Up until earlier today I had a set of harddrives in my computer. A 64gb SSD for OS, a 1TB for MP3/Movie storage, 500g for backup, 500g for random stuff, 500G for Steam.
I recently acquired a couple of 2TB drives and finally decided to install them.
Deconstruction was relatively simple. Removed screws, removed case parts, removed cables, removed more screws, removed harddrives.
I think I may have shortened my lifespan by a few years with the canned air and dust that was inhaled during the cleansing of the computer.
Now, many would think, "Upgrading a computer is very simple and could not cause an injury to anyone."
They are wrong.
Once the bits and pieces of stuff was safely tucked away, cables nicely stored in their respective cubby holes, screws tightly screwed into their receptacles, I was tasked with putting the case parts back onto the body.
As I was attempting to slide the side of the case into the slots, I found out that you can actually rip flesh from your body and leave a glorious blood blister on your arm by simply not removing your fleshy parts from the gap between the sliding door and the case.
Lesson learned. Computer upgrades are dangerous.
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