CoolerMaster has been in the PC hardware and components business for almost 30 years now, and while most casual gamers would know CoolerMaster for their affordable peripherals, the company's stock in trade has been around cases, power supplies, coolers for CPUs, and so on.
So naturally, CoolerMaster makes their own thermal paste. Thermal paste is the grey gooey stuff ... [snip]
The only problem is that, like most companies, CoolerMaster's thermal paste comes in the form of a syringe. There's good reasons for doing so: the syringe design makes it easier when applying paste from above, particularly if you're installing a cooler when the motherboard is already mounted within the case, and it ensures you can apply the paste without getting it everywhere...
Unfortunately for CoolerMaster, there was a problem with their syringes. CoolerMaster is popular among budget gamers because their products are generally more affordable, so it's pretty common for younger PC builders to be buying CoolerMaster components. And the ones that were getting into PC building and modding with CoolerMaster gear were causing their parents to worry ... because the parents thought their kids were taking drugs.We didn't change the shape of the syringe to make applying thermal paste a lot easier, but because we we're getting tired of having to explain parents that their kid isn't using drugs. pic.twitter.com/ClyZLDDFe9
— Cooler Master (@CoolerMaster) January 16, 2020
Also at Ars Technica.
(Score: 2, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 21 2020, @04:38AM (1 child)
That's funny, because I would have thought that thermal paste would have to be freebased to get any benefit out of.
(Score: 5, Funny) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 21 2020, @07:16AM
I've officially spent too much time on this website. I somehow managed to read that as