooling System
3:03 Wireless Card
- DISCLAIMER -
Do not use this video as your only source of information. This video is for entertainment/edutainment purposes, and some information could be too oversimplified or incorrect. This channel's goal is to spark your curiosity and let you do your own research on these topics.
every human organ explained
and their market price, i don't need to relearn this but ik a lot of people need to know this
@@postmailer9223aww howd you knowâ€â€đ„č
â@@postmailer9223Their market price is very much variable. Totally depends upon supply and demand.
and how to get them
And how good they taste
You should do âEvery Part in a Car/Car Engineâ, you could even include EV Motors as well!
Electric Vehicles would be pretty cool.
YES I WANNA SEE THIS VID
PLEASE
THIS PLEASE
i would love this video, especially as someone who is about to get a car and doesnât understand what different parts in cars do
Motherboard: Heart
CPU: brain
Hard drive: memory
RAM: notes turned in after class
SSD: Notes app on your phone
Graphics card: optic nerve/eyes
Power supply: food cupboard
Case: Skeleton/skin
Cooling system: sweat glands
Wireless card: Google
Edit: this is what I got out of the video, I know little to nothing about computer biology, and human biology also isn't my strongest suit lmao
i would say the gpu is also a brain, faster than the cpu but not as smart
like the kid that can do an ab surd amout of simple addition but cant do long division
would the hard drive and the ram not rather be the long-term and short-term memory?
i would say the PSU is more the heart
the motherboard is closer to being the peripheral nervous system
Bold of you to assume my case is made of plastic
Indeed. Only 1 of my 5 cases has been plastic. (Don't say your case is mostly glass)
mine is made of air
mine is made of
â@@alex.g7317 mine is made
Mine is maden't
1:40 You forgot to mention that RAM means "Random Access Memory"
Is that necessary information for a quick overview? Even if you told people, they wouldn't know what random acces meant, anyway
@@David12scht Oh, you're right
Thatâs not really something people need to know though.
ââ@@miloyallhe explained what CPU means so why not explain what RAM means
The motherboard feeds the consumer
Sounds fucking communist cause of my typo tho lol
â@@frozencatcakeThe motherland
@@EEE-1409 lmfao
â đ„
đ„đ„
**Soviet anthem intensifies**
@frozencatcake
No, it is OUR typo.
Thanks for being short and quick to the point and not posting two part 20 min long videos that I could have explained 5 mins. Subscribe earned.
I love this channel so much. Explains everything so well yet so simply.
This breakdown simplifies complex computer components brilliantly, making it easy for anyone to grasp. I appreciate how it covers everything from the motherboard to the cooling system, providing a comprehensive understanding. Great job on making tech concepts accessible!
Literally was looking to buy a new PC and realized I know nothing about computers when this dropped. Thanks for the beginner's explanation!
Look up Linus tech tips how to build a computer, build one yourself, donât buy a prebuilt itâs cheaper
@@Halfcertified linus tech tips is really good i follow him as well
yet id also suggest to do as much research as you can if you are on a budget like me to v avoid wasting your money
especially research on compatibility of components with each other to avoid wasting money like i did in my frist build
This is actually really helpful. Ty!
Another video, something new to learn! Nice content, Paint Explainer!
TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Motherboard
0:19 CPU
0:40 Hard Drive
1:04 RAM
1:41 SSD
1:54 Graphics Card
2:21 Power Supply
2:32 Case
2:48 Cooling System
3:03 Wireless Card
These timestamps are already in the description.
I would have done the video differently, but for a 3 minute explanation the information is very clear without going into too much detail. Very nice.
Another banger as usual đ„
Once again (as someone who can hardly understand computers), you've taught me things teachers have been unable to. Thank you for your concise and easy-to-understand explanations! Now I actually know how the basic parts of a computer work!
This is very much a TLDR and over simplifies a lot of things so I wouldn't consider it helpful if you're trying to fully understand things but it gets the gist of ti
@@Vladimir_4757elaborate
Also made a video on computer viruses
He already made one on lists of computer malwares
I enjoy these kinds of explainer đâš
Finally I understand those components. When I was young all that people teached me was "this is the CPU (talking about the whole tower), it's the brain of the computer and where all its conected" and that's it.
That was definitely the accepted lingo some decades ago. People used to call the whole tower the "CPU". And the case went through different terms like "chassis" and "CPU case". Strange times.
@@rhoharane Computer-illiterate people called it that way. And calling a computer tower a CPU annoys me.
Thank you so much dude
Thanks for making this video. I am a computer nerd, and I struggle to explain what the parts do, and you explain it here in a very simple format.
same lol
The only bad thing about this channel is the sheer amount of copycats it has created, which says a lot.
Is this the original one? Because I know what you're talking about whether a bunch of other people that are doing the same thing with him. Is he the original channel that everybody has based off their copycat ones off?
@@sniperaim333 I believe so. I attempted to subscribe to the first I saw, which was this one.
Ok, this is actually helpful - I was planning to build a pc and this made it much easier
OMG, this is the best summarization I have ever heard!
I'm in a computer science class and this is teaching me a lot in just 3 minutes.
As a cs teacher, these videos are legit helpful as nice quick summaries or introductions for lessons, thanks for the videos!
I love your videos so much
Awesome channel with mountains of information, good job.
Also the power supple's job is to convert AC to DC
Hey I know that band
and make sure each component gets the correct wattage, canât believe he glossed over it so quickly
Diodes already do the job.
I love the videos dude
Nice explanation.
Amazing content
I actually had a computer test on this topic thank you
Short and to the point perfect for new builders.
very good explanation of all components.
next you should do most electrical components next
Thank you!
As a software engineer who often works very closely with the graphics card, I'd just like to give a slight correction.
The graphics card isn't defined by having the ability to draw pixels on the screen - but almost all of them do (some cards such as ones for cryptocurrency mining have no output to a screen).
What graphics cards really do is give the ability to do the same thing thousands of times in parallel. This is used for things where the order of operations makes no difference.
A CPU can also do things in parallel with threads/cores, but every CPU core is far more powerful than a single GPU core. That's why your CPU comes with a handful of cores while a GPU often has thousands.
A GPU is just really good at doing the same thing thousands of times at the same time.
"Graphics card" is bit of a misnomer, because while it's often used heavily in graphics, it does a lot more than just show pixels.
Can I have it in Crayon Eating Terms?
'slight' correction
â@@SpaceMarineJeff graphics cards are good at doing lots of basic maths very quickly, but a CPU can do more complex stuff that a graphics card can't
Basically
Thanks for the additional info!
To be more pedantic, we should separate Graphics Card from GPU. All GCs have GPUs, but there's more to a GC than the GPU (VRAM, etc.). Some CPUs (and some early motherboards) have an integrated GPU. "Mining cards" have a GPU but may not be considered GCs because they lack the ability to drive a display.
As a computer enthusiast myself, I'd say, at 0:30 there are specific names for certain units, (which in this case you said the CPU performs various intricate mathematical operations), there actually is a name for this, and it is known as "ALU (Arithmetic Logic Unit)", and its purpose is to deal/perform all the logic related and mathematical operations. In the slightest, is also has some correlations with FPU (Floating-point Unit), which operates on floating point numbers.
2:35 Most cases are more metal than plastic, as metal is more durable than plastic.
gets hotter tho
@@HypeXtra Oh yeah, most cases are a combination of plastic and metal.
I already knew this but i needed to show my family this
This is the most educational thing ive watched since watching tim and moby back in elementary school
Idea: every outrageous piece of modern 'art' explained
Someoneâs mad people are better at art than him
@@Cybercerialdestroyer a banana taped to a wall, insane art
ââ@@baldingfox77558There is beauty to a banana taped to a wall. It symbolises how completely BONKERS we have become with our artistic ideas, and I think that is poetic XD
@@baldingfox77558 ok so? Itâs still creative
what's so creative about it? if the art is made like an illusion then that's gonna be creative not taped to the to wallâ@Cybercerialdestroyer
What a coincidence! This is what we're learning. Thank you for making the lesson much easier to understand.
lol 3 minutes is nothing. Better read online resources, courses are for people who aren't truly passionate
@@nibble1110 Yeah, I know. His videos aren't meant to be fleshed out informative videos but more like something to get you to research. I still like simplified explanations though.
Whole school year in 3 minutes
- TIMESTAMPS -
0:00 Motherboard
0:19 CPU
0:40 Hard Drive
1:04 RAM
1:41 SSD
1:54 Graphics Card
2:21 Power Supply
2:32 Case
2:48 Cooling System
3:03 Wireless Card
đđđ
It help so much
Nice broâ€â€â€â€
Thank you friends
My guy!
Joke on you, my case isn't made of plastic but used cardboard boxes.
There are also wood or metal cases. But a majority of them are plastic.
The Oregon Science Museum (OMSI) has this game/puzzle where it shows parts of the computer and you put each puzzle on the part of the computer, if you remove the puzzle it'll show a screen saying an error, why that part is important and how a virus can affect it.
hello, I love your videos, I would like to know what software you use to make this kind of video please
It's AI
You explain things in a way I actually understand. Might be useful to me if you made a video on how to use a computer? It'd be nice to be able to have one without the fear and certainty that I will kill it with ignorance.
Could you explain every electric and electronic circuit component in an unspecified amount of minutes?
describe every period in history! modernity, middle ages, etc
They taught IT for like 4 years as a side in the middle school, and I never learned this much. Thanks man.
In 3 minutes you explained more stuff than my college did in a whole semester đđ»đż
Regarding the 'graphics card' and the CPU, it isn't quite correct. What actually exists is a GPU chip inside the CPU, which is essentially an "integrated graphics processing unit" and not a graphic card.
No offense, love your videos! Just an IT guy here.
2:48 I wish you explained the upsides and downsides of a fan cooling and liquid cooling system
main parts of a car next
Though not common in home computer systems, there is also the npu (neural processing unit) and tpu (tensor processing unit)
I honestly wasn't expecting the wifi card to be included haha. What about thermal paste/pads though? Isn't electronic in any way but I feel like the cooler section would've been a nice place to introduce thermal paste and explain why its needed. Other than that I'll be sharing this vid with friends!
Plz do a vid on every mobile component
I dont understand computers. But i like your funny words, magic man.
finally something i can understand
The multiverse again!
I like your videod man.
Literally building a PC right now and this pops up in my recommended
i wish i had this last year when i had a project on this
SSD shown is NVMe tho, which connects to the motherboard and uses PCI-e and not Sata cable as an HDD would
Wrong, NVMe is a type of SSD not a hardware format. You can have non NVMe SSDs use M.2 or PCIe and in that stick format.
Man this would have been great to have in my Computer Class like... 20 years ago.
I wouldn't mind more computer-related stuff.
can you do every car component explained?
WiFi support doesnât necessarily require a wireless card. Many modern motherboards have WiFi hardware built into them.
In fact, most motherboards I looked into when I last upgraded my computer have far fewer slots available for expansion cards; seems people expect the motherboard to handle nearly _everything_ these days. (I managed to find one that just barely has enough slots for the cards I needed to add.)
Correction, modern motherboards have variants that have a built in WiFi card on them usually in m.2. You will not get a wireless access without the wifi card. These kind of motherboard have a dedicated m.2 slot for the wifi card with some motherboards leaving empty for you to add it yourself.
The motherboard you most likely bought is a micro atx or mini atx it has fewer pcie slots than atx because its smaller.
@@someonetooknuggets To be specific, itâs an X570S Aorus Master: ATX form factor, 3 PCI slots, and an Intel AX210 WiFi module which is listed as M.2 but is buried beneath the back panel connectors. As far as Iâm concerned, thatâs built-in.
Fun fact: it takes about 3 hours to watch all of his videos start to end
My ass ainât known nothing except power, and cooling. đđ
Incredibly you explained it better than my hardware teacher đ
Im so glad this exists i can finally barely understand a technobabble
Also, have you ever heard of that way of cooling where people dump a shit load of clear coolant in a watertight case, and they add a fish tank cooler to cool it? đ
don't u think psu is actually the heart it is literally pumping energy to components and motherboard is holding everything and makes sure to everything works properly which makes a skeleton
and chassis is a skin
I'm not sure why you never actually explained what RAM stands for yet you explained what CPU stands for. By the way from what I remember RAM stands for random Access memory. Anyways great video and I think you explained everything perfectly. Even the stuff that I actually may be less familiar with although I'm kind of familiar with all the parts
My IT class explained in 3 mins
A few things that I noticed that were slightly odd were the analogy about motherboards being like the heart of the computer. The motherboard supplies power and data to and between most of the components respectively and not really much else, so itâs more like the computers blood system, nervous system and skeleton. Also, cases are usually made out of metals like Aluminum, not plastic. A quite important thing that you missed about power supplies is that they regulate and control how much power goes through all of the components so that they donât get fried.
Cases should be made from conductive metal because they are essentially grounding the PC.
The motherboard also handles a lot of I/O and secondary features, whether from the front panel, headers, or the extra PCIE/M.2 slots. It also does the audio if using a 3.5mm jack. Just adding that since you didn't mention it
Cases arenât really essential for grounding your PC, since the power supply already does that if itâs plugged in. The case doesnât really help out in that sense.
Forgot to mention power supply, even thought itâs insanely self explanatory.
âall of these together are called the computer. It will drain your bank account.â
How about the network card, Universal Serial Bus controller, peripherals, etc.?
In future, NPU and QPU.
What happened to all the flags explained video?
Why is it private?
This video helped me with my software issues.
The video was uploaded 2 minutes ago, and you also commented 2 minutes ago. How were you able to watch the full video before commenting? đ€Ą
@@undefeatableyt7 Video came out 14 mins ago how are both of your comment older then that? Dafaq is going on
@@undefeatableyt7 satire ig, otherwise, dickriding is insane
I like this one
Every street sign explained, even the unorthodox ones.
DO "every popular game series" explained
5 hour long video
So that's what's wrong when I build computers, I keep forgetting the Power supply.
Some people also call cpus with integrated graphics an âAPUâ, or âAccellerated processing unitâ
Specifically, AMD calls some of their CPUs APUs, and the CPUs that they label like this actually have stronger integrated graphics than usual CPUs.
Example, all ryzen 7000 cpus have an igpu but they're not called APUs, however the newer 8000G series CPUs are called APUs because they have much stronger iGPUs than a usual cpu
Nice.
Wouldn't that make the motherboard more like the spine? Since it provides communication between all the components, like how the spine connects the Central Nervous System (Brain and Spinal Cord) to the Periphiral Nervous System (Everything else e.g. limbs).
Tip: to make your PC run faster, use a plastic bag as your Case to make cooling more efficient!
about the graphics card:
that definition is more of a GPU since a graphics card in an add-on GPU
also it's not a standalone computer, the main difference between it and the CPU being the CPU having tens of smart cores while the GPU has 100s or thousands of dumber cores for fast but simple calculations (also it needs orders from the cpu to work)
â€â€
SSDs are made from cells that can trap electrons when sending a lot of electrons, and release them when massaged with just a little bit of electrons.
These microscopic cells can be stacked in 3 dimensions and each cell is miniscule
I have no idea how SSDs read their memory though. Each line of cells from an SSD when read sends the contents of that line of cells, maybe each line of cells when a flow of electron runs across will modify it based on whats stored in the cell, with electrons being less likely to be where cells have trapped electrons, while being more plenty across empty cells
HDDs are made from a magnetic surface that can be flipped from one state to another with another magnet. storage happens in two dimensions, and the reading is done via one stick that has to run across the whole disk to find the right information, then sends the data.
Some people mistake an entire desktop computer for a CPU (central processing unit.)
Every rollercoaster type explained
Hi, can you make âEvery synesthesiaâ next? đđż