I'm picking out parts for a computer that I'm going to be giving my brother for his 18th birthday within the next few days, and while comparing motherboards, I came across this little "feature" of a particular ASRock board (see attached image).
Cue question:
Does a running PC act as sort of a make-shift dehumidifier, is this some sort of desperate marketing ploy, or did ASRock somehow add a micro-dehumidifier to their board? (I think that would be kinda silly, putting a water-condenser that close to highly liqui-sensitive equipment, but hey... I'm sure someone might think it's a good idea... )?
Here's the actual board on NewEgg
Cue question:
Does a running PC act as sort of a make-shift dehumidifier, is this some sort of desperate marketing ploy, or did ASRock somehow add a micro-dehumidifier to their board? (I think that would be kinda silly, putting a water-condenser that close to highly liqui-sensitive equipment, but hey... I'm sure someone might think it's a good idea... )?
Here's the actual board on NewEgg