Worst PC hardware trends that disappeared

yokonzo@lemmy.world to Technology@lemmy.world – 16 points –
xda-developers.com
35

This is kind of a shit article. Most of these are just old hardware that eventually had modern improvements, not "trends."

A "trend" is cold cathode black lights inside the case, not a silly naming scheme for CPU revisions.

Ya acrylic side cases where a trend, maybe 3D monitors but everything else in there was just specific technology that has been replaced by better technology..

The blower gpu fans were definitely a trend. I remember buying third party coolers and strapping 120mm fans onto them with zip ties.

IDK I would say 3d monitors are a trend that died pretty hard

A trend implies a level of popularity. There was none.

It's ultimately just failed (or "pre-successful") technology that wasn't able to do the job well enough at a sufficient price to develop a market.

How was IDE a hardware trend?

It's an XDA article, what did you expect.

None of these are trends. They're all hardware standards, and all but one of them are still very much here anyway

I remember my first serious build, blue acrylic case with as much black light reactive components I could get

My case is an old Tower Server Case tucked away behind my monitors. Loads of space and no need for cable management.

That bastard would slice you open and gut you like a pig at the first opportunity though.

I remember the first full build I did. All of my fans had LEDs, the case had LEDs. The first time I tried to play on it in the dark basement the SU was blinding. I disconnected all of the case LEDs, and replaced my fans for plain black ones.

Oh man I went through this phase too. I had the clear acrylic case and a bunch of those UV CCFL tubes.

The thing that I wish would go away is oversized graphics cards that take up 3 or more slots. There needs to be more options for liquid cooling that doesn't require modifying the card.

That would require cooler mount standards. I don't think AMD or Nvidia currently have a standard.

RGB. Please. Finding hardware that doesn't light up like a Christmas tree is harder than it should be. Even a simple power LED can light up an entire room.

I don't really mind RGB, but my complaint is why every single LED has to be vivid electric blue. I want old red LEDs back, they were nice, they didn't scorch my retinas.

Not anytime soon. Way too cheap to include(like cents for a mouse or ram and a few dollars for a keyboard) , and way too popular not to include. Well at least you can disable it.

right, you fan disabile them using their unique software which you have to install for every component, signing away your life (cough cough Disney) in the process

Did bottom PSU ATX cases disappeared? Floor dust suckers.

The worst is still around: that GPU's require more and more power. I wished more focus on efficiency. Not long until water cooling is mandatory, to get all the heat away.

They are. GTX 590 from 2011 has a TDP of 375W. RTX 4080 has 320W, while offering over ten times better performance. 4060 outperforms the 1060, 2060 and 3060 while having a lower TDP than any of them.

If you want low TDP, the RX 6400 is twice as powerful as the 590 while having a TDP of 53W.

It's the very top of the line stuff like 4090 that push the limit by achieving that very last 10% performance bump at the cost of using double the power, and that's kinda like complaining a Bugatti Veyron gets terrible highway MPG figures.

Molex connectors were almost universally hated for being flimsy and requiring a lot of effort to connect properly. They were fortunately replaced by SATA connectors.

I can understand the "lot of effort", but flimsy? Those things were built like a tank. SATA connectors certainly aren't more-durable (not that that normally matters, inside a case).

They also came from a time when hard drives could draw several amps while in use and much more on spin-up. There was a good reason why SCSI drive arrays used to spin each disk up one-by-one.

Molex connectors are good for 10 amps or so, SATA connectors couldn't have handled that amount of current.

The capacitor plague era, ever wonder why we don't see a lot of PC's in the early 2000s, this is why as everything with a cap would fail and kill the boards, essentially having to call on the oem to fix it.

Curved monitors.

Uhh, plenty of people still use them (it's still the default for many gaming monitors), and for 32:9 displays you absolutely need it curved or it's basically unusable. I don't think they're going away any time soon, because they're not a "trend".