How do Desktop Computers Work?

Go to for a 30-day free trial and expand your knowledge. The first 200 people will get 20% off their annual premium membership. Have you ever wondered what it would be like to journey through the inside of your computer? In this video, we’re taking you on a 3D animated adventure to every piece of computer hardware inside a desktop computer. You’ll also see a nanoscopic view of the transistors inside the CPU and GPU. This video is like a biology dissection lab; instead, we’re opening up a computer and seeing all the various computer hardware inside. Do you want to support in-depth engineering and technology education? Join us at: Website: On Facebook: On Twitter: On Insta: Table of Contents: 00:00 - 3D Computer Teardown 01:03 - Central Processing Unit CPU 03:12 - Motherboard 05:20 - CPU Cooler 06:00 - Desktop Power Supply 07:22 - Brilliant Sponsorship 08:52 - Graphics Card and GPU 11:52 - Computer Teardown Process 13:14 - DRAM 14:02 - Solid State Drives 15:04 - Hard Disk Drive HDD 15:52 - Computer Mouse 16:15 - Computer Keyboard 16:30 - Outro Key Branches from this video are: How does DRAM Work? How do SSDs Work? How do Smartphone CPUs Work? Erratum: Animation: Mike Radjabov Script: Teddy Tablante Twitter: @teddytablante Modeling: Prakash Kakadiya Voice Over: Phil Lee Sound Design: Sound Effects and Music Editor: David Pinete Supervising Sound Editor and Mixer: Luis Huesca Animation built using Blender References: 27 Main Parts of Motherboard and its Function Cortex-A77- Microarchitectures - ARM GeForce GTX 1080 Ti Review - Pascal GPU Architecture , Intel’s 10th Generation Desktop CPUs have arrived - Still on 14nm Intel Core i9 - 10850K Processor Insights into DDR5 Sub-Timings and Latencies Mechanical Keyboard Guide Nvidia GP102 #:~:text=NVIDIA’s GP102 GPU uses the,CUDA 6.1 can be used. Teardown of a PC Power Supply Wikipedia contributors. “Back End of Line“. “Central Processing Unit“. “Computers“. “Dynamic Random-Access Memory“. “Motherboard“. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, Visited March 22nd 2022 #Computer #Hardware #Teardown
Back to Top