The Top 100 PC Tech Innovations of All Time
70. Liquid Cooling (2000)
A bit clunky, sure, but the thermal benefits of liquid cooling are critical for overclockers pushing their PCs to the absolute limit.
69. Intel 440BX (1998)
Intel’s third-gen Pentium II and Pentium III chipset represented the pinnacle of motherboard technology for years: 440BX boards regularly outperformed later models from Intel.
68. DVD (1995)
Do we enjoy being able to cram 8.5 gigs on a disc? Yes. But we LOVE that our lives are free of nasty VHS tapes. Bonus: As a movie technology, DVD was released without a serious standards war surrounding it—refreshing!
67. Lotus 1-2-3 (1983)
You might not have spent your formative computing years futzing with spreadsheets, but legions of suits certainly did, turning 1-2-3 into the PC’s first “killer app.”
66. Socket 939 (2004)
AMD’s second-generation Athlon 64 socket offered a handy performance boost thanks to its dual-channel 128-bit memory interface. All at a reasonable price, too.
65. Microsoft Word (1989)
WordPerfect is for sissies. Microsoft Word may be bloated, but there’s a reason it’s the industry standard: It can do anything you want it to, as well as thousands of things you need not know about.
64. 3.5-Inch Hard Drive (1987)
Finally supplanting the old 5.25-inch formfactor, the 3.5-inch hard drive became an enduring standard that shows few signs of slowing down.
63. Nvidia SLI (2004)
The laws of computing shouldn’t really let you shove two graphics boards into a PC and boost your performance, but somehow they do. Nvidia’s unlikely technology (which various vendors had tried to develop for years) has helped the company decimate the competition in high-end graphics.
62. Intel Core 2 Duo (2006)
Desktop or mobile, it’s the chip to beat in today’s computing environment, offering the best performance on the market by a wide margin.
61. DivX (2001)
No, not the disposable DVD format. DivX is the world’s best hope for a universal compressed video-encoding format. Many set-top DVD players even support the format.