Seamus Blackley is now more often found posting photographs of the beautiful sourdough loaves he bakes, or his recent Quixotic quest to make chocolate from scratch. But Blackley's long and extremely distinguished career in tech will probably always be defined by his role at Microsoft in the late '90s and early '00s when, alongside others, he spearheaded the internal drive at Microsoft towards videogames, and specifically towards the Xbox.
I blew some minds (may be an exaggeration) in the PC Gamer Slack channel the other week by mentioning where the Xbox name originated: it was based on Microsoft's DirectX technology, and was therefore christened the DirectXbox then Xbox internally, the idea being that this was a working title and when launch came around the marketers would come up with something better. In fact, in Blackley's words, what the marketers came up with was «garbage.» So Xbox it was.
I think there's always been something quite utilitarian about Xbox hardware designs and, as the name suggests, the people behind this thing always knew that the point was to make a standardised PC spec in a box. The recent Series S and X are good examples of this approach to hardware aesthetics, and have lent themselves to a minor social media trend of folk building an outer chassis that makes their Xbox look like one of those classic beige box PCs from the '90s.
Blackley saw one of these posts, and it sparked him to share a pretty remarkable picture: the original prototype Xbox devkits which look, well, exactly like that.
«People who are unaware that this looks a lot like the prototype Xbox devkits will not understand why I just aspirated my coffee,» wrote Blackley. «Here’s what they looked like:»
If you ask me, that's a step up from the infamous silver 'X' prototype shown off at CES, and the millennium vibes are strong with this one. The eagle-eyed will also notice that the case is marked «Alpha II» at the bottom, suggesting there's an even earlier model. Even more beige?
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