this post was submitted on 16 Dec 2025
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You know what’s funny about the clear plastic electronics? They were the result of a unique and new market demand, that of mass incarceration. The point of them was to be easily inspected by guards. To make sure nothing was getting hidden inside them.
Them ending up in normal distribution and getting picked up by teens who thought they were cool was simply a fluke. Kind of emblematic of the era in a way, to have the effects of something so criminal seep out in to the wider world, stripped of it’s context, and resold as trend to teens.
I find this hard to believe given the devices most Millennials tend to wax nostalgic about, vis a vis the clear cases. I don't think Apple was designing their 1st gen iMacs or Macintosh SE's for prison (that article says these were made clear in order to do airflow studies).
Likewise, I know Nintendo wasn't making gameboys clear for that reason. 1990s Japanese teenagers would have had 0 exposure to US prison devices in order to gain the perception of them as being cool, to in turn drive that demand within Nintendo.
Translucent plastic has been around since long before mass consumer electronics. Parkesine was around in the 1850s, and there were translucent products made with it.
I think this is a case of different groups using the same thing for different reasons, independently of each other.
Nah, clear plastic electronics were just cool on their own. Same with beige.
Today's electronics are all boring colors. You find mostly black and white, and rarely some kind of brand-specific colors like the Switch's red and blue or Apple's, uh, very slightly off-white iPhone Air colors (they say those colors are gold and blue). For anything else, you pretty much need to buy a skin, which is cool of course, but you can't use a skin to get clear plastic.
The main reason we don't get fun colors anymore is because it's cheaper to manufacture the more popular options in larger quantities. Fun variants means lower order quantities, which means more expensive manufacturing. This is also why some PC cases are more expensive in white than in black.