![]() And as I’ll mention below, I used VELCRO Ties for cable management in the back. To keep the PC up off the ground (and provide somewhere for me to keep random boxes and devices I’m not using at the moment), I use an adjustable 3-tier wire shelf from Target. ![]() All of those parts reside within a budget-but-stealth-looking Corsair Carbide Series 200R case. There’s also a SanDisk SSD PLUS 480GB (along with a half-dozen other old hard drives crammed in there), two Radeon NITRO+ RX 480s, and a CORSAIR TX850M PSU. What are those components? Well, there’s a MSI Pro Series Intel B250 motherboard running the Intel 3.70 GHz Core i3-6100 3M processor (cooled by a DEEPCOOL GAMMAXX 200T CPU Cooler 2) and the Ballistix Sport 16GB RAM Kit. The most expensive parts in this rig are definitely the graphics cards, which are still highly inflated in price because of cryptocurrency mining. Not a budget setup by any means, but not a powerhouse either. Now I’m back to Windows 10 for this setup. ![]() I always used Windows PCs growing up, but when I went to college I ditched that lifestyle for a MacBook, and that served me well as my only machine for several years. Yes, I’m running a Windows PC as my main rig, and that’s a new thing for me. ![]() ![]() Beyond that I have a pretty large ultra-wide monitor on a sleek monitor arm, a MacBook that serves as my Podcast editing machine and my on-the-go workstation, and a second monitor hung on the wall that keeps me updated on the weather and time throughout my day. It’s perhaps one of the most popular desks, and - spoiler alert - I agree with everyone else who has ever owned one: It’s fantastic. As you might expect, my entire setup revolves around a sit-stand desk from Fully called the Jarvis. ![]()
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