Why Pay $1000 for a 25 year old PC! - NIXSYS Windows 98 PC

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  • Опубликовано: 8 май 2024
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    A brand new Windows 98 PC?! But how? And why would anyone need Windows 98 in 2022?
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    MUSIC CREDIT
    ---------------------------------------------------
    Intro: Laszlo - Supernova
    Video Link: • [Electro] - Laszlo - S...
    iTunes Download Link: itunes.apple.com/us/album/sup...
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    Intro animation by MBarek Abdelwassaa / mbarek_abdel
    Monitor And Keyboard by vadimmihalkevich / CC BY 4.0 geni.us/PgGWp
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    CHAPTERS
    ---------------------------------------------------
    0:00 Intro
    0:43 Who is NIXSYS?
    1:37 The machine
    3:33 A GENUINE WINDOWS 98 STICKER?!
    4:07 Checking out the internals
    7:24 Why not PCI Express?
    8:52 Why does Anthony have an old weigh station PC?
    10:04 Something frivolous
    10:45 Some benchmarks
    12:34 Peripherals and driver issues
    15:02 USB Audio? Maybe not
    16:49 Conclusion
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Комментарии • 3,6 тыс.

  • @ErickPolsky
    @ErickPolsky Год назад +370

    I worked with a company that had million dollar lab equipment. The software was timed to the processor (486) so it only worked on a specific chipset. Their warehouse had a pallet of replacement parts for that one machine standing by to keep it running.

    • @YR7A
      @YR7A 10 месяцев назад +36

      I was surprised to learn that it's very common to encounter things like this in all types of industry. It's probably far, far cheaper to keep that machine running and pay for that pallet of replacement parts than it is to get new software made for the equipment or straight up replace the equipment.

    • @triaxelongd3337
      @triaxelongd3337 9 месяцев назад +15

      ​@@YR7Aalso new software can be buggy and may not work with older hardware. Its just a big hassle sometimes.

    • @KimPossibleShockwave
      @KimPossibleShockwave 2 месяца назад +9

      @@YR7A Yup! It's simple economics.
      Your factory uses Windows 95 or 98 to run a bit of custom software which controls all your machines or a key machine in the assembly line? Paying like £500 every few years for replacement parts to keep that machine up and running compared to spending £50,000+ for upgrades/modernization which may or may not work? Yeah, I wouldn't take the risk.

    • @Niberspace
      @Niberspace 2 месяца назад +2

      were you ever tempted to play Dune 2 on it when everyone was away for Christmas break?

    • @Zack_Wester
      @Zack_Wester Месяц назад +2

      @@YR7A dont help that even today new produced machine got two options.
      IT controled whit some rediculus DRM that will brick it as soon as the internet betwen the factory that the machine is used in and the contry that made the factory (aka all the time), or just anything goes belly upp.
      oh you bought 20 10 milion machines well to bad that Machine factory whent bust last week because now you got 10 pieces of scrap.
      better to use a old 98 solution then deal whit that kind of risk.

  • @danbarnes4069
    @danbarnes4069 Год назад +2974

    I love how the computer looks like a Windows XP/ Vista computer but it runs windows 98.

    • @raikitsunagi
      @raikitsunagi Год назад +260

      True, it should be white and more plastic to run 98 🤔

    • @danbarnes4069
      @danbarnes4069 Год назад +102

      @@raikitsunagi I agree, most people are familiar with those beige boxes sitting the the lounge paired with a CRT display and the keyboard and mouse which comes with the computer.

    • @Dan-Simms
      @Dan-Simms Год назад +23

      @@raikitsunagi or more like beige, then really bling it out with Noctua fans haha!

    • @SmilyTheMare
      @SmilyTheMare Год назад +13

      i was thinking that it looked like a xp case

    • @vincent570
      @vincent570 Год назад +7

      I noticed this as well good catch. We old.

  • @ittos90
    @ittos90 Год назад +195

    This is EXACTLY what I needed! Our company runs a paging system for several hospitals. The system is running on an old XP machine and requires ISA cards

    • @definitlynotbenlente7671
      @definitlynotbenlente7671 2 месяца назад +1

      is there no way to run it on a more modern system like linux??

    • @zorkmid1083
      @zorkmid1083 Месяц назад +1

      ​@@definitlynotbenlente7671 Even (recent) Linux may not support ISA. You'd have to dig up some old-as-crap, unsupported-for-years version of Linux which may not have the drivers for all your hardware and isn't too user-friendly with the install.

    • @Singurarity88
      @Singurarity88 Месяц назад +1

      @@zorkmid1083 Convert them to a new standard and move on. Investing thousands of dollars to hold up old tech just for the fear of conversion (and there is one) is just plain stupid, i think.

    • @zorkmid1083
      @zorkmid1083 Месяц назад +4

      @@Singurarity88 The capital costs for upgrading your system to those new standards may be prohibitive. You'll have to:
      1) find compatible new hardware,
      2) software that will work with the hardware,
      3) retraining the people to use the new software and hardware, then
      4) a lengthy debugging process.
      None of these 4 steps are a given success. Maybe the original hardware manufacturer went out of business or merged with someone else, and no one produces the computer hardware which does precisely this. Or they came out with an entirely new system, which, again, may not do exactly what you want, or isn't supported by the software you're using. As you're well aware, computer technology is constantly evolving, so it's not unheard of to have parts of your system growing out of spec with each other.
      Edit: oh yeah, you'll have to do all that while your business is still running.

    • @Singurarity88
      @Singurarity88 Месяц назад +1

      @@zorkmid1083 But isn't that the thing? Just upgrading when it's neccesary and not keeping old (dying) things alive? Me as an IT Expert would suggest to move on and stop replacing old hardware. Now you guys come in and want to sell your old hardware for that reason? Modern Systems don't depend on liars, and i personally think this is a step forward.

  • @cyscott2714
    @cyscott2714 Год назад +308

    I forgot how fragile those versions of Windows were. Doing loads of things could lead to a blue screen or an outright crash and reboot. You knew you were in trouble when safe mode wouldn't boot.

    • @steinbauge4591
      @steinbauge4591 Год назад +14

      a lot of old specialized stuff will run DOS and do only one thing. It can go on forever. If it communicates by standard ports it can be replaced today.

    • @kinaceman
      @kinaceman Год назад +6

      always have backups of the registry!

    • @Subtra
      @Subtra Год назад +5

      i still remember, of thing that are still fragile today are printers, its like they never changed at all in the last 100 Years of IT Technology XD

    • @exgenica
      @exgenica Год назад +5

      @@Subtra Except that around 1980, an IBM ink jet printer cost something like US$20,000 and was about half the size of a typical home refrigerator. Now, for about $60, one can buy a far superior, faster, higher print quality, *far more reliable* ink jet printer the size of a couple shoeboxes.

    • @Subtra
      @Subtra Год назад +6

      @@exgenica still doesnt change the fragile part, i mean yes its more reliable and stuff but office printers still break down regulary like a clockwork, if you use one for yourself its another matter and a copyshop should use an industrial one of course. Best part about printers these days, if something goes wrong it shows you where it feels wrong, other then random error codes nobody can decipher anyway XD

  • @chrisvan62
    @chrisvan62 Год назад +1273

    I work at a paper mill, a lot of our equipment, HMIs, PLCs, etc are 20-40 years old so we've got a LOT of XP, 98, and some DOS. A computer like this is something we'd definitely get when one of our towers crap out. There's a lot of days I spend just cloning backups and installing 98 and XP on laptops for field usage.

    • @travisscavoni369
      @travisscavoni369 Год назад +72

      I also work at a paper mill, and the computers we use run Windows 7 because supposedly the VNC we use won't run on a newer OS. At least that is what one of our IT guys told me.

    • @InhalingWeasel
      @InhalingWeasel Год назад +42

      Pardon my ignorance, but wouldn't it be just easier to buy a modern PC and run the software in a virtual machine. Surely it can be configured to communicate with the old industrial machines without actually having to use old hardware.

    • @ahmadaamer6
      @ahmadaamer6 Год назад +102

      @@InhalingWeasel I would assume that it's to eliminate any issues that could come up with virtual machines. It's just more reputable to have a dedicated system to run the old hardware.

    • @ethelredhardrede1838
      @ethelredhardrede1838 Год назад +60

      @@InhalingWeasel
      Hardware issues, primarily the serial port I suspect. Yes there are USB to serial adapters. Apparently they are not reliable.

    • @pavelsovicka5292
      @pavelsovicka5292 Год назад +65

      @@InhalingWeasel That could work just fine. Or it could make your work full of misery and pain. The old software might be FUBAR from the virtualisation, the hardware interface might not work correctly. Some old hardware is even incapable of using an USB to serial converter through a virtual serial port driver and requires the hardware port. There is a lot of quirky stuff going on in legacy industrial equipment and as Anthony said in the video: For a business that needs a reliable operating machine cashing out 1k of USD is not that big of a deal. Also you could actually pay a lot more in employee time just making it go on the newer PC...

  • @beerfish109
    @beerfish109 Год назад +467

    Anthony would do amazingly well as an computer history teacher. Genuinely a joy to listen to

    • @joefries7046
      @joefries7046 Год назад +3

      Love the guy hes awesome

    • @magnumass
      @magnumass Год назад +1

      his first IT job was in 2006, nah

    • @dualboy24
      @dualboy24 Год назад +1

      @@matuopm He is okay, but I grew up the same era as him, and its all common knowledge for back then.

    • @beerfish109
      @beerfish109 10 месяцев назад +3

      @@shortsrus sure, now. This vid was posted pre acknowledgement of transition.

    • @JasonEllingsworth
      @JasonEllingsworth 8 месяцев назад +10

      @@beerfish109 I was bummed to see he is another one of those drinking the woke kool-aid. I lean left all day but that stuff is going too far for me. We should be embracing who we are, instead of trying to change what we are. Why can't he just accept he's a dude who likes to be girly, instead of this nonsense of trying to tell people he IS a girl. Ugh.

  • @Babihrse
    @Babihrse Год назад +150

    When it comes to older stuff this fella absolutely blows it out of the water compared to the stuff Linus talks about.
    He's really knowledgeable and presents old historical stuff like it was just yesterday. Maybe I'm just nostalgic but he's exactly on point. He'd play red alert on win 98 and it'd crash and he'd say yep that's not an emulation error that's exactly how it'd behave in 98 random computer locking up errors that even ctrl alt delete couldn't fix.

    • @KimPossibleShockwave
      @KimPossibleShockwave 2 месяца назад +1

      Oh hell, you just took me back to my childhood!
      I remember playing Command and Conquer: Red Alert when it first came out for my Windows 95 PC, haha. I was 8 at the time, and I used to spend twelve hours at a time playing it without breaks (the headaches I had were legendary).
      I miss those days...

    • @Number6_
      @Number6_ 24 дня назад +1

      It was just yesterday.

    • @Babihrse
      @Babihrse 24 дня назад

      @@KimPossibleShockwave the irrational abrasiveness you got when you were on one of those missions without a base and had to make it to the end of the level with a man left. 1 man running towards the end of the inside the nerve gas facility level after loosing most of the squad to a flame tower. Go on little man with health in the red run run. your about to complete it after losing 20 times. Someone touches your back asks you what your doing FUCKOFFNDONTTOUCHME

  • @BenjaminBills
    @BenjaminBills Год назад +1207

    Also, Linus....Don't lose this guy. He's able to articulate in an entertaining manner the knowledge that many of us have and love reminiscing.

    • @beeman4266
      @beeman4266 Год назад +48

      Yeah, Anthony is the best.

    • @guysmiley4830
      @guysmiley4830 Год назад +35

      He's more likeable too. Sorry Linus but he is.

    • @NopeSecret
      @NopeSecret Год назад +30

      Its like watching big smart linus.

    • @lokzarts
      @lokzarts Год назад +9

      @Maiahi is Anthony still working for LTT? Haven’t seen him in the latest videos these days

    • @pop_ulation
      @pop_ulation Год назад +1

      oh wow i did not read your comment before i made mine!

  • @kernelpickle
    @kernelpickle Год назад +287

    Well, that’s an interesting business model that seems crazy, but I work in manufacturing IT and I had to revive a Win98 PC this past year that was a critical system on a production line that was finally decommissioned less than 6 months ago. The line was already scheduled to finish up its final run of parts and when it went down because the spinning rust in it died, it needed to get brought back online to finish up the run of parts, and it was NOT worth the hassle or cost to upgrade it.
    I had to create a bootable DOS USB stick so I could restore a Norton Ghost image.
    Fun fact, there are actually companies that make industrial grade SSDs with a native PATA interface, so you can slot it right into an ancient machine without anything else needed. They apparently have smart controllers in them that know how to manage the wear leveling and other modern SSD type features needed to prolong the longevity.
    Spending $1,000 in order to bring up a production line that’s down is absolutely worth it, because the alternative (if there is still a company supporting those PLCs, HMIs and machines will charge $50-100k to upfit that line with newer PCs. We’re literally talking about a PC with some software installed on it, and they’re charging tens of thousands. Anytime I fix an old ass PC at work I save them a minimum of $10k, so I’m well loved by the guys who operate our ancient gauge machines that check parts are built to spec.

    • @mikebutterface8583
      @mikebutterface8583 Год назад +17

      Remind me when we were in the last night before a line was being decommissioned and i was “filling in” for the IT guy that has been there for almost 20 years because, shrug i don’t know i sat in the room with him. I’m being somewhat facetious because i was at least a desktop administrator prior at the job. Anyway, last night this line needs to run and the server starts crapping out and can’t start the line. The Production IT guys (ladder logic PLC programmer types) didn’t understand what a RAID was and would just try pulling a disk out, trying boot, insert another disk, etc. i was so po’d. There was a hot spare and all they were doing is causing it to try running degraded while copying to the new spare which was also about gone. It’s very scary when you actually see how things are supported and we assemble parts for a very high end auto maker.

    • @kernelpickle
      @kernelpickle Год назад +11

      @@mikebutterface8583 Yup, people would be shocked how the sausage is made in the auto industry. I work for a domestic automaker in one of their engine plants, and we make V6's right now and have for several years. The funny thing is that we also make the V6 engine blocks for an Italian manufacturer that used to be part of company, and is known for their exotics being red.
      Suffice to say the people who drive those cars and pay that kind of money would flip their lid if they knew parts of their engines were actually manufactured in the same facility that builds V6's for much more mundane cars and SUVs. They shouldn't care because we actually know what we're doing because we build more engines in a month than they do in a year, and those low volume OEMs aren't known for their quality.

    • @MikeStavola
      @MikeStavola Год назад +5

      I have a bag of 2GB PATA SSDs in my lab right now. They've saved my butt many times.

    • @MGSsancho
      @MGSsancho Год назад +5

      For a cheap price of $1k, I would have one of these machines already configured but in the box stored away as an emergency spare.

    • @MuseHijinks
      @MuseHijinks Год назад

      Hobbyists would also be interested in owning such a system. It's a neat thing to have on top of some industries still using older stuff.

  • @sharpefilms2287
    @sharpefilms2287 Год назад +614

    I love hearing Anthony talk about why enterprise class stuff will cost more and people will still pay it. I work in film and we get that kinda thing all the time, “why are you paying 10 grand for that workstation, I could build it for half that.” Yes, you could, so could I. However then if anything goes wrong it’s on us to fix it and that takes time away from what we are actually being paid to do. Enterprise customers will GLADLY pay a premium to know that a system has been tested to work and will have the necessary support if it doesn’t. Time is money and it makes so much more sense to spend it and get to doing things we can bill for then to save a buck and miss a deadline later.

    • @RickMyBalls
      @RickMyBalls Год назад +26

      Not helping your argument much if you still miss the deadline. People will say anything to justify getting duped.

    • @HowIsAsh
      @HowIsAsh Год назад +7

      @@RickMyBalls Yeah they just can't build good pc's then lmao.

    • @pissoffkake
      @pissoffkake Год назад +25

      At half the cost for a DIY some other supplier should probably be able to give a better quote. And at some point using internal resources will probably make sense, if you have them. But your (and his) point still stands. If your job is doing something else entirely, wasting a lot of time on doing something that is NOT your job, like building and fixing the computers on the workplace, is time you are not spending on doing your actual job that brings in the money. And if you have a viabe business, working to bring in the money is probably more profitable than mucking around with other tasks.

    • @veduci22
      @veduci22 Год назад +12

      "I love hearing Anthony talk about why enterprise class stuff will cost more and people will still pay it." Let's not pretend that enterprise "stuff" doesn't also generate fat profit margins much higher than some cheap consumer toys...

    • @MozTS
      @MozTS Год назад +9

      Time is literally money. Enterprise you pay for time you save in support and fucking around

  • @lordpurchase9189
    @lordpurchase9189 Год назад +59

    I've built lots of Windows 98 PC's. It all started when I needed an old computer to re-program lots of Motorola PMR equipment that required serial port and slower processor running either DOS or Windows 95/98/2000 and then I realized old Windows 98 PC's sell for good money so I started building retro PC's. There is a good market for old computers.

    • @P25AES
      @P25AES Год назад +1

      I was waiting to see someone mention aging PMR/LMR infrastructure and radios.

    • @user-wg2vw3mz1v
      @user-wg2vw3mz1v 2 месяца назад +1

      Yeah but...can you mine Bitcoin on them?

  • @wvcollenburg
    @wvcollenburg Год назад +45

    I have worked for 'the industry leader' in virtualization and one of my customers was 'that dutch lithography machine builder'. They very often asked for legacy support such as w98 because the machines they build are being delivered with an application set that is built on top of the at that time current OS, but the machine needs to run 20 years + because of the investment they represent.

    • @Porabany
      @Porabany 10 месяцев назад +1

      Thats very ASML of you :)

  • @dycedargselderbrother5353
    @dycedargselderbrother5353 Год назад +166

    6:42 Cool, the power supply provides -5V. That's important for ISA device support, though there are purpose-built transformers available these days, at least in the hobby market. Fun fact, the "reserved" pin that is usually empty on the 24-pin motherboard power connector used to be the -5V line.

    • @tweakpc
      @tweakpc Год назад +3

      But this is really only necessary for very old and special devices, for example some ISA sound cards, Controller Cards.... Even older AT systems do not necessarily need -5V. I have already operated a PIII 450MHz Slot 1 retro PC with a modern DCtoDC power supply without any problems. The power consumption of these old systems is also very low.

    • @thundereagle4130
      @thundereagle4130 Год назад +9

      @@tweakpc It is important for the Soundblaster 16 and 32 and the Gravis Ultrasound. Some ISA cards used it, other didn't. It is kinda hit or miss.
      I have a PIII 700 Mhz with a Voodoo SLI and SB AWE 32 and a normal Be Quiet PSU wasn't enough (besides the fact my SB didn't work due to the -5v problem).

  • @TJ-vh2ps
    @TJ-vh2ps Год назад +158

    This tracks with my experience: getting Windows 95-98 to work with your hardware was an accomplishment in and of itself.

    • @Clemppu
      @Clemppu Год назад +11

      It still is! I love to dabble with old machines and try to get them running. Sometimes it's a breeze, sometimes you're in a world of hurt. 😁

    • @fredericbrown8871
      @fredericbrown8871 Год назад +4

      ​@@Clemppu Recently tinkered with retro Win 9x builds and for me remembering how worked stuff we used to do all the time (because we were constantly reinstalling Windows back in the days) was the hardest part on officially supported hardware. Installing Win 9x on more 'modern' system (like Core2s), that's exactly like you describe (... more often than not the world of pain I'd say, but so satisfying when you get it to work). Happily we have Google nowadays, unlike in the days!

    • @M33f3r
      @M33f3r Год назад +5

      Yeah that’s why they made the second edition. I’m not sure if this is running that or not but dear lord I hope so. Hunting down dll files and gremlins is not something I ever want to do again

    • @jasperwillem
      @jasperwillem Год назад +4

      Our home had a packerd hell custom build from a sale somewhere, I could have learned an instrument in the time I spend troubleshooting it.

  • @mej684
    @mej684 Год назад +25

    We had a milling machine from the 70's that needed a new pc. I agree with Anthony, we had to buy an ancient rig to run the serial connections. It was either spend $500 on an old pc or $100k on a new milling machine.

    • @LordSandwichII
      @LordSandwichII Год назад

      Surely there is a way to interface with the machine using a modern pc, even if you have to custom make an interface with an Arduino. I mean, how hard could that be?...

    • @oliverlemke465
      @oliverlemke465 Год назад +4

      @@LordSandwichII Maybe there is, but you’re neglecting the economics of the situation. Trying to find some makeshift solution is gonna cost quite some manhours, and if it happens to fail, will result in hours, if not days of production standstill until you find the bug. Why do all that if you can just get an old PC, which is warrantied and proven to work?

    • @LordSandwichII
      @LordSandwichII Год назад +1

      @@oliverlemke465 I wasn't being serious. I realise that it could be pretty hard. Although I would say that that should be considered as a long term solution, in case the situation arises that an old computer is no longer accessible or affordable.

    • @rangefreewords
      @rangefreewords 10 месяцев назад

      💯 If Linus went to the Mike Rowe Dirty Jobs level of IT for one episode, I'd watch.

    • @TheDIMONART
      @TheDIMONART 2 месяца назад +1

      @@LordSandwichII Arduino in serious industrial CNC machine? No..

  • @xenonkay
    @xenonkay Год назад +29

    I installed Win98 on a socket 775 system years ago just to see how far it could go and its PCI Express support actually surprised me. It had a PCIe (not AGP) 6600GT in it that that just worked straight away. The OS had no concept of what PCIe was and such cards showed up as ordinary PCI devices in the device manager, but they worked anyway as long as there were Win98 drivers available. I also tried a generic PCIe I/O controller based on a JMB363 chip and that worked too.

    • @stefanl5183
      @stefanl5183 Год назад +6

      That's because PCI Express is compatible with PCI from a software point of view. That's why you can use those simple adapters you buy on ebay or ali express to adapt PCI cards to PCIe slots.

  • @zfox1
    @zfox1 Год назад +170

    3:12 except that he actually meant RS232. and the long-range one could also be RS485, also a very reliable serial interface

    • @MrPorisius
      @MrPorisius Год назад +24

      I knew this, but thanks for pointing it out for everyone. I had to pause and restart the video because I was like "What? They messed up the correction as well?"

    • @Jimmeh_B
      @Jimmeh_B Год назад +3

      Yeah, I caught that too.

    • @davidcain3752
      @davidcain3752 Год назад +3

      Yea definitely a goof on Anthony/editors part

    • @TrainMasterMan
      @TrainMasterMan Год назад +1

      Was just about to type this. They need to correct the correction :)

    • @Mr.Morden
      @Mr.Morden Год назад +6

      12:53 Speaking of old stuff... No children, Anthony is not referring to a PlayStation keyboard and mouse. He is referring to PS/2 which is a type of connector computers used before USB for input devices like keyboards and mice. Before that they used AT keyboard connectors which were bigger, stronger, and more reliable, similar to XLR audio connectors today. Mice and various types of game controllers used a serial port.

  • @Platomenti
    @Platomenti Год назад +293

    I used to work as technician on a hospital, many CT Scan actually still powered by an old Pentium IV or III machine with that ISA slot card connected to the CT Scan.
    So when the PC is borken or something it is really hard to find replacement I remember the hospital had to disable CT Scan for 5-7 days because we are waiting for the parts (I remember that we need to hunting for parts from old school and goverment institution) and it causes huge mess because many people need the CT Scan, so company like that is a life savers (literally) when a CT Scan PC broke you can simply order new one, installing driver and software needed and have a down time of approx. 1-2 days possibly saving countless life.

    • @lolumo
      @lolumo Год назад +5

      I guess its an old CT machine that isn't compatiblke with newer PCs, with the hospital considering it to be cheaper to keep getting PCs instead of spending millions on the new CT

    • @volkhen0
      @volkhen0 Год назад +22

      Why not have backup PC ready to be swapped? These computers are really cheap.

    • @Elkarlo77
      @Elkarlo77 Год назад +10

      @@volkhen0 When they were scavenging for old Parts, that putts you at the problem that this hardware can literally die on the shelves.
      @Namak : ISA has one Feature which is very hard to emulate on newer Connections including PCI:
      Absolut Realtime without Buffering and there was the odd time when Microcomputers were not as avaible and PCIE already implemented,
      when you still could buy 815E Boards for this Purpose as the "King" Tualatin PIII had the best Realtime Performance till the C2D and Athlon 64 X2 launched.
      So from 2000-2006 was this odd time new scientific Machines still came out with ISA Boards, with PIII Maschines, when the Prozessor and ISA was already totally obsolete.
      Today you putt simply a hardened Raspberry pi in it, so an ARM Prozessor with lot of Ram, which passes the results over.

    • @hunn20004
      @hunn20004 Год назад +13

      Borken is now an official internet word

    • @mikebutterface8583
      @mikebutterface8583 Год назад +1

      Why does this procedure cost so much then to run on some old antiquated machinery. Being facetious, but yeah…

  • @harrybaals2549
    @harrybaals2549 Год назад +16

    I worked in a warehouse in Toronto, and we had piles and piles of old computers. We would sell Pentium 2 and Pentium 3 systems for $500 plus to businesses that relied on legacy software. A popular reason was for POS systems. Apparently, most POS software is subscription based, so they preferred to stick with software that they fully owned, as well as not having to deal with the hassle of re-training staff and porting inventory data over

  • @aussiepunkrocksV20
    @aussiepunkrocksV20 Год назад +19

    Love going to the edge with Windows 98 support. One I built most recently was a PCI-Express nVidia gForce 6600GT, Core2Duo 6600 (running single core of course), 1GB DDR2, Audigy 2 ZS... full DOS FM synth and Digital Sound compatibility thanks to the legacy compatibility still in the VIA P4M900 chipset

  • @roberttrains
    @roberttrains Год назад +256

    Kinda wish I knew about this company a couple of years ago. The IT company I worked for had a water department contract and a new boss got hired. She cleaned house and upgraded everyone’s computer with the help of geek squad. They did a great job. Everything was shinny and new including the very custom SKADA computer that controlled all the pumps and valves in the county. When it came time to make a adjustment to the valves the employee had a hard time communicating to the equipment. After two trips form geek squad they finally call our company and ask us how we fixed it last time that is was broken. we informed the tech the old computer was custom built by the maker of the SKADA system and could not be replaced and it is the only thing that will run the equipment. we suggested that they reinstall the old computer and everything would work again. the computer is by now long gone in some e waste facility by now. The boss of course called us liars and called the manufacturer of the control system. The manufacturer agreed with us saying that the county refused to upgrade the system and the system is going on 32 years old so it needed to be upgraded to the latest system. It would cost over 21 million dollars to retrofit all the valves and pumps to run on the new equipment. So there it sat a beautiful new 21 million dollar computer that could only play solitaire until 5-8 months when the new controllers get installed. Her career was measured in hours not years after that.

    • @andlinux
      @andlinux Год назад +42

      I love these stories, people who think they know all but in fact they are so dumb. 😀

    • @tanja-k
      @tanja-k Год назад +16

      Now invested in this story, what happened next? 🍿

    • @FlyingPlastic356
      @FlyingPlastic356 Год назад +65

      I have similar story, but reversed. I was once called by a company begging for us to fix their controller on their (at that time) extremely critical machine. When I checked the control system, it was an almost 35 years old controller that was obsoleted by our company nearly a decade ago. We have to set this controller obsolete because there are some crucial components that our vendor no longer produces since they have those SKU obsolete for some time, at that time.
      So, me not knowing what happened, just did my best and contact everyone, including colleagues from 2 different countries with guru-like experiences on this old controller, and they both roughly said that they should have upgraded this a long time ago. They sold their last spare unit years ago, and nobody can make or repair it anymore since the parts no longer exist or available anywhere. And so, sat there a multi-million dollar critical machine which didn't work with no spare part anymore. I found out that they rejected upgrade offers from our past colleagues years ago because they're too tight to spend couple of grand worth of upgrades even though we have warned them for years.
      Moral of the story: management. Sometimes they're too edgy and spend millions on unnecessary things that don't work, or they're too tight and does not spend a penny on important things until it breaks and make the whole company grinded to a halt.

    • @PrograError
      @PrograError Год назад +1

      @@tanja-k im guessing they upgraded it... even if it ain't cheap...

    • @MikhaelAhava
      @MikhaelAhava Год назад

      @@FlyingPlastic356 intriguing.

  • @lillerosin2915
    @lillerosin2915 Год назад +631

    omg this dude is such a great hire for Linus back in the day. he is so knowledgeable and a joy to listen and learn from when he talks tech and specific's. An absolute treat and you rarely find articulate people in this way these days. he makes it all so interesting that you just have to listen to the end. Great job man! But you honestly should have been a teacher in my opinion. this was just great! Thank you!

    • @daltyd4820
      @daltyd4820 Год назад +83

      If you think about it, Anthony being on this channel means he can educate millions of people, instead of only reaching students at a specific school

    • @joeykeilholz925
      @joeykeilholz925 Год назад +20

      Did someone say Anthony? +1

    • @gooooblaster1800
      @gooooblaster1800 Год назад +12

      He’s a natural being in front of the camera even from the beginning

    • @iscrewyouall
      @iscrewyouall Год назад +7

      @@daltyd4820 this, becoming a teacher will only limit his reach

    • @lillerosin2915
      @lillerosin2915 Год назад +2

      @@daltyd4820 not really correct but ... :o)

  • @MrDuncl
    @MrDuncl Год назад +3

    We had a large expensive environmental test chamber at work. The controller was a built in PC with an ISA card to read all the sensors and control the contactors and a tiny open frame VGA monitor in the front panel. The most unusual thing was that the entire system ran from a 3.5" floppy which was big enough to hold the control software and user sequences (ramp temperature to XX degrees then hold for x hours etc). A colleague thought it would be good to run it from a Compact Flash in an IDE adaptor but for some reason he could never get that to work properly (probably some obscure part of the software still trying to access A:\).

  • @markphillips6170
    @markphillips6170 Год назад +24

    There's defintely a market for this kind of system.
    I used to do IT support for a company that did embroidery (on uniforms, etc) that had a fairly ancient PC give up the ghost. This was the one that handle the designs for embroidery machines (I guess they were like giant sewing machines) so it was crucial to get things going again. The software would only run on Windows 98 and would only export to a 3 1/2" floppy or by serial port. This was back in 2008 so it wasn't too difficult to get it up and running again. Replacing it with a more modern system wasn't an option.
    For a business, spending £1000 on a new/old PC or half a million to replace otherwise working machinery is a no-brainer

    • @ec1888cfc
      @ec1888cfc 10 месяцев назад

      I've seen oil platforms using this stuff as part of instrument and control systems, for safety systems over rides etc to force valves open and what not. It's mental but there's a lot of stuff like this out there.

  • @bradford5833
    @bradford5833 Год назад +183

    I worked in Academia for a research university, stuff like this is always in need. Especially for labs, some of the labs have equipment that can be 20+ years old and the company is defunct or wants crazy money for a more recent OS compatible version of their software for this one specific special use machine. I wish I knew this company existed 5 years ago.

    • @CHIEF_420
      @CHIEF_420 Год назад +1

      🎓

    • @1omerfaruk
      @1omerfaruk Год назад

      Wouldn't a virtual machine with old OS be more direct? or is it more hussle?

    • @SAMarcus
      @SAMarcus Год назад +4

      LOL, yeah. I was going to work on a retrofit job a couple years back when a hospital wanted to switch up to Win 7. That got delayed, delayed, delayed as they desperately tried to find either updated software that could read the existing files or other ways to transfer the software to the new systems. Some of the software was running in DOS on Win 95 machines... and the company that designed it was long dead with no replacements. And with HIPPA, there were a lot of issues with how the files were encrypted and not being allowed to just transfer them into new software that wasn't a direct upgrade of the old stuff.

    • @SAMarcus
      @SAMarcus Год назад +9

      @@1omerfaruk No, the issue becomes hardware compatibility as well. And also, good luck finding newer PCs that have legacy hardware like parallel ports. USB to whatever adapters often can't communicate properly and don't work which then requires weird software written up to fix that which of course leads to a different set of bugs, etc...

    • @katanah3195
      @katanah3195 10 месяцев назад

      @@SAMarcus Hey, the nice thing about a hospital having a bunch of computer stuff still running in really old operating systems, means at least the computers won't get viruses - no one writes viruses for old systems.

  • @ost3005
    @ost3005 Год назад +228

    Wow, recognising the IDE cables and then being confused why Anthony is explaining what they are makes me realise i'm officially old and nobody has seen one for years
    Should probably specify I’m only 21 as well 😅

    • @Rezzell
      @Rezzell Год назад +23

      Yep. I still have a computer with both IDE and Sata cables, functional and usable.
      But we're old, no doubt about that.

    • @roguecommandprompt5268
      @roguecommandprompt5268 Год назад +5

      I was about to say that about ISA slots lol your comment will do :)

    • @boltinabottle6307
      @boltinabottle6307 Год назад +7

      Those are actually PATA cables. PATA and SATA are both IDE standards.

    • @codygrinnell8676
      @codygrinnell8676 Год назад +2

      lol!! I have a 2 OG Xbox systems!! I upgraded the IDE cable to a higher bandwidth one!! I'm going to be Modding it at some point as well

    • @christopherpittman2689
      @christopherpittman2689 Год назад +3

      I’ve still got a pair of Voodoo 2 cards in a box somewhere 😂 and last time I tried my first 486 box still boots.

  • @ripleyhrgiger4669
    @ripleyhrgiger4669 Год назад +7

    The 2001 benchmark brought back so many memories. I used to think that was the most amazing looking thing in the world back then.

  • @XaitTV
    @XaitTV Год назад +6

    I recently started a study within IT and just last week we had about older computing systems. This video couldn't have come at a better time for me, the information in this video is so relevant to what my lessons are going over! Thanks LTT :D

  • @PhonePhreak3z
    @PhonePhreak3z Год назад +222

    More Anthony videos I love them please give him his own retro tech/ Linux for beginners and advanced channel he deserves it!

    • @ryanpaaz
      @ryanpaaz Год назад +17

      Linus talked about Anthony doing Linux content before. TLDR was that he only has one Anthony and while the niche stuff is cool, Anthony is also his go-to guy for benchmarks and new hardware, so having that as a priority really pays LTT bills.

    • @nathanross4036
      @nathanross4036 Год назад +1

      Anthony is morbidly obese and should not be the face of LTT. He's not even that good of a host. James and Riley are way better hosts

    • @Greippi10
      @Greippi10 Год назад +14

      Anthony is awesome! I'm constantly in awe of his knowledge of legacy tech, it's really nostalgic because a lot of this stuff comes from the time when I was into tech. But I fell off the tech train, so it's nice to see him carrying the torch! He's also a great presenter and really pleasant to listen to!

    • @aarondavis8943
      @aarondavis8943 Год назад +6

      Anthony rocks. All round excellent at explaining stuff and obviously highly knowledgeable. He has a perfect presenter voice, too. He could be a radio DJ or NPR host!

  • @drCox12
    @drCox12 Год назад +19

    A few moths ago we had exactly this problem at work. An old x86 (AMD 386) computer running DOS went bad. It caused occasional errors writing to the flash memory card and the card wasn't the culprit. Had to be replaced immediately because a complete failure would mean that a production machine worth a seven-digit sum that makes products worth a five-digit sum per day is just dead.
    That said: A critical replacement part for only 1000 Dollars is an absolute bargain where I work.

  • @yearofthegarden
    @yearofthegarden Год назад +9

    I really likes this series of old computers, it reminds me of my childhood a lot as the kid who had to keep around old keyboards and navigate through by pressing tab to get the mouse hardware installed from the cd drive. Those were the days... kids have it easy now, internet all the time, anywhere, no more running ethernet lines throughout the house and losing your connection everytime someone called your house.

  • @panomaniac5399
    @panomaniac5399 Год назад +2

    That was a fun trip to the past. Feels nostalgic to me because I worked in a print shop where we had to run DOS, Win98, WinXP, OS9 and OSX because of legacy hardware and software. Jumping around between the different OSes kept us on our toes - it was the most practical and cost effective way to do it.

  • @ExcelsiorTech
    @ExcelsiorTech Год назад +310

    I work at an engineering department at a university. I bought from this company a brand new Pentium III specifically because I needed the ISA ports to use with very old lab equipment and its software. Upgrading the software would’ve cost tens of thousands of dollars while buying something like this doesn’t set me back much more than a grand at most.

    • @lowbird7947
      @lowbird7947 Год назад +9

      Couldn't you just buy a usb2isa card instead?

    • @ExcelsiorTech
      @ExcelsiorTech Год назад +29

      @@lowbird7947 I wish. It had an assigned IRQ that would mess with things like that. I tried that first. 😵‍💫 I could not even use boards later than Pentium 3 because they all emulate ISA and have problems.

    • @linuxguy1199
      @linuxguy1199 Год назад +39

      ​@@lowbird7947 No, most ISA drivers for custom stuff rely upon drivers that do direct memory reads and writes, a USB to ISA card does not memory map to the same locations and thus the drivers would not be compatiable.

    • @miamitten1123
      @miamitten1123 Год назад +3

      @@ExcelsiorTech what’s work does your lab do that would require old equipment to be used and an ‘old’ PC to maintain it?

    • @ExcelsiorTech
      @ExcelsiorTech Год назад +24

      @@miamitten1123 I think it was for a gas chromatography machine. The craziest thing was that it was running Windows NT 4… Lol. I had to go through great lengths just to get USB working and all the device drivers and such. Also I used the same sata to IDE adapters that they use on this video.

  • @blackraen
    @blackraen Год назад +50

    6:42 Man, early to mid 2000s power supplies... That was the period where I learned you don't go cheap on a PSU. I feel like 9 out of every 10 times I had to go visit a friend/relative/etc that was having "computer problems", it was due to a dead PSU.

    • @W1ldTangent
      @W1ldTangent Год назад +2

      Can confirm, my body count was 5 PSUs replaced in about a 5 year time span from various branches of the family tree 😂

    • @button-puncher
      @button-puncher Год назад

      PC Power & Cooling power supplies! They were the go-to back in the day. So much junk back then. I remember more than once power up a PC with a generic PS and seeing a green flash out the back as some component vaporized.

  • @bami2
    @bami2 Год назад +32

    3:34 This can be easily explained. For a lot of schools/colleges around that era, they had volume licensing for their windows, yet every pc came with a loose retail windows key sticker and install disk.
    My dad worked as a sys/network admin and I have literal stacks of still sealed windows XP licenses and install discs.
    edit: to everyone who wants one, I'm not selling them or even distributing them for free. That would be software piracy since I'm not an authorized reseller and the only reason these keys work is because it's an oversight in how OEMs license windows, not because they are actually legal licenses.
    XP is end-of-life anyways so you shouldn't connect a PC running it to the internet and doesn't receive updates anymore so you might as well don't even bother with activating it.

    • @crf80fdarkdays
      @crf80fdarkdays Год назад +1

      I would pay decent money for one of em

    • @crf80fdarkdays
      @crf80fdarkdays Год назад

      I would pay decent money for one of em

    • @narutofanz4
      @narutofanz4 11 месяцев назад

      can you sell me one? = )

    • @mikkojala
      @mikkojala 10 месяцев назад

      hey i would give you 50€ for a pop

    • @helloworld145
      @helloworld145 10 месяцев назад

      It wouldn't be software piracy since Windows XP is abandonware

  • @gonrak8796
    @gonrak8796 Год назад +1

    That 3DMark 2001 benchmark brought me so much memories, especially that Matrix part. Thank you !

  • @zimbu_
    @zimbu_ Год назад +103

    Wouldn't be surprised if these guys get a lot more business from this video. That looked great when you opened it up. Companies who have a sudden need for this will be asking how soon they can get it delivered, not how much it costs.

    • @samonsthewise
      @samonsthewise Год назад

      neighbor would have killed for this service last week, but i figured out the base address for his parallel port PCI card. so i bet your right.

  • @GodmanchesterGoblin
    @GodmanchesterGoblin Год назад +184

    I loved this. Thanks, Anthony. From 1992 to 1995 I designed specialist ISA bus cards for avionics databus testing (ARINC 429 / 575 / 629). This was in-development ground based testing; ISA hardware is not flight friendly. These cards sold in minute quantities (at very high prices) to major aircraft manufacturers. It warms my heart that thirty years later a company has decided that proper host PC support for legacy specialist hardware is a niche worth pursuing. I wish them every success.

    • @seanlawrence6029
      @seanlawrence6029 Год назад +7

      ARINC 429 is alive and going strong.

    • @FL4SHK
      @FL4SHK Год назад +6

      I can also confirm that ARINC 429 is still being used.

    • @pipeeeeees
      @pipeeeeees Год назад +8

      I’m a young electrical engineer (born 1998), and I actually had to design a drop-in replacement for an ISA interface board used in one of our products. It’s cool to see that at one time at least ISA was very common in industry

  • @jouletube5605
    @jouletube5605 Год назад

    to be honest, I love your posts on linus tech tips. They are different and I love to hear old school talk on what you enjoyed ^^

  • @OwsleyLaws71
    @OwsleyLaws71 Год назад +1

    Glad Anthony is getting more individual segments!🎉🎉🎉 love you!!

  • @hedgeearthridge6807
    @hedgeearthridge6807 Год назад +563

    I thought it was going to be one of the weird proprietary operating systems like the ones IBM made and still makes, like OS/2. But wow, I was wrong!

    • @SimonBauer7
      @SimonBauer7 Год назад +4

      my dad still has two os/2 boot floppies.

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar Год назад +27

      Fun thing about OS/2. IBM and Microsoft worked on it together, only Microsoft were making NT at the same time (to screw IBM). A lot of what ended up in NT was actually done by IBM and a lot of what ended up in OS/2 was made by Microsoft. They basically grabbed the best bits from both and rolled them in to NT, then essentially told IBM to get lost.

    • @raminatox
      @raminatox Год назад +9

      At this point Win98 could qualify as "one of the weird proprietary operating systems"...

    • @patrickbateman3840
      @patrickbateman3840 Год назад +4

      @@TalesOfWar you know Microsoft didn’t work on the Kernel it work on the gui

    • @dycedargselderbrother5353
      @dycedargselderbrother5353 Год назад +4

      I think they're almost entirely gone now, but I saw an ATM booting into eComStation within the last few years. I have yet to confirm ArcaOS in the wild but I wouldn't be surprised if I ran into it unknowingly.

  • @ShinyQuagsire
    @ShinyQuagsire Год назад +138

    13:52 The cool thing about USB drives is that USB Mass Storage is just a subset of SCSI, so it makes a lot of sense to show up as a zip drive kinda thing. USB being half-duplex and kinda dinky before 3.0 also meant a custom protocol wouldn't make much sense.

    • @tirkentube
      @tirkentube Год назад +2

      i'm sitting here wondering.... why i'm running windows 10 and my SD cards of all shapes and sizes all still show up just like this? i mean sometimes they'll have a name on them, but they are still treated as "removeable USB device" and windows still suggests ejecting it in the system tray before removing it. so, anthony acts like this process is a thing of the past, but to me, it's still very much current. i mean even if i plug my android phone up to my PC, it shows up like that.
      EDIT: that being said, when XP came out, i was using an external USB HDD and running games directly from the drive, even though it showed up as "removeable disk" lol. so, i mean, it worked. they loaded slightly slower, but i think this was USB 2.0 days anyway, so, really not much different speeds than an internal drive at that point.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 Год назад +2

      @@tirkentube His point about removing drives was that the way the drives were formatted and the way Win98 handled external storage meant that just pulling the plug was far more likely to corrupt data. With modern devices, even if it still suggest removing it first, you can generally get away with just unplugging the device. I still try to remove media properly just in case it's still writing data in the background but unless you specifically set a USB device to use caching it shouldn't be a problem (caching speeds up certain operations but means that data being written to a drive may not actually be fully written when the normal copy/paste dialog goes away). He also mentioned journaling which helps correct partially corrupted file system data which can happen when you remove a drive before it's done being written to. FAT32 doesn't have journaling while NTFS and most newer file systems do (NTFS was introduced with Window XP and was one of their selling points for the then new OS).

    • @stefanl5183
      @stefanl5183 Год назад +5

      @@grn1 "NTFS was introduced with Window XP "
      NTFS was around LONG before XP.. It was introduce in 1993 in Windows NT 3.1. In fact, NTFS stands for NT Filing System. So, windows NT had NTFS long before XP came out. XP was windows NT 5.1.

    • @grn1
      @grn1 Год назад +3

      @@stefanl5183 I distinctly remember NTFS being a big deal for Windows XP. After a quick web search it looks like the version of NTFS in XP was upgraded quite a bit to have similar performance to FAT32. I think it may have been the first Windows that defaulted to and/or required NTFS. I also remember them making a big deal about XP no longer being an app that ran on top of DOS like previous versions of Windows (while the command line can be accessed and compatibility was there it wasn't DOS anymore). Of course this was 20+ years ago at this point so my memory could be a bit foggy.

    • @stefanl5183
      @stefanl5183 Год назад +4

      @@grn1 "I think it may have been the first Windows that defaulted to and/or required NTFS."
      No! Windows NT 3.1 "defaulted" to NTFS, and Windows NT never ran "on top of Dos", as you refer to it. I think what you are referring to is that win9x booted through a Dos like system as it loaded, but this was NEVER the case with the NT versions of windows. Windows NT was always a full 32 bit protected mode operating system. And that's where NTFS came from. Before NTFS windows NT used HPFS which was a joint effort between IBM and microsoft and was also used in OS/2.

  • @AlaskaTrucker
    @AlaskaTrucker Год назад +3

    Great video and brings back a lot of memories - I loved 98 SE! A question I'd like to throw at you is this: In 1982 (I think) Dad bought a brand new IBM computer to keep his books on, the machine was $1000, or $1500, back then in the early 80s. I think it was IBMs first or maybe second computer ever made for an individual's use. When the internet became available he bought a new machine - Windows 95. Dad put the IBM back in the original box and stored it in the closet. We still have that machine, in the original box. I think the manuals are still there as well. Is that machine something that anyone would be interested in? What should I ask for it, if I sell it - it probably still works. Thanks for the video on NOS 98 SE!

  • @kd4zqe
    @kd4zqe Год назад +1

    Hey Anthony... That chassis is a variant of an old InWin C-Series case. Those things were my bread and butter for my "El Cheapo" PCs I built when I was an independent system builder. The current C-Series has another faceplate design, but the USB and internal designs haven't changed at all, including the neon keyless drive mounts! And I ALSO have messed with Weigh Station PCs, specifically for a large metal and multi-material recycling operation. All their scales were serial, which I used to convert with USB Serial adapters, but I still had to use a machine like this to provide operational control for their large metal shredder. To think that there was a Win98 PC in charge of destroying millions of tons of vehicles and scrap every year still makes me giggle a bit. I rigged a storage cabinet with airtight seals and a HEPA filter on the intake of a $10 box fan built into one side and an exhaust grate on the other side to always keep a positive filtered airflow inside the cabinet to keep the airborne metal particles out of the PC, and because that worked so well, I only needed to check it for cleaning every 6 months or so. That PC is now 22 years old and is still running as of last month.

  • @ScoobaMusic
    @ScoobaMusic Год назад +189

    That case is actually used by a bunch of Custom PC Builders, Bytespeed, DakTek, and a bunch of other companies you probably haven't heard of. I work in a computer recycling facility, I've seen this many times.

    • @TheTreyBombay
      @TheTreyBombay Год назад +16

      I believe it is manufactured by InWin, we used a very similar case.

    • @NukEverything
      @NukEverything Год назад +2

      yep the case is defaul xD alot of pcs was like that around 2010 if u buy prebuild like for 1000

    • @athmaid
      @athmaid Год назад +2

      @@TheTreyBombay any idea where I could get one of those new in the EU?

    • @dataterminal
      @dataterminal Год назад

      @@athmaid maybe not that exact case, but evercase sell 'retro' cases new stock.

    • @Mdudeman13
      @Mdudeman13 Год назад

      Had a ton of Bytespeed computers at school lol.

  • @Neoxon619
    @Neoxon619 Год назад +388

    It’s videos is like this that remind me of the old curse of every other Windows OS being crap. Also it reminds me of how old I’m getting.

    • @RedstoneMiner18
      @RedstoneMiner18 Год назад +1

      I own a windows 98 pc myself

    • @Wave_Duck
      @Wave_Duck Год назад +16

      @@ianvisser7899 Windows 11 is windows 10 but with a new coat of paint

    • @otherssingpuree1779
      @otherssingpuree1779 Год назад +4

      Dos 5.x -> 98 -> ME -> Vista -> 8 ->7
      This was my journey. 7 was a magical experience.

    • @dazzab111
      @dazzab111 Год назад +9

      @@otherssingpuree1779 Windows XP was amazing too....but I really miss Windows 7.......11 is trash.

    • @ETHANR26
      @ETHANR26 Год назад

      microsoft payin people just to make confusing stupid comments lmao

  • @anon_y_mousse
    @anon_y_mousse Год назад +5

    This really takes me back. I used to game on a Win98 computer back in the day with onboard graphics. Unreal engine games were the best because they ran at nearly full speed most of the time. So many hours playing U1, UT and DS9: The Fallen. Oh yeah, fun times.

  • @graemejwsmith
    @graemejwsmith Год назад

    Just did exactly this for a customer last month. Custom 8-bit ISA controller card for a cutting machine. The MoBo went south. We got a new MoBo (came with a new processor and RAM installed) and they essentially got a new computer - except for that controller car. To deal with the old electro-mechanical PATA drive - we imaged the old one onto a new one so it has some life. Getting some MoBo drivers off the CD onto the computer was a bit challenging as it didn't have a CD drive - had to "slipstream" (well not really slipstream - but you know what I mean) the CD onto a folder on the new HD using the imaging machine. We JUST had enough NoS cabling to make it work.

  • @candle86
    @candle86 Год назад +17

    Something you didn't touch on is the fact that because it has ISA it doesn't have to run Windows 98, it can run MS-DOS and those ISA slots give it the ability to use really old DOS only cards in that enviroment. It's why my 98 machine has 1 ISA slot, though mine is for a soundblaster Awe64, but I need that for DOS game compatability

  • @SilverX95
    @SilverX95 Год назад +82

    You probably had to set the bios setting to point to the graphics card some older motherboards didn't have Auto detection when you had an AGP card installed you had to use the integrated graphics to set it up beforehand

    • @ELSTERLING
      @ELSTERLING Год назад +6

      It's also probable that even most of the AGP cards they have don't have 9X drivers or just don't have good 9X drivers. I believe the last line officially supported for Nvidia was the Geforce 6xxx and for ATI/AMD it was the Xxxx line and even then the drivers weren't exactly well supported or stable. Realistically theiir best chances are probably a Radeon 9x00 or a Geforce 4 or older.

    • @Vile-Flesh
      @Vile-Flesh Год назад +1

      @@ELSTERLING Geforce 4 still feels new to me. I remember when we got our Ti 4200 and UT2k4 looked and played amazing.

    • @ppmguire
      @ppmguire Год назад +3

      @@ELSTERLING He had either a 9700 or 9800 Pro in his hand.

    • @yensteel
      @yensteel Год назад +1

      @@Vile-Flesh Had a 4200 Ti and played UT2k4 as well! Then boom! Radeon 9700 pro made it look slow. Highest end at $399. Then the hairdryer card.

    • @PaulsComputerEmp
      @PaulsComputerEmp Год назад +1

      @@ppmguire 99% 9700 pro

  • @BoyProdigyX
    @BoyProdigyX Год назад +11

    There's something about how Anthony presents that makes me trust absolutely ANYTHING he has to say haha

  • @hummel6364
    @hummel6364 Год назад +1

    Reminds me of the Windows 98 PC I recently acquired. It was originally built in 99 or 2000 for video editing, and as such has a floppy drive, a CD *RW* and a DVD *R* drive, as well as an ACTIVELY COOLED IBM 20GB HDD and a non-cooled 30GB operating system drive. Works flawlessly, despite most of the capacitors being very bulgy (I have enough old hardware to harvest the caps from and replace them if I wanted to, but I won't bother cause it's not a historically relevant piece in any way). I got the newest version of Debian (32 bit) to run on it no problem, as well as the Cockpit remote management software. Fun plaything to do dumb stuff with.

  • @twentysixhundred7813
    @twentysixhundred7813 Год назад +24

    Love these videos where Anthony takes us back to the past. I grew up with DOS and Win98 so it's just pure goodness seeing the retro side of things get some love.

  • @mattwestling164
    @mattwestling164 Год назад +37

    Windows 98 takes me back to simpler, and yet more complicated times. 😁

    • @veltcardio
      @veltcardio Год назад +8

      frustrating times

    • @cvspvr
      @cvspvr Год назад +1

      @@veltcardio THE AGE OF PAIN!

  • @mgroover
    @mgroover Год назад +2

    I remember running an early alpha of 3DMark 2001 with support for a pre-release OEM build test Geforce 4-card in the Fujitsu factory in Sömmerda, Germany when prepping a home pc image build for Telia (swedish cellular and phone operator). One of the first cards to reach Europe.
    The Matrix demo was soooooo fluid even though the full demo crashed like 20-million times. I think the DirectX build we had installed was a closed pre-beta as well 😂
    Good Times!

  • @NLYS27
    @NLYS27 Год назад

    In Texas we still Win98 SE to run emission test and safety inspection on cars for new registration or renewal. I remember at another location i worked at we received a new state inspection system with windows 10. The amount of regular problems we where having prevented us from doing any inspections and the broadband network drivers would fail because its windows 10 and blue screens were common because its windows 10. So Austin would receive there copy of the inspection so we started printing out copys for our selves to ship to Austin. Now at the location i was at that uses windows 98 is still running with no issues. Some times it freezes if worked too hard and if you had to restart it the long dial up wait sucks. But it works very well.

  • @PatrickDKing
    @PatrickDKing Год назад +22

    That's pretty cool. I remember back when all our business pcs were running XP, we delays upgrading to windows 7 for quite a while because our accounting software wouldn't work on 64 bit windows 7, XP on ours was 32 bit. Then the manufacturer made some updates and we could run it fine on windows 7 64 bit. My philosophy is if it is bought and paid for, reliable, and still working, keep on using it.

    • @pandemicneetbux2110
      @pandemicneetbux2110 Год назад +5

      To a degree depending on use case, yeah. Provided you aren't at risk of security threats for example. Although honestly my bigger issue is I hated every edition of Windows after 98, and basically just tolerated XP because it was "fine" despite feeling like it was made for children. This got worse over the years and I've not tolerated anything after 7. 10 I finally got talked into as finding a 7 key was such a pain in the ass and I realized it was so old a lot of my games just won't work with it, even though I consider the whole operating system bloatware and spyware.
      Funny, everyone on ebay is slamming win10 into it no matter how old. I don't even know why they do this, because like fucking hell a laptop with 4gb of RAM is ever going to run this piece of shit and the software you need it to run. Good God, I'm using 8gb of RAM right now just to type this and have Adrenalin, Steam, and GOG Galaxy on in the background. I've seen windows 11 and it's AWFUL. It looks like they're now trying to copy some of what I hate about Macs.

    • @PatrickDKing
      @PatrickDKing Год назад +2

      @@pandemicneetbux2110 True, I doubt we were on anyones radar to attack but we always kept our accounting pcs and backup pc offline and didn't even put browsers on them because there was no need to, just data entry and printing. On Windows 7 we did hook them up to the internet because by then some vendors were integrated into the software and the data needed to transfer.
      I hated vista mostly b/c it was buggy and many games wouldn't play, but eventually it got ironed out and by windows 7 many 97% or so of things got caught up. Biggest problem I had was legacy games having a 32 bit executable and not a 64 bit. Then it was pretty smooth and stable for the last years of its life. We delayed windows 10 b/c it looked too smartphone tablety. And we wanted to make sure everything we used would work on it. Ultimately we bit the bullet and slowly, sloooowly upgraded pcs. Looking back, I'd just do fresh installs of windows 10. Upgrading from 7 was so hit or miss. A pc could run for hours, seem to almost be done then error out and take another hour reversing everything, then magically finally have success with an upgrade. Although the installed programs were present thru upgrade, all the pcs we "upgraded" had to eventually have fresh windows 10 install put on for stability issues. I still prefer the windows 7 layout but now that I know where a lot of things got hidden in windows 10 its slightly easier to deal with. I still hate it though.

  • @EfrainMan
    @EfrainMan Год назад +14

    I used to work at a company that, as late as 2014 when I left, definitely had a mix of modern hardware and old stuff like this for using their old manufacturing machines. They relied on ISA cards (card connector standard even older than PCI) to communicate to the database software the machines relied on, and they definitely had to make sure the power supplies were old enough to feed the ISA slots the right kind of power, otherwise they just would not work.

  • @Autunite
    @Autunite Год назад +2

    I've worked as an automation technician in both dairy production and water/sewage treatment. In one dairy I worked at, they had a robot that took samples of milk cartons and put drops of sample in a tray, that then were analyzed to check for bacterial growth. This was a robot that cost $3 million.
    The PC running this machine has an ISA Yamaha servo controller card, an ISA I/O-card and serial interface to control the robot.
    Midst the hectic spring season, the PC decided to die. A company creating legacy PCs delivered a new one with express shipping for about $2500, and it had the guts of an old Windows XP machine, but new. $2500 is way cheaper than $3-5 mill for a new robot, and added wait ontop of that.

  • @musicalmoodsofficial
    @musicalmoodsofficial Год назад +3

    I love how they always plug the ltt waterbottle and this time was arguably the best one 👍

  • @BatBeardGames
    @BatBeardGames Год назад +39

    There's a lot of industrial applications that run very specific and old software. My dad's lab as a chemist had windows 98, me, xp, machines running different stuff.

    • @dxanatos2
      @dxanatos2 Год назад +8

      Yeah, we still have some machines where the control software only runs on Windows XP. We virtualized some of them, but that's not always an option. (For example if the PC also needs some proprietary card to connect to the machine. Or the maintenance contract states that IT is not allowed to touch the Hardware)

    • @shingofan
      @shingofan Год назад +1

      @@dxanatos2 That's such a bizarre contract clause - why would something like that exist?

    • @dxanatos2
      @dxanatos2 Год назад +1

      @@shingofan I honestly have no idea.

    • @VanisherXP
      @VanisherXP Год назад

      @@dxanatos2 So the third party can continue to extract money out of your company instead of IT obsoleting them?

    • @GYTCommnts
      @GYTCommnts Год назад +2

      I think there are industrial "secrets" clauses related to that.

  • @vidm96
    @vidm96 Год назад +11

    This reminds me of my highschool. When I started highschool in 2009, the building was brand new. We were the first batch of students to start their first year in that building. This new building also featured computer controlled* blinds in the main auditorium. These blinds were controlled through serial with a very proprietary piece of software running on a windows XP PC. Somehow, this system would also only work with that specific PC. Other PCs with serial wouldn't work. Shortly after they had finished their work on the school building, the company that had installed this already outdated and weirdly proprietary system went out of business. So if this one PC were to break, the school would have no way of controlling the blinds in their very expensive new building.
    *They weren't even automated. All the computer program had were some buttons to open and close the blinds...

    • @JJFlores197
      @JJFlores197 Год назад +1

      Gotta love proprietary stuff with little to no documentation. I work in school tech support. We have upgraded our school marquee signs to more modern and easy to update systems. In the past, they required a special program and license that was tied to the machine. It worked, but it became a hassle over time when the company that made the software either went out of business or dropped all support for the old software. It was also annoying to move the license to a different machine as sometimes a new license had to be regenerated. It was a mess.
      We've had other proprietary systems that still work, but the people who installed it have long gone so it is only a matter of time before stuff starts breaking and no one knows how to fix it.

  • @pwnzcrewgaming
    @pwnzcrewgaming Год назад +1

    the cable management is a thing of beauty! Awesome throwback rigs, windows 98 is my favorite OS to-date.

  • @corsairsofnarshaddaa
    @corsairsofnarshaddaa Год назад

    11:42 Ohhhhhhh man we got a Homestarrunner reference _in_ a video featuring a Win98 rig? Made my week.

  • @paulnguzman
    @paulnguzman Год назад +3

    Worked with a company a while back to help them find and purchase a system like this. Similar to the examples in the video, they are relying on old ISA cards for their business and were also relying solely on original computer hardware (floppy disks and all). I was contracted to find the replacement hardware and also to make sure the ISA cards worked correctly in the new system.
    It was a lot of fun figuring everything out, especially MS-DOS networking in 2021 (for transferring the data generated by the ISA card). It was very cool to transfer data from DOS to a modern server share! Almost unbelievable that it still works! Also found a workaround for the floppy disks so they aren't relying on those anymore.
    Don't remember why, but I ended up purchasing from ADEK instead of NIXSYS but the price was similar.

  • @taner65th
    @taner65th Год назад +151

    Im so glad Anthony is getting more screen time in videos.

    • @RedstoneMiner18
      @RedstoneMiner18 Год назад +4

      Same

    • @SumPatti
      @SumPatti Год назад +7

      Yes, he's so good on camera

    • @ndgoliberty
      @ndgoliberty Год назад +2

      Anthony and Dan are my new favorites.

    • @ggill1313
      @ggill1313 Год назад +3

      Y’all say this like he hasn’t been for awhile lol

    • @DeKempster
      @DeKempster Год назад +2

      Yeah, it's not as dumbed down as when other presenters are

  • @gorkyshaw
    @gorkyshaw Год назад

    2:23 My first PC from 2006 with MSI K8MMV had the exact same rear I/O. Nostalgic!

  • @mainiac430
    @mainiac430 Год назад +2

    As an IT field tech I come across many companies that use these older machines for everything from sensor IOs to controllers that will run machines that will last forever. Alot of these computers run in dirty environments and while I can replace componants like power supplies and hdds...if a system board fries...its done. Companies like this one are a huge need.

  • @dethvx
    @dethvx Год назад +38

    I'm sure it would be shocking to know how much of our infrastructure is still running on ancient tech. The original engineers of the solution have long since moved on or retired and there is no budget to modernize so it just gets kept on life support.

    • @boredapathetic
      @boredapathetic Год назад +3

      i work with many large companies and a lot of them are indeed working with legacy tech. mostly older software actually, but there are some with deathly old hardware as well.

    • @haminator55
      @haminator55 Год назад +6

      I work with legacy software rather than hardware, but I've got to say I quite like the job security that comes with it. Often there actually is budget to modernise stuff, but little reason to actually do it. A lot of the code I work with was written in the 80s but is rock solid, not much reason to replace it.

    • @boredapathetic
      @boredapathetic Год назад +1

      @@haminator55 you’ve found a niche, that’s always good for job security. also, if it ain’t broke don’t fix it, eh?

    • @mateuszzimon8216
      @mateuszzimon8216 Год назад +3

      @@boredapathetic i was working in company where we called them snowflake's, they have a CNC machine operating on 133MHz 16MB, on win95.

    • @boredapathetic
      @boredapathetic Год назад +1

      @@mateuszzimon8216 yikes, i’m surprised Windows doesn’t eat up most of that memory.. what’s left for the CNC application?

  • @Gil3344
    @Gil3344 Год назад +63

    When Anthony referred to the serial port initially, the annotation wrote RS - 323 when in reality it's actually RS-232 :)

    • @miaso130
      @miaso130 Год назад +6

      Came here to leave the same comment :)

    • @ipr724
      @ipr724 Год назад +2

      I came here to correct this as well. Huge mistake, had to go check that I'm not stupid and RS-323 doesn't actually exist.

    • @Ficus117
      @Ficus117 Год назад +1

      Hello fellow serial users. Was also confused. Should note as well that RS-422 and RS-485 are both rated for up to ~1200 meters.

    • @tadmikowsky7520
      @tadmikowsky7520 Год назад +1

      Same here!!! I demand that this be corrected!!!!!!!🧐🙂😛

    • @rkorkie
      @rkorkie Год назад +1

      Haha, did the same since I hadn't heard of 323. Probably some Gen Z'er doing their post production :)

  • @alk3myst
    @alk3myst Год назад +5

    Learned something new. My belief was serial is limited to 15 meters full speed and about 60 meters with loss. However; I read MAX232 drivers can do 4800 baud at almost 1400 meters. This makes sense since working in some steel mills on network devices I saw some serial connections that I thought were WAY to long. Also got to see laptops just being held in the air by their ethernet connections :)

  • @nktslp3650
    @nktslp3650 Год назад +2

    Coming from someone who is currently coding in a 60 years old programming language, I totally understand the concept of old modern stuff. Sometimes, you just can't replace the old if it works well and/or your entire structure revolves around it. Old doesn't always mean obsolete.
    For the curious, COBOL is language I'm talking about. And around 50% of the entire financial structure is build around it, and IBM is still maintaining the language and developping new hardware for it.

  • @DeKempster
    @DeKempster Год назад +185

    I'm working in OT at it doesn't surprise me one bit that companies like this exist. I see win XP running scada application more than it should. Heck DOS is still being used. Not even taking about PLC's that are 40 years old and still running (Siemens S5, Allen Bradley PLC2 and the like). IT can learn something from this
    Regarding the serial he is probably refering to RS-485 with fieldbusses like Profibus-DP. Which indeed can go over a kilometer.

    • @TalesOfWar
      @TalesOfWar Год назад +15

      A few years ago the air traffic control at Paris Charles de Gaulle airport went down because nobody on staff knew how to fix the problem they were having with the system, that ran on Windows 3.1. All the IT staff who worked with it in the past had retired.

    • @Mdudeman13
      @Mdudeman13 Год назад +6

      I work at a water treatment plant and it's the same way, about a year ago they upgraded the main PLC for our conventional treatment plant from a PLC2 to Micrologix 1400, talk about a huge upgrade. They've been better about upgrading the computers however since upgrading to newer versions of Wonderware Intouch is pretty straight forward.

    • @fonkbadonk5370
      @fonkbadonk5370 Год назад +4

      I'm an automation engineer with IT background, and the last S5 we replaced at our customers was about 10 years ago, but just a few weeks ago we were asked if we could revive a small sub-plant where the HMI was based on a WinNT 4.0(!) PC with a Siemens communication processor that doesn't have any drivers for any newer OS. Given the limited scope of functions this needs, we're probably going to end up replacing it with a somewhat recent touch panel via a new ethernet capable interface card. But everything else is from about 1997 and will be for many years to come. Many don't quite realize on how old things this world runs on to this day, and does so surprisingly well.

    • @Noughtta
      @Noughtta Год назад +3

      PLC tech here, I worked on a program that was stored on a windows 98 machine just like this. I work in industrial automation and you find stuff like this all the time. If it works, why change it?

    • @kristopherleslie8343
      @kristopherleslie8343 Год назад

      Nothing to learn for IT, it’s a minority aspect of these still running around.

  • @ethanlieske9678
    @ethanlieske9678 Год назад +5

    I used to manage old fire safety control systems and HVAC at a large state collage. Almost everything was windows 95/98 in 2008. The windows 95 system was plugged into custom fiber boards so upgrading these systems would have run millions. Stuff like this would have been a god sent as I had to legit garbage pick for replacement parts at one point.

  • @2Guys1ControllerShow
    @2Guys1ControllerShow Год назад +3

    This dude is my jam. I swear I have watched everything he's done.

  • @markwarren1989
    @markwarren1989 Год назад +1

    The communications standard available on a standard serial port is RS-232 (not RS-323 as written, although I'm assuming that's a typo). You are correct that RS-422 (and RS-485) can (with the correct cable, and termination resistors) travel for over a km. It's useful for long-range data measurement where the signal can be digitised before being sent.

  • @jierenzheng7670
    @jierenzheng7670 Год назад +54

    Win98 SE was one of my memorable Windows OS, I remember a time before that with just MSDOS, then windows 3.1

  • @ColJonSquall1
    @ColJonSquall1 Год назад +24

    Ah yes, PCs that would be beneficial to my dad's work. A rock crushing gravel plant, where the equipment is designed to run on specialized expansion cards. I had to clean their tower PC out once, and when I say Tower PC, I mean, the PC that ran the control tower, that ran the plant. They recently needed to find someone to fix it. Well knowing this company exists, its kind of heartwarming that companies don't have to reinvent the wheel to keep going.

  • @gifhornking
    @gifhornking Год назад

    We use „Siemens Simatic Field PG M6“ laptops for machines and equipment from the early 90s. Those laptops have modern CPUs, a SSD, a parallel port, USB-C and multiple network ports which is really amazing.

  • @twokei2
    @twokei2 10 месяцев назад +2

    my man so knowledgeable, he explains everything without reading prompter, he literally knows what he saying.

    • @Renix
      @Renix 10 месяцев назад +2

      *she

  • @Silverhazey_
    @Silverhazey_ Год назад +43

    I saw Anthony in the thumbnail. I dropped everything to click and watch asap. This man and his enthusiasm for tech, Linux, retro gaming, it’s just the best.

    • @DabBubbles420
      @DabBubbles420 Год назад

      Lol same, was scrolling and all there was was minecraft, crap and more crap then ANTHONY! Dude kicks ass with his knowledge and enthusiasm

    • @yosutzuhruoj
      @yosutzuhruoj Год назад +2

      Yes, he's very entertaining while being educational. All the marks of a great teacher.

    • @kris_wk
      @kris_wk Год назад +2

      Agreed...

    • @woooooooooow
      @woooooooooow Год назад +2

      That's why I'm here

  • @ljcool17
    @ljcool17 Год назад +8

    Man, I remember all the trouble I've been through with 98. It's a night and day experience to what we have now mostly with stability.

  • @drinkscoffeealot
    @drinkscoffeealot 2 месяца назад

    Man I'm so happy how far along Anthony has come in his presenting skills and has become a regular host on LTT he def. deserves this

  • @antilogic81
    @antilogic81 Год назад

    So many refineries use old as sin PLCs & SLCs to run and monitor their machinery. And the best part is that a lot of them simply won't play nice with new hardware. Looking at you Honeywell. My job focuses on protecting layer 0-3 devices. So many places just leave all sorts of security holes just to ensure stuff can talk to other stuff.
    Pcs like these are fairly common in these places where compatibility is all important to keeping things up and running. Sometimes they have special converters just for one device in place of a pc playing handshake between incompatible devices.

  • @StubbornBishop
    @StubbornBishop Год назад +5

    That video benchmark with cars and robots actually had a short demo game! It was amazing, it only let you fire 4-6 rockets and that was it, but I remember wanting to play a full game so bad!

  • @Gatitasecsii
    @Gatitasecsii Год назад +17

    Always happy to watch videos hosted by Anthony just telling us what he knows mostly from experience.

  • @lukealadeen7836
    @lukealadeen7836 Год назад

    In my previous job as a instrumentation engineer our test jigs used multiple serial to USB converters for comms,

  • @GregMacLellan
    @GregMacLellan Год назад +1

    3:05 The port on the back is RS-232, pretty common on the earliest PCs up until USB replaced it in the late 90s. It was gone from most PCs by the early 2000's. Dial-up modems were the most common use, but also used for configuring routers/switches, bar code scanners, and (rarely) mice and printers. There's still lots of uses of RS-232 in networking, IoT and some industrial systems, and you can still buy USB and ethernet adapters for it.
    RS-485 is the industrial version that can go for very long distances, and is good in noisy environments. It's still extremely common today in factories and building automation.
    RS-422 is somewhat of a hybrid of them, and was used in early Macs (before USB replaced it). Seems like the only place you'd find it today is broadcast equipment.

    • @callmebigpapa
      @callmebigpapa Год назад

      Thanks for posting this info, I knew this since I am old but wanted to be sure someone shared it but didn't way to post a dup.

  • @nightcorefusion3884
    @nightcorefusion3884 Год назад +13

    On the topic of the windows key.
    "genuine" ones are simple to come by. Because we know how the random generation works now. Using the same formula Microsoft used in the day, you can "create" your own key.

    • @JelleBesseling
      @JelleBesseling Год назад +6

      yea but how do you get the nice looking official sticker?

  • @BenjaminBills
    @BenjaminBills Год назад

    This was a complete walk down memory lane, thanks!

  • @EspyMelly
    @EspyMelly Год назад +3

    I can definitely believe that there are a ton of businesses out there with employees that wouldn't touch a computer outside of work and haven't experienced anything newer than Windows 98.

  • @phydeux
    @phydeux Год назад +9

    Hey Anthony, one of the biggest use cases for something like this is in lab situations where every component and driver needs to be thoroughly validated and trusted to maintain exacting performance tolerances. And where buying new lab software can cost a fortune and require years of new hardware validation. It's more economical in both time and money just to buy what you know will meet your requirement and keep the Windows 11 machines for your office computer.

  • @tactiks7468
    @tactiks7468 Год назад +6

    I worked for a company just like that as a builder of newer and older machines! Rarely did we go below XP though! But definitely hardware wise, we would build older machines sometimes, a great company called SuperLogics Inc.

  • @Streeterm
    @Streeterm Год назад

    Boy I do like me any video that features Anthony! He's super knowledgeable and a joy to listen too. Thanks Yall fo a good vid!

  • @Suspended4thYT
    @Suspended4thYT Год назад

    I used to work as in-house IT support for a Tech-based security company - y'know CCTV systems, card acces door systems and all that stuff. Joined them in about 2002.
    When I first started with them, all the engineers were connecting to Security access panels and CCTV controllers with Serial-RS232. Yes - security and CCTV system manufacturers would sell new products over time, but we had to keep as many old lapotops as we could, to support our customers with the older systems.
    The biggest pain in the ass tho - was our service department. Years later - well into the 2010s, our Service manager would go round companies trying to sell them support contracts. This is for security equipment we never installed. Basically he was poaching service contracts from companies whose existing service contracts, from the original installer, had expired. He would just rock up to their premises, see what card access or CCTV system they had and offer them a deal to provide their ongoing service - rather than going bck to their original supplier. Of course, he never involved us (the IT dept) in these decisions. All he did was look at the Security system and panels etc - NOT the back-end PCs that were running it all.
    So you can guess what happened ... About 18mths after we get them on board, they might log a service call - and a service engineer is called out. He can't connect to the PC. They call me back at the office - I go out to site and have a look at the antique in queston. And say "yeah - that's going to be a problem". I lost count of the amount of times I was scouring ebay, and paying way over the odds for obsolete TV-capture and other antique interface cards, to help support a Windows 95 backed security system which should never have been sold a service contract in the first place.

  • @scott2100
    @scott2100 Год назад +11

    I work at a DOE funded lab, the amount of crap we have that runs on parallel and serial port for communications is staggering, and some of these devices are less than 5 years old, we only now are transitioning to USB. This stuck with parallel and serial reason is that we have some equipment that is immensely expensive, or doesn't need to be changed out

  • @Drinkyoghurt
    @Drinkyoghurt Год назад +27

    Seeing 3dMark 2001 really brings back memories. I also remember that back in the days you could choose between PCI (NOT PCI-E) and AGP card, and AGP was definitely the faster one. Initially it caused a lot of confusion when PCI-Express came out because like many I thought it was slower than AGP.

    • @engineeringvision9507
      @engineeringvision9507 Год назад +1

      "AGP is a version of PCI-E" smh

    • @psycronizer
      @psycronizer Год назад +1

      but why would you ever think that ? PCI-E was the new scheme to replace AGP, that was it's entire purpose, strictly speaking it wasn't just for graphics cards, but that was/is the core use that every man and his dog used PCI-E for...

  • @Lacsap3366
    @Lacsap3366 Год назад

    14:33
    Hi Anthony,
    just wanted to point out that NTFS is unfortunately also not a journaling filesystem, at least on the personal windows versions (non-server)

  • @thetankgarage
    @thetankgarage Год назад

    I've had a multiple monitor setup since around 1996. I got a broken TV from the local TV repair shop, went to town on it with the solder and got it working. Then I guess it must have been a novelty feature of whatever computer I had.

  • @MyNewSoundtrack
    @MyNewSoundtrack Год назад +3

    During my last year of college we had to visit a relatively successful PCB manufacturer that had 2 PCs similar to this one running 98 SE
    They told us they needed them because some clients send PCB plans made in a very old DOS only program.