I was wondering about that as well. Desktop vs tower used to be a thing. But I do not think "desktop" even means horizontal computers any more, just another synonym for computer because they literally don't exist at all anymore.
@@wisnoskij Today, "Desktop" just means it's not a mobile computer. As to case orientation, there are still cases that can be horizontal or vertical depending on space requirements.
The early 2000s, the dark days of modding, cutting our own windows, and installing cathodes tubes meant for cars, hoping the inverter wouldn't fry. A lot of modern design stemmed from those days. We apologize for RGB; we thought you would only use it for one color at a time.
I still have a midi-tower hidden away with custom window (with cutout for a 120mm fan grill), custom paint job, cutout for an 80mm fan with wire mesh in the front and 100+300mm Sunbeam blue CC's. The name "Sunbeam" was quite fitting, as I had to bend a piece of sandblasted acrylic and place it over the 300mm in the bottom of the case to difuse the light, as it would otherwise blind me when trying to use the PC. :) The 300mm was bought as a kit with power adapter and slot mounting plate for the on/off switch for the back of the PC. I made the mod in 2004 when I was unemployed for a time. I still have the trusty old Dremel Pro (Model 398 Type 1) I used to cut out the window. :)
Actually Dell was one of the first OEMs to offer a black case. Cases were mostly in a grey phase before that. You really stopped seeing the beige cases about the time Windows 95 came out.
@@bepbep7418 beige went away and they were either black, or BRIGHT WHITE with a splash of blue. but the flat desktop form factor (instead of tower) didnt really go away from most places until after 2001.
@@bepbep7418 Ehh not entirely true, Biege was pretty common up until around 2002, but in the late 90s, grey, white, and black started becoming more popular.
I bought an Intel Mac pro in 2009, Awesome workstation. I loved how easy it was to swap out parts. Sadly it stopped working a few years ago and it wasn't worth it to fix. I still have it, I'm having a hard time getting rid of it.
I still have my 2012 cheese grater Mac Pro. A masterpiece of case design, I love that thing. Even in 2024, after fully maxing it out with dual CPUs and RAM and adding a modern graphics card, it has respectable performance in Final Cut Pro and DaVinci Resolve. These days, I just use it to play my old 32-bit games, though, since modern Apple Silicon Macs are so much faster for video editing work
I still miss the front drive bays. Even if you don't use disks, it was still neat to be able to expand your front I/O or have a fan controller with instant access.
Miss them? Just ran an price search and there are over 500 different case designs currently available with at least single 5.25" drive bay. I have Fractal Design Define 7 with a bluray-drive in it. It could support over dozen HDDs (like Linus demonstrated), but only have 2xSSD + 2xHDD and three M.2 drives in my system.
I upgraded my PC in the past few months and used the Fractal Design Define R5. I still have a Blue Ray DVD writer and occasionally might need to pop in a Blue Ray for ripping or whatever. I wasn't willing to give that up just yet. Plus the R5 is very quiet, has good air flow, modern cable management and lots of space for additional drives. I have multiple drives for backup, media and games. I just don't care about the RGB bling thing because the box sits on the floor under my table.
It annoys me to no end that most modern cases don't even have a single external drive bay anymore. I'm already fine with squeezing my optical drive and my card reader into the same bay but give me at least _one!_
Eyy guys, come look at this. No, seriously. What use do you have with optical drives? Edit: almost all replies to my comment are about the bay, not about optical drive. Please reply to me only if you're going to talk about optical drive. I get that these bays can act as extensions.
@@kichapps Read optical media. Admittedly, the card reader is much more important but since I can fit both in the same bay, why shouldn't I? Mine even gives me two more front USB 3 ports and ESATA.
I rather have expansion bays on the front instead of all those "unicorn barf" color fans. It's looking like I may have keep reusing my current Corsair case for all future builds in the years ahead.
@@kichapps uh, blurays and cds?? I’ve been buying blurays for awhile now cause I’ve gotten so sick of the countless subscription services, and I also buy looots of CDs (and load them onto my computer) because I like owning physical media.
1:10 kinda tells a bit more of the story of beige boxes, at least in the 90s they were usually more of an off white, but the plastics used were easily discoloured by uv light, so in offices with strip lighting they typically went beige very quickly, which is why older hardware can be a weird mix of shades of beige, depending on the environment they've been in
@Jd Yes you can, but that defeats the purpose of having a case to put your components in. You have to admit that putting components on your desk because people don't like the look of having them in a case is a bit dumb
When I started at Dell, they were using the Klinger chassis, which was a PITA to open, especally when we were trying to get customers to reseat their video cards, which came loose a lot.
@@JeffDeWitt Assuming you mean Fahrenheit, as 98°C is sweltering, that's 37°C! Very impressive indeed. Of course, the other parts of the system need to be looked at to put things in perspective. Power consumption, efficiency, that sort of thing. ;P
@@benjaminoechsli1941 They were very fast at very specific tasks, having dedicated circuits for face recognition, pattern recognition, etc, but very *very* slow at just about everything else.
PSUs by Mitochondria brand were quite efficient. Although the power factor from Glucose (C6H12O6) to Adenosine Triphosphate was not quite 80 plus Gold rated.
Beige really came in because white things didn't stay white in an office where smokers were lighting up. By making them beige it didn't look dirty/yellowed in a short time. They had tried black earlier particularly on keyboards - but they showed "grease" from fingertips. Most of this was figured out not on PCs but on telephones and typewriters.
I currently cant sleep peacefully because I suddenly experienced of sudden bad memories hitting like its the end of the world. Good thing Linus just posted his new tech video and had removed right away my stress. Nothing is better satisfying than what you really love.
No mention of one of your first case reviews on NCIX, the Corsair Vengeance C70, for shame! Truly ahead of its time with the flexibility for water or air cooling, removable mechanical drive bays, and still kept a few 5.25 bays for the much needed at the time fan controllers and front mounted reservoirs for watercooling.
They were, I owned a couple from the original 300, and 900 series which were some of the first that I know of to have large top exhaust fans and space for multiple 120s up front. Coolermaster also had some nice looking anodized aluminum cases with front 80mm intake fans which was new at the time as well.
I literally have a piece of bamboo wallpaper stuck to the side of my case, cuz it was scratched up and it annoyed me. Wallpaper actually holds up pretty well.
BTX was mostly focused on cooling, as it placed the CPU right smack in the middle back side of the board, next to the exhaust fan. I believe it was mostly used by Dell Dimensions
Thank you this excellent rundown of PC cases. In Pakistan, we've had power outages for many years (a lot better now). I bought a laptop just to make sure that I wouldn't have to worry about power outage related issues with my PC's hard drive. Even though we use a UPS, the computer could restart when a power outage occurs. Its been so long since i've used a custom PC. Good to know all the things that have been happening with PC cases this whole time.
Yep, RGB doesn't impress me at all. I refurbished an old tower case to build my computer last year. No glass panel either. Used the 3.5" floppy space for front panel USB and used two 5.25" drive bays for a front fan kit. It's sleek, black and beautiful.
I am an advocate of having at least one DVD drive in every pc. When my mom got an MRI a few years back, they gave her the files on a DVD and I had the only pc in the house with a DVD drive. If I didn't have that, we'd've had no way of getting those medical files. Because of this, if I ever have to get a new tower, I will make sure it has bays for optical drives.
Linus' LAN boy air review was my introduction to the channel. Rocking double earrings and a park bench. Prior to Linus, I'm pretty sure I only watched 3dgameman aka Rodney Reynolds.
I also watched Rodney Reynolds a lot. His case reviews were very detailed and in depth. He focused a lot on characteristics that mattered such as airflow, removable motherboard trays, positioning and number of drive bays and expansion card slots. To this day I still base my purchasing decisions on these factors. Too bad the computer case industry has been prioritizing looks over function over the last few years. I would take a Corsair 800d over any of the tempered glass, drive bay lacking disasters that they have been pumping out over the last few years. I built my main system in a Corsair 750d a few years ago. I would love to get my hands on an 800d some day as well. It would go well with my EVGA SR-2.
1:54 Weird, I think this is the only time I've ever seen an ATX PSU with a monitor output. I thought those disappeared with the transition from AT to ATX. Or maybe I just forgot about it in the fog of times past. What I DO remember, is swapping the case for my first PC (486 DX-2 66 w/4MB RAM and 546MB HDD), as I wanted a push button instead of the flip switch. That was back in '94 when displays on the front showing the CPU speed was a thing. :)
@@jacobw446 wdym “usb power drives?” Also fan controller hubs don’t need a expansion slot. They already have one. All you have to do is just mount it to the back of the case and there is double sided tape.
For years, I've wanted to take a beige box from the '90s and turn it into a sleeper PC. I'd keep an optical drive, though, but replace the CD or DVD drive with a Blu-ray drive. I'd also keep the floppy drive and turn it into a SD card reader, using the disks as caddies like Dr. Moddenstine did. If you haven't seen his video on his IBM Aptiva sleeper, you should. I like what he did with that rig.
I think the most important shift in cases, was knowing the name of your case manufacturer. In the early-mid 90s, you maybe bought a branded mobo, CPU and graphics card. HDD, memory and optical was on size/speed (and maybe you were a baller that chose SCSI and a controller) - and your case choice was tower or desktop (and nobody cared about the PSU - it came with the case and they all powered whatever you had). My first 'case experience' was buying a Lian Li. It cost as much as stuff I was putting inside the case, which seemed ridiculous - but it was oh so lovely. (I had some 'funky' no-names between beige and the Lian and then some horrible 'gamer' cases I choose not to remember - but I knew who made them) I'm now back to Lian Li. A beautiful TU150 in brushed aluminium and no f'in window.
That's what happens you skimp on quality for quick buck, and more so when it came to their PSU's their green painted Earthwatt series was total garbage. I had 2 of them go bang on me in a year, and they where not even pulling 1/2 their rated load.
@@martheunen Well there's not much that can blow up on a PC case lol! I will admit I had an Antec 300 case for years that was very lovely, and at the time I kept the build under my desk(AMD Phenom II X6) to save space, but my girlfriend at the time had a young daughter, and she ended up knocking my morning coffee off my desk, and killed the build, I salvaged what I could like my HDD's to get the data off ASAP using my laptop, but in frustration I sent the case, and other components to the local recycle drop off. Learned my lesson, and I no longer keep my PC on the floor lol! These days If I need something budget friendly I go Rosewill(their cases, fans, and PSU have never failed me), and Fractal Design for my main builds.
Oh man I had one of those Compaq Presario systems. Only case I know of that had a single cd/dvd disc holder built in under the front panel. That's right, not a drive, but a disc holder.
4:15 Tacky!? I'll have you know that Lanboy Air case was functionally far beyond its competition in terms of airflow! The entire case has mesh all over while everyone else was obstructing airflow behind solid panels. They pioneered mesh principles! Even Steve from GN would be in awe of it's superiority over other cases of the era.
Recently built my first pc, used the Be Quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 rev 2… still has 2 optical drive bays, and I was still able to fit a 280mm radiator up top and an absolutely massive watercooling res in the case too. You don’t always have to give up features to get a powerful/cutting edge/neat looking build!
There's one thing I really want designers to start taking into account: cats. I love mine, but she loves to use a case on the ground (or a stand on the ground) to get on my desk or lay on my monitor speakers (where most people would put their towers). She turned off my old computer numerous times by stepping on my old HAF 922's power button. So I made sure my next case had the I/O on the front, which was actually less common than I thought it'd be. So... put your I/O switch, front USB, and front audio jacks on the actual front, not the top, case makers!
mount it to the bottom of your desk. Also handy for standup desks so it can raise and lower as the desk does. If your front panel ports face up, you can mount it an inch forward or whatever.
My first year in college they had pentium 4s which were brand new and top of the line. I bought a usb drive that cost $100 and was a grand total of 128mb... ya...
TL;DR - Case designed peaked in the mid 2010's with a perfect combination of functionality, cooling and looks, and then RGB happened and now cases are garbage with no room for expansion.
Started using my old Lian Li PC-7 with brushed black aluminium panels that I bought back in 2005, again this year when I upgraded my pc. Such a nice case.
Overall decent, just missing some stuff like: PC's switching from flatbed to tower style. (this was a massive change) Introduction of the Cube cases. Small cases like Mini ITX cases and NUC boxes. Obviously had time for it, given whomever wrote that added in periphials and addons instead.
I recall our school getting some 386’s the department of energy was getting rid of that were like 2 ft high towers with more expansion cards in them then total ports in any computer today, I’m pretty sure one had 15 between iso and pci
Funny story: Back in the early 00's, I wanted to improve cooling for my GPU (Hercules Radeon 9500 Pro). I did so by drilling 6mm holes in a hexagonal pattern in the side panel and mounted an 80mm fan behind it with some brackets. Behold, green and purple artifacts all over the screen. I thought I had messed something up regarding the GPU, and ordered a Club3D 9700 non-pro instead. Well, I thought, as the old card was toast anyway, might as well see how high I can clock it before discarding it. I clocked the card fairly high, and rebooted the system. To my immense surprise, all the artifacts were gone, and the card performed perfectly. Just to double check, I reset the card to default settings, and the artifacts were back! OC'ed it again and everything was fine. Somehow the extra cooling had the GPU running too cold at default settings, don't ask me how it's possible.....
Early 2000's had a lot of various PC case designs including from Dell which by then was using black/grey for many of their home desktops ranging from office to high end. I remember the XPS lineup in 2003-04 had those Blue/Grey cases for example. Then you had Alienware which was really far out for what cases looked like before being bought by Dell and becoming their gaming lineup.
I am trying to find a beige ATX case with a vintage aesthetic for a build, but it is very hard to track down any new ones. Evercase seems to have discontinued their beige ATX tower offerings, and they might have been the last ones?
It did. You could probably do an hour video just on how the acrylic "gamer" PC cases evolved, and how Alienware (among others) drove how gamer PC cases look today.
Well, the channel is called "tech quickie".... He'd spend an hour just covering the XT form factor.....which was completely left out of this video, but was the form factor of the original IBMPC, mentioned toward the beginning of the video.
1:20 in the video. I have to disagree most connecters where in the black plate of each IO card and on the case it's self. The only ones in the case it's self tented to be Keyboard and later Mouse. As the MB's had very little IO as most of the IO was on cards you pluged in to the MB . This ment that when you upgraded something like the Soundcard you was not left with redundant connectors on the MB. This even included the HardDisk interface so you could go from MFM to IDE (for example) without having to leave the MFM controller and connectors in the system. The move to every thing on the MB could be seen as certailing upgrade ability. For example when I new USB or HD definition comes about now you often change the Hole MB.
I used to be very skeptical when I watched "Time Team" and some archeologists with pottery expertis could look at a little shard and say, "Yeah, this is roman. It was made on site between the years 40 A.D - 90 A.D. But today I can pretty much do the same thing by looking at a computer chassi, or some component.
I love these walk-throughs of the evolution of computers, its hard to believe that consumer desktop computers have only been a thing for less than half a decade. Please keep doing more of these!
Always wondered what happened to Antec. Their cases were by far the most popular in my nick of the woods in the early 2000s. Next thing I know, it's like they just disappeared.
My wife's grandmother gave us a wooden desk from the early 2000's with a compartment specifically made for a computer tower with holes for running cables and such. Unfortunately computers back then give off as much heat, so they didn't really focus much on giving it good airflow. I have to step my games down to a less intense resolution than my rig could handle to keep the temps in check. When we eventually move I am going to gently inform her that the desk is too bulky to fit in the new office and get a new one that will let my system breathe.
I cut a circle on the bottom and mount a big pc fan blowing upward, powered off 5 volt usb charger it's pretty quiet and good flow. i7 2600k, gtx 970 temps stay fine, even with one-hour, all-core software builds.
SGI looked cooler, but Sun was more practical. I always liked their pizza-box designs (SS20, for example): they were tiny, but, with SBUS and processor cards, just as upgradeable as a modern PC.
iFixit commercial is not explodey enough. I haven't actually seen the Minnow or Moray yet, but they look like nice SMALL sets with the bits most of us actually use. I'd still replace that mostly plastic driver handle with a spare alu model made for the Pro Tech toolkit. Seriously wish that were an included option in the smaller kits. Oh, the abridged history was fun too.
Loved my lanboy air. Great case for a few years. Even had a built in tool/screw tray. It was however a dust nightmare, the rubber suspension for the hard drives dried up, and in general it did fall apart. R.I.P. old case. You did your time.
The high voltage power switch on the original AT case was a bit of a shocker! I remember welding one to the inside of the chassis as my hand involuntarily clenched down when I was working on one that I didn't realize was on.
The last five years have been devolution, not evolution. I despise the industry's move towards minimalism completely. 5.25 bays are not just for optical drives and they gave cases greater utility.
@@jstan5802 SSDs are fine for boot devices but terrible for bulk storage - unless you're Linus and can throw thousands of c-bills at it for shits and giggles. HDDs remain the most cost-effective for bulk storage for everyone else.
@@iaobtc Yeah, I agree, personally I have a couple of 3.5 in my PC. However seeing how the industry is moving forward I won't be surprise if in the future we would have a couple of M2 at the back of the motherboard and phased out disk drives. However I think disk drives are still the more sensible option for NAS.
2:05 - Yea...just killing the power...no joke, we had no idea that you had to shut a computer down when my parents got our first one. We would just get back to the desktop and turn it off. ...until icons and stuff started disappearing. 😆 That thing shit itself HARD and we had to have it fixed. It was more corrupt than the left after a few months of that. Live and learn, right? lol
@@nevoyu 👍 Yep it's my first case and I plan on using it for my next build. I replaced the acrylic window side panel with a tempered glass one and it looks great
This was a fun trip down memory lane. I remember my step dad's PC back in 92. It was super ugly lol. Then a few years later we upgraded to a Gateway with Win95. Then my cousin's family got a Gateway with Win98 which blew ours away. Then once I got out of high school in 2004 I bought my own desktop with graduation money. Had me a fancy AMD Athlon 64 3400+ with a Radeon X800.
Honestly, I wouldn't mind going back to a big beige box for my next build. I don't want glass on my LAN party PC, nor do I give single fuck about RGB lighting. A PC has to be fast and efficient and be able to do what I want it to do. That does not include being a safety hazard or a fucking light show.
Despite all the evolutions, what's funny is that in theory an ATX case from the mid-90s is still compatible with modern hardware from 2021. And I'm still using my 12yo Obsidian 800D for one of my machines :P Still an awesome case
@@ploperdung i speak 5 language so believe me when i say that i dont care about your opinion. Also keep in mind that my smartphone dictionary isnt in English so sometimes it decides to change some words. For a troll you should at least know that "I have" and "i've" are the same thing.
big zipties- Thats whats holding all my drives in on my Lanboy Air- Zippies around the drives and then bigger ones threaded through to hold them into the case. Although my machines all SSD now, so the load isnt anywhere near as big on the mounts (And somehow i've squeezed a Ryzen 3900X and an EVGA 2080 super in there) and I'm brainstorming watercooling because why not push the old Lanboy Air as far as you possibly can!
TRS-80's were GREY. Mine had 16KB memory in the keyboard. Then I added the Expansion interface and it memory increased to 48KB. It had 1- 5&1/4" external floppy. I then added 3 more in a special box that was really a computer with the motherboard removed. The original drive were 35 track single sided (You could make the floppy double sided by punching a hole for the timing light and cutting a write protect notch in the side.) One of the Floppy Drives was a True 80 Track Double sided Drive. A Box of 10 Radio Single Sided 35 Track Floppys cost $39.95 + tax back in 1979.
Same here i wouldn't personally use floppy and DVD drives but there are card readers fan controllers even stuff for water cooling I love to have 5.25 back it makes a build more personal
@@Rainbow__cookie Indeed. I still have my Blu-ray drive and wouldn't mind having floppy drive as well because I have retro PC's so transferring stuff to them would be easier that way.
Topic suggestion: What is Antimalware service Executable and why does it hog so much COU, RAM, Disk usage and battery. Second topic: Why is the failure rate in laptop manufacturing so high. That is, many people get a laptop with major problems and have to return it. Even LTT got laptops with issues which were solved by reordering. (Surface Book 2)
I honestly think 90s beige/white cases looked better than today's cases. New cases in the early 90s looked really stylish and professional, not like a night club. Usually had a ridge pattern, really tactile power and reset buttons, CPU frequency display, Turbo button (cmon), and the 5.25" drives and 3.5" floppy. In the late 90s they made everything more round and "aerodynamic" and then things got ugly, but early 90s... some awesome retro cases from that time, I am rebuilding my childhood PC in one.
I think it's about nostalgia, cause I fondly look back at the 2000's computer designs, because they were just ridiculously experimental with see-thru plastics, LEDs, etc. Nowadays it's all standardized just like back in the AT days, except with much more variation. Case modding had it's peak in the 2000's, best off the shelf cases are available now and the beige boxes had their very own appeal, imho.
@@jayhill2193 Nostalgia is a big part of it. The beige cases get a bad reputation because most of them looked terrible after a few years. The problem was, they used plastic that yellowed over time when exposed to any amount of sunlight and generally wasn't very strong, also stained easily. So it was common to see yellowed, dirty, and banged up cases. But when they were new, they looked sleek. 2000s there was a lot of ugly sports car-looking designs, then finally in the 2010s they figured out clean lines were the way to go. But then RGB ruined everything LOL.
I still remember the awe of seeing the first iMacs that came out. They really stood out in a time when beige boxes still came to mind when thinking about computers.
This warrants a full LTT video, not a quickie. So much missed on such a great topic.
I’m surprised there was no specific mention of the shift to towers in the 90s.
Yeah, he totally skimmed past the XT and AT form factors and moved straight to ATX.
I was wondering about that as well. Desktop vs tower used to be a thing. But I do not think "desktop" even means horizontal computers any more, just another synonym for computer because they literally don't exist at all anymore.
@@wisnoskij it mostly means a computer that isn’t a laptop or phone
@@wisnoskij Today, "Desktop" just means it's not a mobile computer. As to case orientation, there are still cases that can be horizontal or vertical depending on space requirements.
@@wisnoskij showing my youth, but i didn't even know that was a distinction. neato
The early 2000s, the dark days of modding, cutting our own windows, and installing cathodes tubes meant for cars, hoping the inverter wouldn't fry. A lot of modern design stemmed from those days. We apologize for RGB; we thought you would only use it for one color at a time.
Also remember the use of UV-reactive plastics and sticking a black light in there to make everything glow.
Yes! I think I still have a UV reactive fan in my tech box somewhere; its probably even wired for 7v.
@@ayuchanayuko I miss those a lot, there's still the old pc in my brothers room that has them and it kinda looks cooler than my new full rgb build
Did the inverter ever fry?
I still have a midi-tower hidden away with custom window (with cutout for a 120mm fan grill), custom paint job, cutout for an 80mm fan with wire mesh in the front and 100+300mm Sunbeam blue CC's. The name "Sunbeam" was quite fitting, as I had to bend a piece of sandblasted acrylic and place it over the 300mm in the bottom of the case to difuse the light, as it would otherwise blind me when trying to use the PC. :) The 300mm was bought as a kit with power adapter and slot mounting plate for the on/off switch for the back of the PC. I made the mod in 2004 when I was unemployed for a time. I still have the trusty old Dremel Pro (Model 398 Type 1) I used to cut out the window. :)
Wonder if Dell warranties back in the day were beige.
Actually Dell was one of the first OEMs to offer a black case. Cases were mostly in a grey phase before that. You really stopped seeing the beige cases about the time Windows 95 came out.
@@bepbep7418 beige went away and they were either black, or BRIGHT WHITE with a splash of blue. but the flat desktop form factor (instead of tower) didnt really go away from most places until after 2001.
@@bepbep7418 My father's old Compaq desktop case was black as it gets, running Windows 95, back in early 1997.
Okay, depressed robot :)
@@bepbep7418 Ehh not entirely true, Biege was pretty common up until around 2002, but in the late 90s, grey, white, and black started becoming more popular.
I love the G5. Absolutely TIMELESS. Something that legitimately didn't age a day.
Modded a case years ago and the only thing that can make me replace it if the new parts dont fit anymore...
Same, that's probably why Apple basically reused that design until the 2013 Mac Pro too
I bought an Intel Mac pro in 2009, Awesome workstation. I loved how easy it was to swap out parts.
Sadly it stopped working a few years ago and it wasn't worth it to fix. I still have it, I'm having a hard time getting rid of it.
I still have my 2012 cheese grater Mac Pro. A masterpiece of case design, I love that thing. Even in 2024, after fully maxing it out with dual CPUs and RAM and adding a modern graphics card, it has respectable performance in Final Cut Pro and DaVinci Resolve.
These days, I just use it to play my old 32-bit games, though, since modern Apple Silicon Macs are so much faster for video editing work
I still miss the front drive bays. Even if you don't use disks, it was still neat to be able to expand your front I/O or have a fan controller with instant access.
You can still find some out there. You just have to dig through thousands of pages.
Fractal design focus g have front drive bays it’s 60$ great case
Miss them? Just ran an price search and there are over 500 different case designs currently available with at least single 5.25" drive bay. I have Fractal Design Define 7 with a bluray-drive in it. It could support over dozen HDDs (like Linus demonstrated), but only have 2xSSD + 2xHDD and three M.2 drives in my system.
@@kimnice u make it sound like 7 drives is a small amount :P
I upgraded my PC in the past few months and used the Fractal Design Define R5. I still have a Blue Ray DVD writer and occasionally might need to pop in a Blue Ray for ripping or whatever. I wasn't willing to give that up just yet. Plus the R5 is very quiet, has good air flow, modern cable management and lots of space for additional drives. I have multiple drives for backup, media and games. I just don't care about the RGB bling thing because the box sits on the floor under my table.
It annoys me to no end that most modern cases don't even have a single external drive bay anymore. I'm already fine with squeezing my optical drive and my card reader into the same bay but give me at least _one!_
Eyy guys, come look at this.
No, seriously. What use do you have with optical drives?
Edit: almost all replies to my comment are about the bay, not about optical drive. Please reply to me only if you're going to talk about optical drive. I get that these bays can act as extensions.
@@kichapps Read optical media. Admittedly, the card reader is much more important but since I can fit both in the same bay, why shouldn't I? Mine even gives me two more front USB 3 ports and ESATA.
@@unvergebeneid yeah, that makes sense. I was thinking of optical drives, as you referred to.
I rather have expansion bays on the front instead of all those "unicorn barf" color fans. It's looking like I may have keep reusing my current Corsair case for all future builds in the years ahead.
@@kichapps uh, blurays and cds?? I’ve been buying blurays for awhile now cause I’ve gotten so sick of the countless subscription services, and I also buy looots of CDs (and load them onto my computer) because I like owning physical media.
1:10 kinda tells a bit more of the story of beige boxes, at least in the 90s they were usually more of an off white, but the plastics used were easily discoloured by uv light, so in offices with strip lighting they typically went beige very quickly, which is why older hardware can be a weird mix of shades of beige, depending on the environment they've been in
3:50 - They also started removing NECESSARY features from cases, so you can't put in a Blu-ray drive any more.
This is the main reason I haven’t upgraded in years.
I remember how big that was.
@Jd Yes you can, but that defeats the purpose of having a case to put your components in. You have to admit that putting components on your desk because people don't like the look of having them in a case is a bit dumb
Most people don't need them
Also there are still cases with 5.25 bays for those who needs it
I want more "history of" videos - this is my kool aid jammer
Watch "The Computer Chronicles". Theres your bonefide history lesson right there.
When I started at Dell, they were using the Klinger chassis, which was a PITA to open, especally when we were trying to get customers to reseat their video cards, which came loose a lot.
Most cases still are
@Zeta Darus pain in the ass
@Zeta Darus Pain In The Ass
Ahh dell tech support, getting grannies to rebuild their PCs since 93
Was that the hinged clamshell with release buttons? I loved the idea but hated actually opening them.
The first computer case was actually mixture of human skin and cloth.
The words "Computer" used to refer to people who did mathematical equations.
What were the thermals like? Sounds pretty insulatory.
@@benjaminoechsli1941 The cooling system used both air and water and was actually very effective, the computers maintaining a constant 98.6 degrees.
@@JeffDeWitt Assuming you mean Fahrenheit, as 98°C is sweltering, that's 37°C! Very impressive indeed. Of course, the other parts of the system need to be looked at to put things in perspective. Power consumption, efficiency, that sort of thing. ;P
@@benjaminoechsli1941 They were very fast at very specific tasks, having dedicated circuits for face recognition, pattern recognition, etc, but very *very* slow at just about everything else.
PSUs by Mitochondria brand were quite efficient. Although the power factor from Glucose (C6H12O6) to Adenosine Triphosphate was not quite 80 plus Gold rated.
Beige really came in because white things didn't stay white in an office where smokers were lighting up. By making them beige it didn't look dirty/yellowed in a short time. They had tried black earlier particularly on keyboards - but they showed "grease" from fingertips. Most of this was figured out not on PCs but on telephones and typewriters.
Now you can get PCs built into the monitor lmao wow
And they probably fold, too.
All In Ones actually came out back in the early 2000s. I'm sure there's a few people who remember the brightly colored transparent 2000s iMacs.
It started and ended by monitors on cases
more like into your monitor stand like that Dell one they looked at a bit ago
@@bepbep7418 All in Ones actually came out in the 80's..... They were originally called Macintosh 128
I currently cant sleep peacefully because I suddenly experienced of sudden bad memories hitting like its the end of the world. Good thing Linus just posted his new tech video and had removed right away my stress. Nothing is better satisfying than what you really love.
RGB LEDs evolved from Cold Cathode lighting ("Neon") back in the day.
I once had my water cooling loop generously spill onto the circuitry for the cathode. I was quite an sparking mess.
A minor correction: The writable CD is what killed the floppy disc. Flash drives were a few years behind burning cheap CD's.
If you're wondering why it was beige the answer is......."Yes"
Yes.
Yes
Yes
Actually it was because it was cheap. Kinda like early Ford's having only black paint.
Yes
linus: leave a like, or dislike depending on how you felt-
107 people: and I took that personally
I'm going to be honest rgb is fine but the rainbow vomit that is modern builds makes me want to get a hammer
That has to get uncomfortable on the eyes after a while.
No mention of one of your first case reviews on NCIX, the Corsair Vengeance C70, for shame! Truly ahead of its time with the flexibility for water or air cooling, removable mechanical drive bays, and still kept a few 5.25 bays for the much needed at the time fan controllers and front mounted reservoirs for watercooling.
The Antec cases look really interesting and ahead of their time.
expecially the antec lanboy air. pls make a build in it
They were, I owned a couple from the original 300, and 900 series which were some of the first that I know of to have large top exhaust fans and space for multiple 120s up front. Coolermaster also had some nice looking anodized aluminum cases with front 80mm intake fans which was new at the time as well.
dawid made a vid on that
I had an Antec Sonata for some time, I had to "Dremel" the lower corner of the 3.5" drive tray to fit a GTX260.
Nice case, but too short...
antec 900 = my fave (I still have mine)
If it performs it's great. If it doesn't, no amount of good looks makes me want it.
I'd give up a bit of performance for a nicer look. A bit.
I literally have a piece of bamboo wallpaper stuck to the side of my case, cuz it was scratched up and it annoyed me. Wallpaper actually holds up pretty well.
We all know RGB adds performance
I said the same thing until I got my original lanboy in blue
_cough_ *NZXT* _cough_
Dark mode in video background, so good and soothing to eyes.
Everyone should copy it. This is really a necessity
@@77pixels32 ya know not everyone uses dark mode right
I was expecting this to be a lot more in depth, but then again, this channel is called Techquickie
I think you forgot to mention BTX failure. My Cooler Master Stacker case was ATX/BTX covertable
BTX was mostly focused on cooling, as it placed the CPU right smack in the middle back side of the board, next to the exhaust fan. I believe it was mostly used by Dell Dimensions
Thank you this excellent rundown of PC cases. In Pakistan, we've had power outages for many years (a lot better now). I bought a laptop just to make sure that I wouldn't have to worry about power outage related issues with my PC's hard drive. Even though we use a UPS, the computer could restart when a power outage occurs.
Its been so long since i've used a custom PC. Good to know all the things that have been happening with PC cases this whole time.
"People really like RGB"
Me: *Cat hissing sounds*
I hate it too, just give me an elegant case over a tacky RGB anyday
If it's done good it does look good, but if it's RGB only to be RGB, it's not worth it
@@linuxman7777 I have elegant case with some RGB
Yep, RGB doesn't impress me at all. I refurbished an old tower case to build my computer last year. No glass panel either. Used the 3.5" floppy space for front panel USB and used two 5.25" drive bays for a front fan kit. It's sleek, black and beautiful.
Don't worry, it's fine to be in that absolute minority that just likes to be different.
I am an advocate of having at least one DVD drive in every pc. When my mom got an MRI a few years back, they gave her the files on a DVD and I had the only pc in the house with a DVD drive. If I didn't have that, we'd've had no way of getting those medical files. Because of this, if I ever have to get a new tower, I will make sure it has bays for optical drives.
Linus' LAN boy air review was my introduction to the channel. Rocking double earrings and a park bench. Prior to Linus, I'm pretty sure I only watched 3dgameman aka Rodney Reynolds.
I also watched Rodney Reynolds a lot. His case reviews were very detailed and in depth. He focused a lot on characteristics that mattered such as airflow, removable motherboard trays, positioning and number of drive bays and expansion card slots. To this day I still base my purchasing decisions on these factors. Too bad the computer case industry has been prioritizing looks over function over the last few years. I would take a Corsair 800d over any of the tempered glass, drive bay lacking disasters that they have been pumping out over the last few years. I built my main system in a Corsair 750d a few years ago. I would love to get my hands on an 800d some day as well. It would go well with my EVGA SR-2.
1:54 Weird, I think this is the only time I've ever seen an ATX PSU with a monitor output. I thought those disappeared with the transition from AT to ATX.
Or maybe I just forgot about it in the fog of times past.
What I DO remember, is swapping the case for my first PC (486 DX-2 66 w/4MB RAM and 546MB HDD), as I wanted a push button instead of the flip switch. That was back in '94 when displays on the front showing the CPU speed was a thing. :)
Those 'cheese grater' Macs were inspired by the aesthetics of Braun company products. Same thing for the early iPods.
a n i m e
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THANKS FOR THE COOL AD AT THE END I NEEDED THAT
I did not like the fact that modern cases have no external 5.25" and 3.5" bays.
@@WarrenPostma We want gaming cases, with expansion bays.
that makes 2 of you
Well discs are gona disappear in the future and more people are using online methods only.
@@Graphics_Card Still like bays for expansion, like fan controllers or usb port drives.
@@jacobw446 wdym “usb power drives?” Also fan controller hubs don’t need a expansion slot. They already have one. All you have to do is just mount it to the back of the case and there is double sided tape.
For years, I've wanted to take a beige box from the '90s and turn it into a sleeper PC. I'd keep an optical drive, though, but replace the CD or DVD drive with a Blu-ray drive. I'd also keep the floppy drive and turn it into a SD card reader, using the disks as caddies like Dr. Moddenstine did. If you haven't seen his video on his IBM Aptiva sleeper, you should. I like what he did with that rig.
Linus didn't include the cases that make him feel old
I think the most important shift in cases, was knowing the name of your case manufacturer.
In the early-mid 90s, you maybe bought a branded mobo, CPU and graphics card. HDD, memory and optical was on size/speed (and maybe you were a baller that chose SCSI and a controller) - and your case choice was tower or desktop (and nobody cared about the PSU - it came with the case and they all powered whatever you had).
My first 'case experience' was buying a Lian Li. It cost as much as stuff I was putting inside the case, which seemed ridiculous - but it was oh so lovely.
(I had some 'funky' no-names between beige and the Lian and then some horrible 'gamer' cases I choose not to remember - but I knew who made them)
I'm now back to Lian Li. A beautiful TU150 in brushed aluminium and no f'in window.
Cooler Master CM690
Original, II, and III
Still rockin' my Antec p182 for my second rig...
Sad to see they're no longer a top dog in the market.
That's what happens you skimp on quality for quick buck, and more so when it came to their PSU's their green painted Earthwatt series was total garbage. I had 2 of them go bang on me in a year, and they where not even pulling 1/2 their rated load.
@@CommodoreFan64 sry to hear about your experience with their PSU's.
Luckily, I'm very happy with the p182's quality.
@@martheunen Well there's not much that can blow up on a PC case lol! I will admit I had an Antec 300 case for years that was very lovely, and at the time I kept the build under my desk(AMD Phenom II X6) to save space, but my girlfriend at the time had a young daughter, and she ended up knocking my morning coffee off my desk, and killed the build, I salvaged what I could like my HDD's to get the data off ASAP using my laptop, but in frustration I sent the case, and other components to the local recycle drop off. Learned my lesson, and I no longer keep my PC on the floor lol! These days If I need something budget friendly I go Rosewill(their cases, fans, and PSU have never failed me), and Fractal Design for my main builds.
1:17 I am not even kidding,
This are the computers my school "computer lab" has .
Oh man I had one of those Compaq Presario systems. Only case I know of that had a single cd/dvd disc holder built in under the front panel. That's right, not a drive, but a disc holder.
Agreed, this required a full video, a lot is missing here!!
4:15 Tacky!? I'll have you know that Lanboy Air case was functionally far beyond its competition in terms of airflow! The entire case has mesh all over while everyone else was obstructing airflow behind solid panels. They pioneered mesh principles! Even Steve from GN would be in awe of it's superiority over other cases of the era.
Recently built my first pc, used the Be Quiet! Dark Base Pro 900 rev 2… still has 2 optical drive bays, and I was still able to fit a 280mm radiator up top and an absolutely massive watercooling res in the case too. You don’t always have to give up features to get a powerful/cutting edge/neat looking build!
There's one thing I really want designers to start taking into account: cats. I love mine, but she loves to use a case on the ground (or a stand on the ground) to get on my desk or lay on my monitor speakers (where most people would put their towers). She turned off my old computer numerous times by stepping on my old HAF 922's power button. So I made sure my next case had the I/O on the front, which was actually less common than I thought it'd be.
So... put your I/O switch, front USB, and front audio jacks on the actual front, not the top, case makers!
mount it to the bottom of your desk. Also handy for standup desks so it can raise and lower as the desk does. If your front panel ports face up, you can mount it an inch forward or whatever.
@@theredscourge I have a wooden executive desk, so that's not an option. I also don't really trust under desk mounts with $2,000 of hardware.
2:45 The Antec Lanboy, my mom still has that case for her pc. I just keep updating it as I replace the parts in my pc.
My first year in college they had pentium 4s which were brand new and top of the line. I bought a usb drive that cost $100 and was a grand total of 128mb... ya...
that Antec case at 2:47 really brings me back to 2003
I want a computer case that represents me as a human, with the delicate components exposed on the outside, and the hard stuff on the inside!
Mine is definitely delicate inside out
I'd love to see a move detaled video about the evolution of PC cases. Very cool content.
"oh yeah and somewhere in there RGB happened"
yep, seems about right
Got a hackintosh built in it for myself. Not an easy thing to do but still looks awesome.
Well researched video,nicely done
TL;DR - Case designed peaked in the mid 2010's with a perfect combination of functionality, cooling and looks, and then RGB happened and now cases are garbage with no room for expansion.
Started using my old Lian Li PC-7 with brushed black aluminium panels that I bought back in 2005, again this year when I upgraded my pc. Such a nice case.
Overall decent, just missing some stuff like:
PC's switching from flatbed to tower style. (this was a massive change)
Introduction of the Cube cases.
Small cases like Mini ITX cases and NUC boxes.
Obviously had time for it, given whomever wrote that added in periphials and addons instead.
Cube cases and small cases would probably be too tangential for techquickie (also that's not how you use the word "whom" :^})
I recall our school getting some 386’s the department of energy was getting rid of that were like 2 ft high towers with more expansion cards in them then total ports in any computer today, I’m pretty sure one had 15 between iso and pci
That “3.5 inch floppy” you pointed out on the PowerPC Mac was actually an IOMega Zip drive.
Somebody tried to sneak in a PowerPC as a PC
@@drewzero1 PC means personal computer not a Windows machine. That was also around the last time you could actually game on a Mac.
I'm going to forget all of this in 10 minutes or so, but y'all's presentation is great! Very cool.
Oh hey, we're back to the old Techquickie style. You listened!
The LAN boy air was the coolest thing I couldn't own when I was at college, learning it was horrendous later in life was a good time
Before: We dont care about cooling
Now: We pretend we care about cooling
I care about cooling.
@@R9A9V2 i was talking some of the case manufacturers
Funny story:
Back in the early 00's, I wanted to improve cooling for my GPU (Hercules Radeon 9500 Pro). I did so by drilling 6mm holes in a hexagonal pattern in the side panel and mounted an 80mm fan behind it with some brackets. Behold, green and purple artifacts all over the screen. I thought I had messed something up regarding the GPU, and ordered a Club3D 9700 non-pro instead. Well, I thought, as the old card was toast anyway, might as well see how high I can clock it before discarding it. I clocked the card fairly high, and rebooted the system. To my immense surprise, all the artifacts were gone, and the card performed perfectly. Just to double check, I reset the card to default settings, and the artifacts were back! OC'ed it again and everything was fine.
Somehow the extra cooling had the GPU running too cold at default settings, don't ask me how it's possible.....
@@HepauDK i know how it happened it's
MAGIC
Early 2000's had a lot of various PC case designs including from Dell which by then was using black/grey for many of their home desktops ranging from office to high end. I remember the XPS lineup in 2003-04 had those Blue/Grey cases for example. Then you had Alienware which was really far out for what cases looked like before being bought by Dell and becoming their gaming lineup.
I still like my optical drive bay
It's a must have for me in my case
These are now shockingly rare to find. My local Microcenter carries literally ZERO cases that have an optical drive bay 😢
@@rickw9799 Fractal still makes the Define R5. That's what I just used in my latest upgrade.
I am trying to find a beige ATX case with a vintage aesthetic for a build, but it is very hard to track down any new ones. Evercase seems to have discontinued their beige ATX tower offerings, and they might have been the last ones?
I have tons in my garage with 386 builds. 486 builds. OG pentium builds. Etc.
I had that first lanboy but it was to show off my overclocked P4 Northwood ^^
Ahh, good ol' Antec. Always there for you no matter what.
I can't help but feel this left out swaths of history.
It did. You could probably do an hour video just on how the acrylic "gamer" PC cases evolved, and how Alienware (among others) drove how gamer PC cases look today.
Well, the channel is called "tech quickie".... He'd spend an hour just covering the XT form factor.....which was completely left out of this video, but was the form factor of the original IBMPC, mentioned toward the beginning of the video.
1:20 in the video. I have to disagree most connecters where in the black plate of each IO card and on the case it's self. The only ones in the case it's self tented to be Keyboard and later Mouse. As the MB's had very little IO as most of the IO was on cards you pluged in to the MB . This ment that when you upgraded something like the Soundcard you was not left with redundant connectors on the MB. This even included the HardDisk interface so you could go from MFM to IDE (for example) without having to leave the MFM controller and connectors in the system. The move to every thing on the MB could be seen as certailing upgrade ability. For example when I new USB or HD definition comes about now you often change the Hole MB.
Thats awesome ❤️❤️🔥
I used to be very skeptical when I watched "Time Team" and some archeologists with pottery expertis could look at a little shard and say, "Yeah, this is roman. It was made on site between the years 40 A.D - 90 A.D. But today I can pretty much do the same thing by looking at a computer chassi, or some component.
I feel like this wasnt scripted.
Linus is speaking from experience. Lol
I love these walk-throughs of the evolution of computers, its hard to believe that consumer desktop computers have only been a thing for less than half a decade. Please keep doing more of these!
This Linus guy should have his own channel! 🤨
ikr!
Yeah Imagine if he had one for himself.. he could call it Linus Tech Tips or something... idk
@@whitehavencpu6813 Wow, what a genius name
Always wondered what happened to Antec. Their cases were by far the most popular in my nick of the woods in the early 2000s. Next thing I know, it's like they just disappeared.
I'm sad Linus didn't talk about air ducts and side fans. The good old days.
External radiators! 5.25" bay reservoirs!
My wife's grandmother gave us a wooden desk from the early 2000's with a compartment specifically made for a computer tower with holes for running cables and such. Unfortunately computers back then give off as much heat, so they didn't really focus much on giving it good airflow. I have to step my games down to a less intense resolution than my rig could handle to keep the temps in check. When we eventually move I am going to gently inform her that the desk is too bulky to fit in the new office and get a new one that will let my system breathe.
I cut a circle on the bottom and mount a big pc fan blowing upward, powered off 5 volt usb charger it's pretty quiet and good flow. i7 2600k, gtx 970 temps stay fine, even with one-hour, all-core software builds.
He didn't include SGI's awesome cases in the early 90's.
LMG don't have anyone 1337, they wouldn't have been allowed on SGIs in the early 1990s.
SGI looked cooler, but Sun was more practical. I always liked their pizza-box designs (SS20, for example): they were tiny, but, with SBUS and processor cards, just as upgradeable as a modern PC.
iFixit commercial is not explodey enough.
I haven't actually seen the Minnow or Moray yet, but they look like nice SMALL sets with the bits most of us actually use. I'd still replace that mostly plastic driver handle with a spare alu model made for the Pro Tech toolkit. Seriously wish that were an included option in the smaller kits.
Oh, the abridged history was fun too.
Someone make a tempered glass RGB abacus case.
But can you overclock it?
Submit this idea to Razer for their next April's fools
with RGB.
Loved my lanboy air. Great case for a few years. Even had a built in tool/screw tray. It was however a dust nightmare, the rubber suspension for the hard drives dried up, and in general it did fall apart. R.I.P. old case. You did your time.
Me: That one guy that modified his case to support 1 Optical drive so he doesn't have to buy a case with a huge cage.
The high voltage power switch on the original AT case was a bit of a shocker! I remember welding one to the inside of the chassis as my hand involuntarily clenched down when I was working on one that I didn't realize was on.
you're the first youtuber I came across who suggested "Dislike"
Thumbs up to you. great content
Dave2D does that too, can highly recommend his channel if you're into more laptops oriented stuff, he sometimes also does some other stuff too
I was hoping for at least a mention of the SGI workstation cases, those were awesome!
The last five years have been devolution, not evolution. I despise the industry's move towards minimalism completely. 5.25 bays are not just for optical drives and they gave cases greater utility.
Pretty sure soon most cases won't even fit 3.5 or 2.5 drives now that everyone uses M2
We've gone from everything being an external device back to.....everything being an external device..... amazing how history repeats itself, huh?
@@jstan5802 SSDs are fine for boot devices but terrible for bulk storage - unless you're Linus and can throw thousands of c-bills at it for shits and giggles. HDDs remain the most cost-effective for bulk storage for everyone else.
@@iaobtc Yeah, I agree, personally I have a couple of 3.5 in my PC. However seeing how the industry is moving forward I won't be surprise if in the future we would have a couple of M2 at the back of the motherboard and phased out disk drives. However I think disk drives are still the more sensible option for NAS.
2:05 - Yea...just killing the power...no joke, we had no idea that you had to shut a computer down when my parents got our first one. We would just get back to the desktop and turn it off.
...until icons and stuff started disappearing. 😆 That thing shit itself HARD and we had to have it fixed. It was more corrupt than the left after a few months of that. Live and learn, right? lol
What about silent cases?
15 years ago you could not buy a one - you had to make it yourself
you want a silent case? EASY, Don't put anything in it!
*badum-tsk*
Ok, I'm going now, you don't need to get the broom.....
4:10 Nice to see the Define R5 make a cameo! It's a great case
I still use one :)
@@nevoyu 👍 Yep it's my first case and I plan on using it for my next build. I replaced the acrylic window side panel with a tempered glass one and it looks great
We need the evolution of Linus
This was a fun trip down memory lane. I remember my step dad's PC back in 92. It was super ugly lol. Then a few years later we upgraded to a Gateway with Win95. Then my cousin's family got a Gateway with Win98 which blew ours away. Then once I got out of high school in 2004 I bought my own desktop with graduation money. Had me a fancy AMD Athlon 64 3400+ with a Radeon X800.
Honestly, I wouldn't mind going back to a big beige box for my next build. I don't want glass on my LAN party PC, nor do I give single fuck about RGB lighting. A PC has to be fast and efficient and be able to do what I want it to do. That does not include being a safety hazard or a fucking light show.
Despite all the evolutions, what's funny is that in theory an ATX case from the mid-90s is still compatible with modern hardware from 2021.
And I'm still using my 12yo Obsidian 800D for one of my machines :P Still an awesome case
If Linus wants to buy, i've a Antec Super Lanboy in the attick.
I have*
an*
attic*
@@ploperdung 2/3rds of that is just regional language, not necessarily incorrect.
@@ploperdung i speak 5 language so believe me when i say that i dont care about your opinion. Also keep in mind that my smartphone dictionary isnt in English so sometimes it decides to change some words. For a troll you should at least know that "I have" and "i've" are the same thing.
4:15 I saw a pc with this case for sale cheaply on the facebook marketplace a while ago
I still have my Lantec Airboy, exactly 0 he's mounts survive to this day so I'm brainstorming design ideas. Lol
Luckily my hdd mounts are still working fine but I've read that you can replace the rubber with surgical tubing.
big zipties- Thats whats holding all my drives in on my Lanboy Air- Zippies around the drives and then bigger ones threaded through to hold them into the case. Although my machines all SSD now, so the load isnt anywhere near as big on the mounts (And somehow i've squeezed a Ryzen 3900X and an EVGA 2080 super in there) and I'm brainstorming watercooling because why not push the old Lanboy Air as far as you possibly can!
@@ferremit I have a 3700x in mine. Used to have a gigabyte 5700xt but has since been downgraded to a 2060 ko.
TRS-80's were GREY. Mine had 16KB memory in the keyboard. Then I added the Expansion interface and it memory increased to 48KB. It had 1- 5&1/4" external floppy. I then added 3 more in a special box that was really a computer with the motherboard removed. The original drive were 35 track single sided (You could make the floppy double sided by punching a hole for the timing light and cutting a write protect notch in the side.) One of the Floppy Drives was a True 80 Track Double sided Drive. A Box of 10 Radio Single Sided 35 Track Floppys cost $39.95 + tax back in 1979.
I'll never give up 5.25" bays. I wish 3.5" bays were still around too.
Same here i wouldn't personally use floppy and DVD drives but there are card readers fan controllers even stuff for water cooling
I love to have 5.25 back it makes a build more personal
@@Rainbow__cookie Indeed. I still have my Blu-ray drive and wouldn't mind having floppy drive as well because I have retro PC's so transferring stuff to them would be easier that way.
I've been so interested in older cases lately.
Topic suggestion: What is Antimalware service Executable and why does it hog so much COU, RAM, Disk usage and battery.
Second topic: Why is the failure rate in laptop manufacturing so high. That is, many people get a laptop with major problems and have to return it. Even LTT got laptops with issues which were solved by reordering. (Surface Book 2)
Another topic suggestion: why are my bowels filled to the brim with liquid hot lava diarrhea?
This guy knows his stuff. He should really make his own channel
I honestly think 90s beige/white cases looked better than today's cases. New cases in the early 90s looked really stylish and professional, not like a night club. Usually had a ridge pattern, really tactile power and reset buttons, CPU frequency display, Turbo button (cmon), and the 5.25" drives and 3.5" floppy. In the late 90s they made everything more round and "aerodynamic" and then things got ugly, but early 90s... some awesome retro cases from that time, I am rebuilding my childhood PC in one.
I think it's about nostalgia, cause I fondly look back at the 2000's computer designs, because they were just ridiculously experimental with see-thru plastics, LEDs, etc. Nowadays it's all standardized just like back in the AT days, except with much more variation. Case modding had it's peak in the 2000's, best off the shelf cases are available now and the beige boxes had their very own appeal, imho.
@@jayhill2193 Nostalgia is a big part of it. The beige cases get a bad reputation because most of them looked terrible after a few years. The problem was, they used plastic that yellowed over time when exposed to any amount of sunlight and generally wasn't very strong, also stained easily. So it was common to see yellowed, dirty, and banged up cases. But when they were new, they looked sleek. 2000s there was a lot of ugly sports car-looking designs, then finally in the 2010s they figured out clean lines were the way to go. But then RGB ruined everything LOL.
I still remember the awe of seeing the first iMacs that came out. They really stood out in a time when beige boxes still came to mind when thinking about computers.