It was horrible for the intended audience. Almost every single thing he did in the video was wrong, and almost every piece of advice given was wrong. You could seriously damage your computer parts if you followed what was originally shown as is, especially since they skipped around so much in editing and skipped a lot of important steps. If I was working for a major organization, and came out with a how-to video on something I knew absolutely nothing about with a large risk of damaging thousands of dollars worth of viewer's parts, why would I be defended?
The editing is so bizarre. They clearly make mistakes in the segments shown that are then corrected off-camera. They knowingly published a video they knew would make them look clueless.
Is the Verge's budget for stuff like this so tight that they can't go back and re-shoot some video when they realize something like "Oh dang, I forgot to install these fans, we should probably fix that part where I talk about how long the screws are and shoot footage of the fans being put in."
But no, for whatever reason they fixed it off-screen and never acknowledge it.