Of course the KryoTech and other units (Vapochill) have been on the market for years. lastig21 mentioned this in the third post. These units only cool the CPU, one of your previous posts mentioned that you wanted to cool all the components, not just the CPU. This would require some type of system that cooled incoming air, not the CPU. The KryoTech and vapochill type units use lots of insulation and sometimes heaters to make sure the outside of the CPU cooling device doesn't get below the dew point and cause condensation. These units are also really expensive. Unless the computer is in a hot environment or being radically overclocked, it should have no problem as long as there is a good CPU cooling soloution. You could build a cooling system that uses an air-conditioner like system to cool incoming air, but you would have to have a pretty good handle on HVAC design and construction. It would also be big and expensive.
The igloo cool isn't a good idea. Why? It uses a
peltier thermoelectric element. (Also available
here) Basically, when an electric current is applied, on side gets hot and the other cool. The items in an igloo cooler don't generate heat and the heat loss through the insulation of the cooler is fairly low, therefore the peltier unit doesn't have to do alot of work. This is basically a very low power peltier, not suitable for cooling the inside of a computer. To handle the heat load inside your computer, you would need at least half a dozen high powered peltiers. I won't go into the mathematics behind peltier performance - dig around on the Melcor site if you want to find out more. Peltiers also are VERY inefficient. For every watt of heat they transfer, they also produce at least one watt at the hot side. This means that your (for example) 200 watts of heat produced by the computer would now be at least 400 watts of heat dumped into the room. If your room temperature increases a great deal (let's say 20 degrees) due to this excess heat, then even if your case is 20 degrees below room temperature you would still have a net gain of 0. Plus you now need a 200 watt (minimum) power supply, and don't even think of using a computer power suppy, you'll need a high current linear type. Plus massive heat sinks and fans. Peltiers are best when used for targeted cooling - CPUs for example. Although this runs into the same issues with insulation and condensation as the Vapochill type units, as well as problems of its own.
I've heard of one guy who used a peltier to cool the water in his water-cooling rig to below room temperature, but it took alot of experimentation and tweaking to get any kind of gain (most times it actually cased the water temperature to slightly increase!). In case you're wondering, I've done the watercooling thing for years (I started about the same time as Jim at
Benchtest, check out his site!) and was running a peltier back in 1997 on an AMD K6-200. I've got several pelts and the components for some power supplies sitting around at home - they're more trouble than they're worth, IMHO. That's why extreme cooling has gone to phase-change refrigeration and water. Water cooling can be done for (fairly) cheap and if you build it right, is leakproof.