A new amusement center will teach kids how to build PCs

Daniel Sims

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In brief: Building a PC can be complex and intimidating, but it allows savvy customers to save money and learn more about how PCs work. Soon, two companies will collaborate to give school-aged children an early start on grasping the basics of PC building.

Starting July 26, a Tokyo children's amusement center will offer an exhibit where attendees can learn how to assemble desktop PCs. The workshop will teach kids about various hardware components and how they fit together. The upcoming attraction is a collaboration between amusement park company KidZania and Japanese PC vendor Mouse Computer.

Children between the ages of three and 15 will learn to assemble desktops with genuine components like CPUs, RAM, GPUs, and more. Whether attendees will use stock clip-on coolers or study the intricacies of applying thermal paste remains unclear. Nevertheless, they will endure the notoriously tense final step of checking whether their completed builds boot.

KidZania fun parks across the globe are like miniature cities where children participate in simulations of real jobs to help prepare them for adult life. The collaboration with Mouse hopes to replicate a made-to-order PC assembly plant experience. Attendees also learn to build systems according to the requested specifications. Each session lasts around 30 minutes for eight participants mentored by an instructor.

Mouse only operates in Japan, and there was no mention of whether the exhibit will come to other KidZania locations like the one in Dallas, Texas. However, local made-to-order PC vendors could assume that role.

The task can appear daunting to someone without hands-on experience. However, as many of you know, it isn't any more difficult than assembling Ikea furniture. Plus, building a PC from scratch has its advantages. Shopping for individual parts allows consumers to purchase the most affordable components for their particular build instead of spending extra money on pre-built markups containing hardware and software they might not want.

TechSpot periodically offers updated guides with suggestions for builds at multiple price points – some below $500. Other features include in-depth suggestions for GPUs, SSDs, monitors, and other components. PCPartPicker is also an excellent shopping resource that aggregates buying options while ensuring all the parts on a shopping list are compatible.

On the more casual side, Spiral House Ltd's PC Building Simulator game allows players to practice building and repairing virtual PCs from dozens of authentic hardware brands without risk or expense.

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I guess it's a start but is that really what kids should be learning? Maybe, I'm not saying they shouldn't but it's a simple thing. I would suggest teaching kids how mechanical things work. Sawing wood with a ruler then constructing something. As a kid we had Tinkertoys and erector sets. Millennium Falcons out of bristle blocks would be good to teach...reading plans
 
Amusement center? a work center at is best, and work is "trabaco" in spanish, who means "tribolare" in italian, that means suffering in english. so this is an amusement suffering center. epic!
 
If in the process they also taught them to add/swap ram and ssds from laptops, it would be even better.
 
Amusement center? a work center at is best, and work is "trabaco" in spanish, who means "tribolare" in italian, that means suffering in english. so this is an amusement suffering center. epic!
I think the Spanish word you meant is trabajo.
 
I guess it's a start but is that really what kids should be learning? Maybe, I'm not saying they shouldn't but it's a simple thing. I would suggest teaching kids how mechanical things work. Sawing wood with a ruler then constructing something. As a kid we had Tinkertoys and erector sets. Millennium Falcons out of bristle blocks would be good to teach...reading plans
What's the % of the population who will be sawing wood right now? And that's not going to increase over time...

On the other hand, TONS of people own a desktop - I think this would be a far more valuable skill to have going forward...

I remember taking autotech in high school (about 30 years ago, man I feel old) - I have to admit that learning how to remove/replace a carburetor might not be useful anymore - but the general skills learned are still useful...
 
Excellent ... next lets teach them how to use AI in a productive fashion, like building applications that will track and identify scammers and hackers with complete details so legal authorities can go after them ....
 
Excellent ... next lets teach them how to use AI in a productive fashion, like building applications that will track and identify scammers and hackers with complete details so legal authorities can go after them ....
AI training courses should probably be mandatory for everyone moving forward as it takes over more and more of our life.
 
It might've been nice if they had this when I built my first computer.
Blank circuit boards, bags of resistors, capacitors, inductors, transistors, integrated circuits, etc.
Just grab your pliers to bend the leads, soldering iron t mount the parts (including IC sockets), and cutters to clip the long component leads down to the board.

But wait! There's more. Grab your screwdrivers to screw the wooden sides of the computer to the metal base, screw on the metal back and front plates. Finally screw on the top lid after getting all the main board and circuit boards inserted--and all the wiring between them and the front and back plates.
Then plug it in and use the 8-bit LCDs and 10-key keypad to see if it works, then play with it.
(Later came a keyboard and monitor/TV. Ahhhh.... 1979.)
 
What's the % of the population who will be sawing wood right now? And that's not going to increase over time...

On the other hand, TONS of people own a desktop - I think this would be a far more valuable skill to have going forward...

I remember taking autotech in high school (about 30 years ago, man I feel old) - I have to admit that learning how to remove/replace a carburetor might not be useful anymore - but the general skills learned are still useful...

That's hillarious, you tell the guy he's wrong but then go on to say how useful a similar, seemingly useless experience was for you.
 
That's hillarious, you tell the guy he's wrong but then go on to say how useful a similar, seemingly useless experience was for you.
I didn’t say he was wrong… I simply offered an opinion… the world isn’t black and white - look for shades of grey 😍
 
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