The problem I have with the argument is that I can't really differentiate it from the argument that a bicycle is better than a Corvette because it's easier to pick up and ride.TehCookie said:How did that argument lose ground? Plugging my console into my TV with a controller is a lot easier than doing that with my PC. Also you never have to worry about compatibility issues, you put a game in and it works. I use both and I prefer my console since I don't have to spend hours fiddling with it to get it to work.
Yeah, it's quite hard to go wrong when plugging stuff in, since you can't phu=ysically plug them in the wrong place. Well, most of them, at least, but that's why everything is also colour coded. Unless, you know, you feel lazy enough to make sure you know what cable you are holding by following it to both ends. Ah, most slots also have a sign describing what goes in.Matthew94 said:Ask online what parts to get and state a budget.tippy2k2 said:snip
When it arrives follow the extremely simple instructions that come with the motherboard.
Boom, you are now part of the "master race".
fyi It's not "part #32115". Nearly every cable and slot is easy to identify and aren't hard to use.
See above. It's slightly more complex than LEGO. Well, probably depending on what LEGO set you have, I guess, but yeah.Vanitas likes Bubbles said:We actually learned about the different parts of a computer last year in my IT class (CPU's, motherboards, RAM etc.). But we never learned how to put it all together. I'm guessing it's like lego?
Nuh-huh, we have them before you. It's called a mouse, sheesh.Aerosteam 1908 said:We have motion controls! Yeah, how can you beat that?! [small]nope[/small]
Actually funny, since I'm doing this right now. Well, I'm not really gaming but I was up until 20 minutes ago. I'm still on the sofa, though.Aerosteam 1908 said:I also heard it's physically impossible to sit back and relax on a sofa whilst gaming on a PC.
I'm not talking about the other functions, I'm talking about the same function. Playing games. It's like saying the PS3 is better than the 360 because it has bluray, that's nice and all but we're talking about gaming not media centers. That may just be me since I want a cheap console to play games that I know will work, I don't care about the extra features.peruvianskys said:The problem I have with the argument is that I can't really differentiate it from the argument that a bicycle is better than a Corvette because it's easier to pick up and ride.TehCookie said:How did that argument lose ground? Plugging my console into my TV with a controller is a lot easier than doing that with my PC. Also you never have to worry about compatibility issues, you put a game in and it works. I use both and I prefer my console since I don't have to spend hours fiddling with it to get it to work.
Let me set it up this way: If someone came up with a machine that never crashed, never had hardware compatibility options, and never needed updating, but still did the exact same thing as a PC, then I would call it more convenient than current PCs. But if you made a "PC" that had no modding support or changeable hardware, then it wouldn't be "easier to use" in any real sense; instead, it would just be lacking features. If consoles could offer what the PC does but do it in an easier or more reliable way, then it would be a point on their side. But just taking out something and saying, "See, now it's more accessible!" strikes me as the worst kind of positive spin on a blatant negative.
What I'm arguing is that a console is not really "more convenient" because a comparison of convenience requires even a basic equivalence. Saying that a lighter is more convenient than a nuclear power plant might be technically true, but it's meaningless in a discussion of their merits as power producers because they don't perform the same function. So if you want to argue that the console is an inferior toy version of a PC, then that's fine. But if you want to argue that they're in any way equal in merit, then you can't pass off a result of their inequality as a point on your side.
Does that make sense? It's a hard idea for me to accurately express because I'm exhausted right now.
You know, I've seen him post about "People don't have the knowledge do do computers stuff", but I get this feeling he has never actually tried.Matthew94 said:Ask online what parts to get and state a budget.tippy2k2 said:snip
When it arrives follow the extremely simple instructions that come with the motherboard.
Boom, you are now part of the "master race".
fyi It's not "part #32115". Nearly every cable and slot is easy to identify and aren't hard to use.
Well, technically you could just as well use a large tv as a computer monitor and play PC games that support the use of a controller.. I don't know anyone who actually bothers to do this, but it certainly rules out relaxing on a sofa being an impossibility.Aerosteam 1908 said:I also heard it's physically impossible to sit back and relax on a sofa whilst gaming on a PC.
You probably already got this multiple times, but the PC does have motion controls, it's called the RAZR Hydra (or the Kinect, if you hack it).Aerosteam 1908 said:We have motion controls! Yeah, how can you beat that?! [small]nope[/small]
I also heard it's physically impossible to sit back and relax on a sofa whilst gaming on a PC.