Concerning that PSU:
http://forums.guru3d.com/showthread.php?t=317192It's a Seasonic. Great buy, especially since it's $45. The 400CX is $30 and remarkably similar in design, however you have to deal with a rebate and 100W less max (no, not 120). It's about the same as a VX450 and an Antec Earthwatts 500W (they are identical), but they both cost a whole lot more. Much better than the basiq Ex linked (how that is, IDK).
http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/954/1Also, Ex, if overclocked, AMD's incompetence can be slightly overlooked (it's actually their competence that makes tri cores exist, since they're selling sub par products at a discounted price, and the "par" is incredibly high). The AMD tri core can be overclocked to a quad propus at 3 GHz with ease. To be safe, let's underclock it to a 2.8 GHz, and call the 3300 celeron an e6300 @2.8 (even though it can hit 3.3 on stocks, it still doesn't have the same cache as the 6300).
The wolfdale's much better in gaming, but the propus wins in everything else. Bump in the max theoretical OC, and you've got a heated debate on what's better. Still though, $50 vs $70? Celeron wins in price efficiency, hands down. If you get a Callisto, however, the l3 cache helps out a bunch, and you can unlock it to a heka (apparently) or deneb with ease. Not to mention, the callisto can keep up with the celeron, but the deneb will decimate it. Why xbit labs didn't get ANY numbers at 3.3 or 4 GHz on the celeron, I don't know, but that would help a lot in comparing.
As for cases: it's a matter of opinion. What makes a good case? It's a very difficult question that has to be answered on a person to person basis. After all, a case IS an optional component to a computer. You don't need a case to get the computer to work. A good case to me depends on what you want out of it. My preferences are:
-Aluminum panels for heat dissipation/weight. This is actually pretty negligible, and I'm not sure if airflow has a significant impact on cooling. If it does (and is a positive impact) then that adds a whole other section:
-Airflow. What's better? More holes and fans, or a good and constant stream of low turbulence (laminar would be ideal, but air has a really small kinematic viscosity, making it only laminar at REALLY slow velocities). This is also difficult to say what's better. If more fans are good, then why bother with a case at all? Just leave it out of the case, or do some crazy case fan mods. Personally, I think that a closed positive pressure system is the best. That means no vents except where you want them (the back and front of the case) where you can put fans to create good airflow. Most importantly, you know where the air is coming from, so you can put in filters and keep your case relatively clean. This is harder to do if you have vents on the side, a plastic unremovable front cover, or holes everywhere.
-Amount of plastic. A good case IMO shouldn't have plastic on it except for holding stuff like drives. The front cover should be made out of metal (but can be held there by plastic).
-Access. A good case needs to be able to be disassembled with ease, to allow easy access to all parts of the system. This includes removable motherboard tray (helps tons when building), easily removable front covers, removable back side panel, removable HDD bracket, etc...
-Amount of rice. I dislike anything ricer like LEDs. There was a time I thought it was nice, and indeed some things are cool. My DFI board has funky colors designed for a UV light to be placed in the case with a see through panel (I don't use it however, and it's
unobtrusive. LEDs, especially blue ones are very annoying in a dark room). However, I wouldn't ever want to have something that looks like this:

Seriously, looks are important, possibly the most important part, and simple yet elegant is the way to go.
Of the cases, I can't say I hate the Antec 300. In fact, it's a good case. Decent worksmanship, excellent design, good airflow, little rice. However, it was designed to be cheap, and it is. It lacks many things I mentioned above. The Antec cases which HAVE those things usually have lots of rice attached. On top of that, the Antec case price is far too high. The antec 300 would be a killer deal at $30. It would be THE case to get. But not at $50, and if it ever hits $30, there will be a much better case at $50 which you can buy. I don't think even Ex would disagree with me that the 300 is the best hundred series case, all things considered.
@ShadowFlare
IMO, a case doesn't help much with sound. If you want a quiet system, you have to build your parts quiet, and optimize your airflow with low decibel fans. If I were to build a seriously nice quiet computer, I'd get this:
LL A05NB. Airflow is good right at the CPU (the intake is in the back, vents through the front). If you get a good graphics card, you'll probably want a nice big passive cooler with an extra pcie dual fan blowing down on it, as the graphics are in a poor location (but they're meant to run much hotter than the CPU.
Quality is different on cases. A cheap case isn't going to break. It will, however cut you. It might bend a little if you accidentally hit it with something. I accidentally bent my $10 case's door cover, and it never fit on properly again. My lancool case has a much better method of attaching the case, so that even if it did bend, I would be able to fit it back on easily.
Probably the most important facet of a case is its longevity. If you buy a case, you can reuse it practically forever.
Also, ex, I feel this is an excellent case:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811112184Your opinions?
There are only a few problems that immediately jump out at me:
Blue LEDs (sorta fixable)
Dust from HUGE SEE THROUGH VENT on side.
80 mm top fan (not included)
no eSATA
$110 on a case, plus the money for new replacement fans
top mounted PSU (I don't find that much of a problem, because if it's bottom mounted, your GPU is going to be at the top where it's hot, plus you get to use the PSU fan for cooling too)
Other than that, I'm amazed.
"Parliamentary inquiry, Mr. Chairman - do we have to call the Gentleman a gentleman if he's not one?"