Well its like in the mid to late 1960s when people used to build their own Microwave ovens from surplus radar parts. You had newsletters on Microwave building, magazines and even overclocking contests back in in the days of home build Microwaves.
Now no one builds their own Microwaves anymore.
In the future You wont be able to buy Motherboards etc.. PC's will be the equivalent of Microwaves, where you buy as an appliance it and toss it when it fails, no user replaceable parts.
Apple is already leading in that direction.
Well its like in the mid to late 1960s when people used to build their own Microwave ovens from surplus radar parts. You had newsletters on Microwave building, magazines and even overclocking contests back in in the days of home build Microwaves.
Now no one builds their own Microwaves anymore.
In the future You wont be able to buy Motherboards etc.. PC's will be the equivalent of Microwaves, where you buy as an appliance it and toss it when it fails, no user replaceable parts.
Apple is already leading in that direction.
I just saw a post at another forum by a guy talking about building a PC for his programmer dad, and mentioning stuff like water cooling, etc. I'm like WTF?!?!
Corsair sells the all in one closed loop water cooling systems. Easier to put on than a heatsink,
Just ordered parts for a new build. Looked at Dell for a bit, but unless I wasn't doing it right, was frustrated that you apparently can't customize the build anymore. Want an i7 with SSD? It has 12 GB ram. Want 16 GB ram, well, no SSD then, and seemingly no way to just click customize and add what I needed.
Even if true, the enthusiast isn't going anywhere. There will be a market for devices that are higher performing, and people who buy those will tinker with them to make them go faster, because "good enough" doesn't exist in the heart of an enthusiast.
In such a future, I fully expect to see odd cooling solutions, overclocking, software hacking to enable tinkering etc. Overclocking and tinkering might make a return to where it once was, when tinkering wasn't expected by the manufacturer and wasn't supported. Those were the golden days when you really felt like you were getting away with something that few others could.
I just saw a post at another forum by a guy talking about building a PC for his programmer dad, and mentioning stuff like water cooling, etc. I'm like WTF?!?!
In the future You wont be able to buy Motherboards etc.. PC's will be the equivalent of Microwaves, where you buy as an appliance it and toss it when it fails, no user replaceable parts.
Apple is already leading in that direction.
I've seen comments like this throughout this thread. Why is it people think Dell is the only prebuilt game in town? I could name half a dozen others (that aren't alienware owned by dell).
I've seen comments like this throughout this thread. Why is it people think Dell is the only prebuilt game in town? I could name half a dozen others (that aren't alienware owned by dell).
Because they were the biggest that did this, and this is what they built their retail business on. Then they basically said, "eh, we're going retail, you didn't really like our biggest selling point, did you?"
I knew people here were mean and hateful but I did not realize they are also so naive.
I knew people here were mean and hateful but I did not realize they are also so naive.
Only as long as the market is big enough to generate a net profit after expenses.
Or if the market is too small, then the products would sell at at a price high enough to pay for the capital investment.
Either, the market disappears OR it becomes a niche market where motherboards cost 1200 dollars and the fancy coolers cost 900 bucks. So in essence the market would become a tiny one but for high heeled individuals, not your regular joe six pack who wants to play.
In 20 years one or the other will happen. PC building will pretty much become extinct anyways. It will just be another appliance.
Is pc building a dying trend?
Who has been "mean and hateful" exactly?
It's so common that I don't really pay attention to whom exactly. The anandtech forums have a reputation of hate and bigotry among all the tech forums I frequent.
Because people tried to go touchscreen only and realized you can do so much more at a desktop. 24-27" screens have never been more affordable and multi-monitor is a must. Even attempting to write content or code on a touchscreen pales in comparison to two huge monitors and a keyboard. On the subject of micro/SFF prebuilt killing self built, I don't see it happening either. Building your own isn't that much more expensive and is more likely to last a longer time because you choose higher quality components than OEM's and SFF does not have the airflow capability to dissipate heat well.These are the same idiots who said mobile computing would replace desktop computing starting back in 2008.
Seven years later, desktop computing is stronger than ever.
And no, building your own will never, EVER die.
Ever.
IMO you're going to think that of a lot of places on the Internet if you're willing to ruthlessly pigeon-hole people into a stereotype you find objectionable.
Only as long as the market is big enough to generate a net profit after expenses.
Or if the market is too small, then the products would sell at at a price high enough to pay for the capital investment.
Either, the market disappears OR it becomes a niche market where motherboards cost 1200 dollars and the fancy coolers cost 900 bucks. So in essence the market would become a tiny one but for high heeled individuals, not your regular joe six pack who wants to play.
In 20 years one or the other will happen. PC building will pretty much become extinct anyways. It will just be another appliance.
Seven years later, desktop computing is stronger than ever.
? Mobile computing has been replacing desktop computing for years. It's a slow and agonizing decay for desktop computing.These are the same idiots who said mobile computing would replace desktop computing starting back in 2008.
Seven years later, desktop computing is stronger than ever.
And no, building your own will never, EVER die.