WEBVTT

00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:04.240
You've probably seen the metric boatload of videos that we make every year at CES,

00:00:04.240 --> 00:00:07.840
but the thing is, in spite of being called, and I quote,

00:00:07.840 --> 00:00:13.040
the most powerful tech event in the world, the show runs out of Las Vegas,

00:00:13.040 --> 00:00:17.040
where the hotels don't exactly have the fastest internet.

00:00:17.040 --> 00:00:21.280
So instead of sending our footage back home to the studio to be edited,

00:00:21.280 --> 00:00:29.200
we have to bring our editors to the footage. And there's a lot of footage, so much so that a couple of years ago, we built this.

00:00:29.280 --> 00:00:33.680
And you might think, wow, Linus, that looks like a crappy old business machine.

00:00:33.680 --> 00:00:41.360
And you're right. But I promise it's got a heart of gold and a heart of Kyokuse CM6 NVMe storage,

00:00:41.360 --> 00:00:46.880
specifically 60 terabytes of it that allows our editors to work on location

00:00:46.880 --> 00:00:51.760
with the same speed and efficiency as they would with the crazy servers we have here in our studio,

00:00:51.760 --> 00:00:54.880
all without even having to think about running out of space.

00:00:54.880 --> 00:00:58.160
It's small enough to fit in a... Yes, thank you for that, Jake.

00:00:58.160 --> 00:01:03.920
Carry on. And it has enough networking to support more editing machines than we could ever need at the show.

00:01:05.680 --> 00:01:11.520
But it has a major flaw. It's, at least with the case, way too heavy.

00:01:11.520 --> 00:01:15.280
I actually almost missed my flight last year because of this thing.

00:01:15.280 --> 00:01:21.040
It just so happened that the airline check-in manager was a fan and was like, okay, he can go.

00:01:21.040 --> 00:01:26.800
We don't want that to happen again. So it's time for a portable NAS V2, smaller, lighter,

00:01:26.800 --> 00:01:29.280
but just as capable. And we're going to be using...

00:01:30.080 --> 00:01:32.480
Oh, oh yeah, you have the box. Do you want the box or the actual thing?

00:01:33.360 --> 00:01:37.200
Sorry. Meet the Mini's Forum MSO1 Mini PC.

00:01:37.200 --> 00:01:41.280
This thing's got to be what? A quarter of the volume of what we built before?

00:01:41.280 --> 00:01:46.960
And if the spec page is to be believed, we'll be making basically no compromises to performance.

00:01:46.960 --> 00:01:50.240
Perhaps the best part is you could just buy one of these online,

00:01:50.240 --> 00:01:53.120
no weird modifications required. Check this out.

00:01:53.840 --> 00:01:55.440
I can even fit our sponsor in there.

00:01:57.200 --> 00:02:08.240
We promised basically no compromises compared to our older NAS machine.

00:02:08.240 --> 00:02:14.880
So why don't we start with networking? Any storage system that we use is going to have to be at least 10 gig Ethernet.

00:02:14.880 --> 00:02:18.000
Good for around one Gigabyte per second of throughput

00:02:18.000 --> 00:02:26.240
to the MacBooks that our editors bring to see. Yes. But this has not one, but two onboard Intel-powered 10 gig SFP plus ports.

00:02:26.240 --> 00:02:32.080
Not unlike the system that it's replacing. But on top of that, it also has dual two and a half gig

00:02:32.080 --> 00:02:38.880
and dual 40 gig USB four ports, which could easily run 10 or even 25 gig Thunderbolt adapters.

00:02:38.880 --> 00:02:42.640
Now we wouldn't want to bring a 25 gig switch with us to CES, right?

00:02:44.400 --> 00:02:47.600
Are you not? Are you? No, I'm not. What? Well, I don't know.

00:02:47.600 --> 00:02:51.200
I'm not going to. Can never tell with you. Where am I going to put that? I'm going to bring that on the airplane.

00:02:51.760 --> 00:02:56.240
I'm going to end up on a watch list. The point is the onboard 10 gig is already lots for what we're doing,

00:02:56.240 --> 00:03:05.920
but it's cool that we could go faster if we wanted to. Speaking of faster, is that a freaking PCIe by 16X slot on a computer this small?

00:03:05.920 --> 00:03:09.360
It's a half height slot. So there are some limitations.

00:03:09.360 --> 00:03:11.840
I call them line of slots. That's a great name for them.

00:03:12.400 --> 00:03:17.040
Unfortunately, while it is a 16X slot, only eight of the lanes are hooked up.

00:03:17.040 --> 00:03:22.880
But that's still a ton of bandwidth to play with if you wanted to add something like a couple additional SSDs

00:03:22.880 --> 00:03:27.200
or in our case, an NVIDIA Quadro P1000.

00:03:27.200 --> 00:03:30.320
A half height. Oh my God. It's so cute.

00:03:30.320 --> 00:03:34.480
Single slot workstation GPU. Now, this might be a bit of an older card,

00:03:34.480 --> 00:03:37.760
but realistically, it's powerful enough for our purposes.

00:03:37.760 --> 00:03:40.800
Actually, why do we need your workstation card? We're going to get into that.

00:03:40.800 --> 00:03:44.960
And let's read the bloody script, brother. Ah, which we'll talk about in a minute.

00:03:44.960 --> 00:03:49.680
But the system officially supports up to NVIDIA's current gen RTX 2000 E

00:03:49.680 --> 00:03:54.080
ADA with a whopping 16 gigs of VRAM. Or if you're feeling crafty,

00:03:54.080 --> 00:03:58.480
you can install this sick custom single slot cooler from Nerdware

00:03:58.480 --> 00:04:03.200
onto an RTX 4000 ADA SFF like Kraft Computing showed off recently.

00:04:03.200 --> 00:04:06.480
We're going to have all that linked in the description if you wanted to do something like this for yourself.

00:04:07.120 --> 00:04:12.400
As for why we need a GPU in a NAS, I mean, we're not running a Plex server on it, are we?

00:04:12.400 --> 00:04:16.960
Well, I don't think I told you, but I actually did find a place in Vegas with good internet.

00:04:16.960 --> 00:04:21.520
HyperX Arena Esports Venue. And they offered to let us keep this machine there,

00:04:21.600 --> 00:04:24.640
which is great. It's just that they're not open 24 seven

00:04:24.640 --> 00:04:28.560
like everything else in Las Vegas. So we need to like export a video at two in the morning,

00:04:28.560 --> 00:04:31.440
which I'm going to try not to, but it happens.

00:04:32.080 --> 00:04:38.080
This way we can run a VM on this machine, remote in and render a video from wherever.

00:04:38.080 --> 00:04:41.840
That is awesome. And it will still have good internet. But why not go with something newer?

00:04:41.840 --> 00:04:45.200
I think I know the answer. And workstation cards are expensive. And that was on the shelf.

00:04:45.200 --> 00:04:49.200
And because I had a better idea. Huzzah! The new Mac Mini M4.

00:04:49.200 --> 00:04:52.320
It's so small. And this is so small that I can bring both.

00:04:52.320 --> 00:04:56.720
And to be honest, this Mac Mini will absolutely crush this system,

00:04:56.720 --> 00:05:02.000
even with the best GPU we could possibly put in there. This thing is actually kind of incredible,

00:05:02.000 --> 00:05:05.840
especially for the price. And for Adobe apps, macOS is better anyways.

00:05:05.840 --> 00:05:08.960
So that's why we use MacBooks for our editors.

00:05:08.960 --> 00:05:13.200
Normally here, we're a PC house, but Premiere is just so much more stable on the MacBooks.

00:05:13.200 --> 00:05:17.760
And we don't have time to screw around with that stuff when we're at a show. Of course, anything would shred the performance

00:05:17.760 --> 00:05:22.400
of our MSO one in his current state. While you can buy it, and I read you to go out of the box system,

00:05:22.400 --> 00:05:27.120
we got ours as a bare bones. So it still doesn't have any memory or storage.

00:05:28.400 --> 00:05:31.440
Oh, cool. DDR5 Sodems. Let's go.

00:05:31.440 --> 00:05:34.800
Every once in a while, I'm like, oh yeah, Bushkin still exists.

00:05:34.800 --> 00:05:38.080
They actually have some really cool stuff. It doesn't have labels on it,

00:05:38.080 --> 00:05:42.160
so you wouldn't know what it is. Oh, but it's on here. Oh, no, are you kidding me?

00:05:42.160 --> 00:05:47.600
Yeah, those are dual 48 gig DDR5 5600 mega transfer Sodem.

00:05:47.600 --> 00:05:51.520
Wow. So we are technically downgrading our capacity,

00:05:51.520 --> 00:05:54.720
128 to 96, but it's close,

00:05:54.720 --> 00:05:57.840
and we're going from 3200 to 5600.

00:05:57.840 --> 00:06:00.880
It's not going to be a problem. Now I just have to figure out

00:06:00.880 --> 00:06:03.920
how to get it into the system. Phillips zero, perhaps.

00:06:04.800 --> 00:06:09.440
Yes, sir, yes, sir. Ah, ooh, that's cute.

00:06:09.440 --> 00:06:13.520
You can take the fan off without actually removing the heat sink to get the Sodem slots.

00:06:13.520 --> 00:06:17.600
Oh, and that gives them lots of airflow too. I love it. Yeah, but you're going to remove the heat sink anyways.

00:06:17.600 --> 00:06:21.360
Oh. I heard through the Gravevine that the thermal paste they use on these,

00:06:21.360 --> 00:06:24.720
not the greatest. A lot of the Mini's Forums boxes use liquid metal,

00:06:24.720 --> 00:06:28.800
but this one does not. Okay, screws are out, but no, there's two more.

00:06:28.800 --> 00:06:32.640
They're under the foam. If you feel it right there. I got to take the foam off?

00:06:32.640 --> 00:06:36.400
There, I'll just poke through. Oh, that's horrible, Jake.

00:06:36.400 --> 00:06:40.720
That's the other one. Ew. It's not the worst thing ever.

00:06:40.720 --> 00:06:44.320
I'd actually rather you do it like that than rip the foam off

00:06:44.320 --> 00:06:48.720
because it probably won't stick back on. Remember when CPUs were square?

00:06:48.720 --> 00:06:52.320
I do. I mean, look at this thing. It's a laptop chip.

00:06:52.320 --> 00:06:55.920
It's a tall boy. It's a laptop chip. Or a short wide boy.

00:06:55.920 --> 00:06:59.520
I assume this is Intel then because AMD doesn't look like that.

00:06:59.520 --> 00:07:02.560
Yeah, they actually sell a few different versions of the MSO1,

00:07:02.560 --> 00:07:06.800
but we went for the top dog. Core i9-13900H.

00:07:06.800 --> 00:07:10.880
Given the form factor, like I said, it is a laptop chip, but it is no slouch.

00:07:10.880 --> 00:07:14.240
14 cores, six of which are high-clocking performance cores

00:07:14.240 --> 00:07:17.280
reaching peak speeds of up to 5.4 GHz

00:07:17.280 --> 00:07:20.400
with the rest being low-power efficiency cores. But this chip is ready

00:07:20.400 --> 00:07:23.600
for a max turbo power of 115 watts.

00:07:23.600 --> 00:07:27.840
How is that a mobile chip? Well, it's a... I mean, I guess that's why their CEO's gone.

00:07:27.840 --> 00:07:31.920
Yeah. I was just primed to say,

00:07:31.920 --> 00:07:35.200
yeah, I wasn't expecting you to say that. Jesus.

00:07:36.080 --> 00:07:39.840
That's nice. He's prepared to agree with me even when he hasn't heard what I said.

00:07:39.840 --> 00:07:43.440
I mean, usually not, but I just... I mean, with the size of this cooler

00:07:43.440 --> 00:07:48.240
or the size of the cooler in any laptop, it's not going to be able to do that kind of wattage sustained.

00:07:48.240 --> 00:07:51.280
No, in fact, Minisform actually limits it to 80 watts in the bias,

00:07:51.280 --> 00:07:56.080
but they do allow you to change it. And since I heard that the thermal paste is kind of crappy,

00:07:56.080 --> 00:08:01.520
PTM7950 from LTPstore.com. Okay. And maybe we can turn the wattage up then?

00:08:01.520 --> 00:08:05.840
Yeah. This stuff's actually perfect for this application. Funnily enough, the reason we started carrying it

00:08:05.840 --> 00:08:11.120
was because of the crazy improvements people were seeing after upgrading laptop chips with it.

00:08:11.120 --> 00:08:14.320
Because on a normal desktop CPU, which has a metal heat spreader,

00:08:14.320 --> 00:08:17.600
the thermal paste might only see like 70, 80 degrees.

00:08:17.600 --> 00:08:24.320
But on a laptop chip, it's a bare die. And you might actually see temperatures of 100, 110 degrees,

00:08:24.320 --> 00:08:28.560
which normal thermal paste is not made for. This stuff, it handles it.

00:08:28.560 --> 00:08:33.440
We'll throw some screenshots on the screen, maybe a before and after to see what the temps are like.

00:08:33.440 --> 00:08:37.200
Oh, did you get before temps? Yeah, oh yeah. Oh, nice. I'm sure it's quite a bit better.

00:08:37.200 --> 00:08:42.000
Here's the application process, by the way. You just cut yourself a little piece, peel the one side.

00:08:42.080 --> 00:08:45.280
Hope that you cut the right size piece, and then peel back the top.

00:08:45.280 --> 00:08:48.720
That's a lot. What's trippy is it goes on like a thermal pad,

00:08:48.720 --> 00:08:54.160
especially if you put it in the fridge or freezer before you work with it. So you can see it's a solid right now.

00:08:54.160 --> 00:08:58.320
But once it heats up, it changes to a liquid so that it fills in all the grooves,

00:08:58.320 --> 00:09:01.520
just like a more traditional paste would. Oh, I forgot to clean that.

00:09:01.520 --> 00:09:05.520
Yep. I believed in you though. I thought too much of you. You put so much, oh my god.

00:09:05.520 --> 00:09:09.840
That's fine. You can't put too much paste on something. We proved it recently that you cannot.

00:09:09.840 --> 00:09:13.520
You definitely can. You can put it even in between the pins and the CPU.

00:09:13.520 --> 00:09:16.960
Really? And it still worked? Oh yeah. Oh my god, you're not. What?

00:09:16.960 --> 00:09:23.120
That's the GPU mounting solution? Look, okay. Justin has not had time to make a bracket for this GPU

00:09:23.120 --> 00:09:28.880
because it's missing the half height bracket. And he's going to today before we go to CES tomorrow.

00:09:28.880 --> 00:09:32.880
I'm sure it'll definitely happen. Now, since we're talking about using this as a NAS,

00:09:32.880 --> 00:09:37.360
we should definitely talk about storage, which is another one of this system's strong suits.

00:09:37.360 --> 00:09:42.640
It has not one, not two, but three M.2 storage slots,

00:09:42.640 --> 00:09:48.880
which is kind of crazy. Now in the old system, we used two of Kyoksia's 30 terabyte CM6 SSDs

00:09:48.880 --> 00:09:52.080
because we had them on the shelf and it's nice to not have

00:09:52.080 --> 00:09:55.760
to worry about capacity. And while we could still use a 2.5 inch SSD

00:09:55.760 --> 00:09:58.960
with this handy M.2 to 2.5 inch adapter,

00:09:58.960 --> 00:10:03.760
they actually include with the MSO1. Now that we have experience running a NAS at a show,

00:10:03.760 --> 00:10:07.200
we know that even three or four terabytes is lots.

00:10:07.200 --> 00:10:12.640
So instead of me having to worry about lugging around a $20,000 in Kyoksia SSDs on a plane,

00:10:12.640 --> 00:10:15.920
we're going to install a pair of the Sabrant Rocket 4 Plus

00:10:15.920 --> 00:10:19.040
8 terabyte drives. They're still stupid fast with a ton of capacity,

00:10:19.040 --> 00:10:25.520
but at about a tenth of the price of the Kyoksia drives. Then for boot storage, a normie 512 gig Gen 3 Sabrant Rocket.

00:10:26.720 --> 00:10:30.560
And I think with that, we're all ready to power this thing on. This looks great.

00:10:30.560 --> 00:10:34.400
The entire package with networking plus the Mac,

00:10:34.400 --> 00:10:38.080
plus its external network card, is smaller than our previous machine.

00:10:38.080 --> 00:10:41.920
Where is that thing? Look at this. That's freaking awesome.

00:10:41.920 --> 00:10:45.360
Yeah, I could honestly probably just like stuff that in an LTT Store backpack.

00:10:45.360 --> 00:10:48.400
I think it's lighter than the previous setup too. The whole thing.

00:10:48.400 --> 00:10:53.760
8.26 pounds, 10.68. Not to mention we didn't have a Mac mini before,

00:10:53.760 --> 00:10:57.840
and that switch would have been with this computer too. Yeah, this is awesome.

00:10:57.840 --> 00:11:01.040
Yeah. Does it work? Oh yeah. As with most of our storage builds,

00:11:01.040 --> 00:11:05.280
this system's running true NAS scale. It's a staple in the network attached storage community,

00:11:05.280 --> 00:11:09.760
and it makes use of ZFSA. Combo file system slash volume manager,

00:11:09.760 --> 00:11:14.080
we have been using for years. I already went ahead and put our two 8TB drives,

00:11:14.080 --> 00:11:18.240
whenever it loads, into a mirror. Is that enough storage space for the entire trade show?

00:11:18.240 --> 00:11:21.280
We already addressed that. I was working. I had a meeting.

00:11:21.280 --> 00:11:25.840
The point is that a mirror will create a redundant copy of any footage or projects that we copy to it.

00:11:25.840 --> 00:11:29.600
So in the event of a drive failure, which probably won't happen,

00:11:29.600 --> 00:11:33.280
we will still have a fully functioning NAS. Are you going to talk about your Windows 11

00:11:33.280 --> 00:11:37.280
version machine with Premiere? Why do we even need that if we're going to be using the Mac to export?

00:11:37.280 --> 00:11:42.000
Because this is our plan C. If for whatever reason the Mac, not responsive,

00:11:42.000 --> 00:11:45.920
we can't get into the building, right? Sure. We're just out of luck. Well, we put the GPU in there.

00:11:45.920 --> 00:11:50.480
We might as well have the VM ready to go. So we started up. That's also part of why it wasn't worth going

00:11:50.480 --> 00:11:53.840
to buy a fancy new one, right? Right, because we probably won't use it.

00:11:53.840 --> 00:11:58.240
This is our plan C. And so you've just got it passed through to the VM?

00:11:58.240 --> 00:12:01.680
Yep. Cool. And I don't even need to leave the VM running.

00:12:01.680 --> 00:12:06.000
Like we can just, if we need to, turn it on. Are we using like a Pi KVM or something like that

00:12:06.000 --> 00:12:09.200
for the machine itself? It's funny you should ask.

00:12:09.200 --> 00:12:14.080
Another super tiny thing, the Nano KVM. They finally open sourced the firmware on this thing.

00:12:14.080 --> 00:12:19.840
And this is the more expensive one with the screen and stuff. But the base model version of this is like 30 US dollars.

00:12:19.840 --> 00:12:23.040
Basically what this does is it takes any computer,

00:12:23.600 --> 00:12:27.120
desktop, laptop, you know, little mini PC like this.

00:12:27.120 --> 00:12:30.400
Mac mini. And it turns it into almost like a server

00:12:30.400 --> 00:12:33.840
with a remote management interface. So you plug this into your network

00:12:34.080 --> 00:12:38.000
you plug this into your USB port and your HDMI port

00:12:38.000 --> 00:12:41.520
and remote access over the network to any machine.

00:12:41.520 --> 00:12:44.640
Like a digital keyboard and mouse. So cool.

00:12:44.640 --> 00:12:48.000
And actually this one is pretty cool too because it has those pins.

00:12:48.000 --> 00:12:52.000
If you have this in like a desktop computer and I guess in theory you could do it with this

00:12:52.000 --> 00:12:55.840
you can run little wires to like your power on switch.

00:12:55.840 --> 00:13:00.560
So if the system is the bed you can hard restart it.

00:13:00.560 --> 00:13:04.640
That is so awesome. Are we going to wire it up? No, I don't think that's going to be a problem.

00:13:04.640 --> 00:13:09.120
The system also does technically have Intel's, I think it's called the Vepro management thing.

00:13:09.120 --> 00:13:12.720
So you can wake on land but like extra super special wake on land. I think it'll be okay.

00:13:12.720 --> 00:13:16.080
Okay. I like this one a lot too because unlike the Pi KVM

00:13:16.080 --> 00:13:19.200
it doesn't require additional power.

00:13:19.200 --> 00:13:23.120
Oh nice it can just be powered off the system. Unless the machine doesn't output enough

00:13:23.120 --> 00:13:27.200
but as far as I know it does. Is it off? I wouldn't know because you know.

00:13:28.720 --> 00:13:32.320
Is it? You gotta press the power button on the bottom. Smart design.

00:13:32.320 --> 00:13:37.600
Let's look at plan B. Eh? Yep. That's a fast processor.

00:13:37.600 --> 00:13:42.640
God damn Format Mini is sick. Yeah I mean like if you tried to build a computer

00:13:42.640 --> 00:13:46.480
with the same amount of money I'm sure you could build one that was like technically faster for editing.

00:13:46.480 --> 00:13:50.720
Oh right and it costs twice as much once you increase the RAM and storage one step.

00:13:50.720 --> 00:13:53.520
Yeah but all we would realistically use it for is

00:13:54.080 --> 00:13:57.120
taking a final video making a couple little edits and exporting.

00:13:57.120 --> 00:14:00.160
And sure that might take 45 minutes instead of 30 minutes

00:14:00.160 --> 00:14:03.840
but at least we can do it at all. I see how we're going to edit remotely if we need to

00:14:03.840 --> 00:14:08.800
but how are you planning to ingest footage to the NAS? It's actually pretty similar to how it's set up right now

00:14:08.800 --> 00:14:14.080
just instead of a Mac mini MacBook Pro. They already have an SD card slot right there.

00:14:14.080 --> 00:14:17.600
All we have to do is take sorry if that's still open in Premiere.

00:14:17.600 --> 00:14:21.200
Wow. Take our 10 gig dongle. I mean we're all going to bring one so it's fine.

00:14:21.200 --> 00:14:24.400
We don't have to share. Plug it in. Copy over your footage.

00:14:24.400 --> 00:14:28.160
The place that I told you that has the internet they're just going to let us have some editors hang out there.

00:14:28.160 --> 00:14:31.280
No way. Yeah it's like an eSports venue. Oh yeah.

00:14:31.280 --> 00:14:37.280
The thing that drives me crazy is none of that used to be necessary. The Aria and the Vidara used to have great internet

00:14:37.280 --> 00:14:40.720
and then as far as I can tell because of just like

00:14:40.720 --> 00:14:43.920
the ownership group for pretty much all the hotels on the Strip

00:14:43.920 --> 00:14:47.120
being either like one or two and then all basically colluding

00:14:47.120 --> 00:14:49.520
to make sure that none of them are too much better than the others

00:14:50.400 --> 00:14:55.600
meant that the fast internet went away. Yeah they all as far as I can tell have the same internet service provider

00:14:55.600 --> 00:15:01.680
and it's all like 10 megabit. And they used to have hardwired jacks in the rooms

00:15:01.680 --> 00:15:06.080
and they just pulled them out. It would have cost them literally nothing to just leave them there

00:15:06.080 --> 00:15:10.480
but they couldn't do that. Everything's Wi-Fi so everything is dog s***.

00:15:10.480 --> 00:15:13.600
Yeah I'm not recommending this but sometimes they have

00:15:13.600 --> 00:15:17.680
you know the AP is just plugged in you can just unplug it. Plug it into your laptop.

00:15:17.680 --> 00:15:21.200
I didn't tell you to do that. I did the same thing in Japan. Sometimes it works.

00:15:21.200 --> 00:15:26.400
Of course not all of our editing is going to be done down in Vegas. What about what we have to send back to the office here?

00:15:26.480 --> 00:15:31.600
Right we have faster internet than we usually do but not like 10 gig like we have at the office.

00:15:31.600 --> 00:15:35.760
So we're not going to be sending the raw footage. Instead we're going to start using proxies.

00:15:35.760 --> 00:15:39.840
So the editors back home with our fast but not crazy fast internet

00:15:39.840 --> 00:15:42.880
can get proxy footage and then they send the project file back

00:15:42.880 --> 00:15:49.280
and then since we have the raw footage here you take your Mac mini or your laptop and you conform the raw footage

00:15:49.280 --> 00:15:52.320
which is basically like replacing the proxy with it and render the video.

00:15:52.320 --> 00:15:56.080
Cool and I think all that's left is to show how all of it fits into our commuter

00:15:56.080 --> 00:15:57.920
backpack lttstore.com. Here we go.

00:15:59.600 --> 00:16:04.480
I'm going to put that power cable there. I'm going to put that computer right there.

00:16:05.040 --> 00:16:08.240
I'm going to put this other power brick which I don't even know what it's for right here.

00:16:08.240 --> 00:16:12.800
Oh no wait that's for the computer. It should fit right? Well you still left your tech sack in there.

00:16:12.800 --> 00:16:17.120
Yeah I know. Well I need my tech sack. How am I going to take stuff apart at the show if I don't bring my tech sack?

00:16:17.120 --> 00:16:18.720
You're bringing this over there.

00:16:20.480 --> 00:16:23.520
I don't know man this is looking spicy. No no no let's go and get this.

00:16:23.520 --> 00:16:27.520
Well this can just sit right there. Yeah easy. And then this. No they're good they're good dude.

00:16:28.240 --> 00:16:32.160
I'll put the cable up there. Okay easy peasy squeezed lemons.

00:16:34.800 --> 00:16:38.640
Oh my god. And Macmanie's going to have a giant scratch on the top of it.

00:16:38.640 --> 00:16:41.920
No no it's going to be fine. It's on the bottom where no one will ever see it except when they turn it on and off.

00:16:41.920 --> 00:16:44.480
Which nobody does apparently. Oh god.

00:16:46.000 --> 00:16:48.640
It should be what did you say 9.6 pounds heavier?

00:16:50.720 --> 00:16:54.640
It's pretty heavy now I got a lot of screwdrivers in there too. You can't bring those on the point.

00:16:55.360 --> 00:16:58.400
There it is. Commuter backpack no Pelican case required.

00:16:58.400 --> 00:16:59.840
Oh this says weigh it. Here we go.

00:17:02.320 --> 00:17:05.120
With a water bottle? Not bad. How full is it? Full.

00:17:06.160 --> 00:17:11.440
24 pounds. That's pretty awful. And here's a 24 pound segway to our sponsor.

00:17:11.440 --> 00:17:14.800
Do you guys like this video? Why not check out the last time we built a portable NAS.

00:17:14.800 --> 00:17:19.200
Yes. It was sick and a lot more custom but this is so much more useful.

00:17:19.200 --> 00:17:22.880
I mean we kept it put together this whole time. Like we actually did use it multiple times.

00:17:22.880 --> 00:17:30.480
Yeah we used it for Computex as well. I think right? No we used it at we used it at the something.

00:17:30.480 --> 00:17:34.400
Some other show. The land party I think I used it as a cash.

00:17:34.400 --> 00:17:35.120
Oh my god.
