Комментарии •

  • @JorisPauws
    @JorisPauws 5 месяцев назад +2964

    This already looks very complicated and its only 1,2mil transistors. Its insane how they can fit billions of transistors on something the same size nowadays.

    • @ld2048
      @ld2048 4 месяца назад

      In a other decade or two, we will be matching or passing the number of neurons in our brains

    • @furnacego2164
      @furnacego2164 4 месяца назад +55

      How big does that make the traces? 100 atoms wide maybe? I'm really curious, if you can answer that

    • @taktoa1
      @taktoa1 4 месяца назад +162

      ​@@furnacego2164Minimum metal pitch at the 0.8 μm process node was around 2 μm, and about half that for trace width. The minimum distance between atoms in silicon is 0.2 nm, so a trace was ballpark 5000 atoms wide.

    • @taktoa1
      @taktoa1 4 месяца назад +129

      But nowadays traces are 20-30 nm wide at narrowest. So 100-150 atoms.

    • @furnacego2164
      @furnacego2164 4 месяца назад +26

      @@taktoa1 amazing

  • @BubblegumCrash332
    @BubblegumCrash332 4 месяца назад +1606

    That CPU ran my childhood. Photoshop 2.0, 3D studio 2.0, WingCommader , Doom, DukeNukem 3D , Dark Forces etc etc

    • @orsonstarbuck
      @orsonstarbuck 4 месяца назад +35

      So many memories. This was around the time my dad bought a PC that replaced the Apple IIe

    • @neil1997
      @neil1997 4 месяца назад +56

      We had a DX2-66... And all the same games still needed serious config.sys and autoexec.bat fiddling to get enough memory 😂

    • @knivesron
      @knivesron 4 месяца назад +18

      Gaming stopped there too. We topped with doom and duke 3d 😢

    • @BubblegumCrash332
      @BubblegumCrash332 4 месяца назад +24

      @@knivesron I spent so much time making custom Doom WADs. I still have them on 3.5 discs. I have to dig them out one day

    • @knivesron
      @knivesron 4 месяца назад

      @@BubblegumCrash332 that would be awsome. I have a doom map myself its in the ramp 2023 pack check it out

  • @Brave2standalone
    @Brave2standalone 4 месяца назад +697

    That was my first CPU; 486DX-33 back in 1990 I believe! The machine cost $2,200 with 120mb HD and 4mb memory.

    • @maurodemello6078
      @maurodemello6078 4 месяца назад +18

      wow... I had the I286 in a Schneider Euro PC and my dream after that was to have a computer with that processor, but obviously my father couldn't buy it at that time because yes, was crazy expensive for him

    • @beverlychmelik5504
      @beverlychmelik5504 4 месяца назад +7

      Same

    • @huberthumphry280
      @huberthumphry280 4 месяца назад +11

      same, i486DX, 129mb hd, 4 mb ram but mine cost $1200 in 1991, that's what you got with Dell "quality"

    • @pamdemonia
      @pamdemonia 4 месяца назад +13

      My first was a 486 DX2-50 which ran at a blazing 50mHz .

    • @AutisticThinker
      @AutisticThinker 4 месяца назад +5

      Was my 2nd. I needed to wait several years for the prices to go down.

  • @Hopeless_and_Forlorn
    @Hopeless_and_Forlorn 4 месяца назад +328

    After a deadly mid-air collision over Cerritos, CA in 1986, the decision was made to equip commercial aircraft with an airborne collision avoidance system with the best technology available at the time. The TCAS system was activated in 1992 and has been protecting fliers ever since, even though its operations are rather primitive compared to the technology. available today. The first TCAS processor units installed in aircraft were based upon two 486 CPUs.

    • @EpicTyphlosionTV
      @EpicTyphlosionTV 4 месяца назад +22

      I'm a pretty big plane enthusiast, and not even I knew that!

    • @MajorCaliber
      @MajorCaliber 4 месяца назад +8

      Do you know which avionics vendor that was? Even back then there were SO many better chips for *embedded real-time* apps such as TCAS, than the klugey x86 family. :(

    • @2jpu524
      @2jpu524 4 месяца назад +1

      @@MajorCaliber which processors did you have in mind?

    • @MajorCaliber
      @MajorCaliber 4 месяца назад +9

      @@2jpu524 AMD 29k family, Motorola 68k line, MIPS, Hitachi/Zilog 64180, etc., basically standalone microCONTROLLERS vs. motherboard type microPROCESSORS such as the 486, the latter requiring all kinds of support chips, e.g. Northbridge, Southbridge, etc... not to mention the x86 CPUs have always been power-hungry, which means more HEAT to get rid of... things you might not want in a small expensive box, stacked like bricks amongst other avionics, all 8 inches from the pilot's knees.

    • @D0Samp
      @D0Samp 3 месяца назад +11

      @@MajorCaliber Convenience in programming is a big factor. Even though the timeframe likely misses the i486SL (first to run on 3.3V core voltage) as well as the i386EX (bundling all the support chips in a SoC package), this is still the era of single digit watt SBCs that you can shove into a box with a heatsink.

  • @agentdevil2096
    @agentdevil2096 5 месяцев назад +607

    This needs more recognition than those foolish podcasts.

    • @Floris_VI
      @Floris_VI 4 месяца назад +21

      I dont think its the same audience

    • @DrakeOola
      @DrakeOola 4 месяца назад +4

      ??

    • @jaredloveless
      @jaredloveless 4 месяца назад +9

      Which foolish podcasts?

    • @michaels8607
      @michaels8607 3 месяца назад +11

      yYou are right but then we have 2,343,567,499 people walking around confused..Most of them do not even know where their local library is located ,much less know about CPU chips...

    • @prestonfisher2632
      @prestonfisher2632 3 месяца назад +1

      ​@@Floris_VII can affirm that it is. Though I don't think their content is mutually exclusive, I have been looking for this content for years.

  • @Sphyxx
    @Sphyxx 5 месяцев назад +260

    Intel = illuminati confirmed

    • @usern90210
      @usern90210 4 месяца назад +38

      Illuminintel?

    • @usern90210
      @usern90210 4 месяца назад +29

      Wait 486 is (6-2)(6+2)(6-0) 😮
      666 😈
      Why -2 +2 -0?
      It's because the 'minatii love chaos 🤔

    • @mrflamewars
      @mrflamewars 4 месяца назад +7

      That's 🎈🤡💩

    • @Justin-bn2ob
      @Justin-bn2ob 4 месяца назад +34

      came here for the illuminati comment

    • @ugraltnbilek
      @ugraltnbilek 4 месяца назад +12

      Intelluminati

  • @phillyphakename1255
    @phillyphakename1255 5 месяцев назад +300

    Fun fact, they stopped making the i386, the predecessor, in September 2007.
    The chip came out in 1985.

    • @Dhalin
      @Dhalin 4 месяца назад +64

      A lot of tech is used in places that aren't PCs; there were probably some Point-of-Sale, ATMs, etc running those kinds of processors. I just recently got a new job back in September and the previous place I worked at was still using machines from the early-to-mid 00's for the two PoS units, and also the server in the back was almost as old.

    • @phillyphakename1255
      @phillyphakename1255 4 месяца назад +35

      @@Dhalin yeah, it's all the weird industrial stuff that used 'em for that long. I saw it when I was repairing an MRI magnetic field trim controller. Had an '06 date code, and I was absolutely shocked, had to look at the Wikipedia.
      I guess if you used a 20 year old part on a 20 year old piece of equipment, it'll be 40 years old high technology still in use. Kinda cool to see computing history still chugging along.
      Still though, I would have thought an FPGA would have been cheaper.

    • @derekddanderson1
      @derekddanderson1 4 месяца назад +10

      I had a pc with that as the processor

    • @JoaoPedro-ki7ct
      @JoaoPedro-ki7ct 4 месяца назад +2

      How much were they costing in the 2000s? What was their availability like in comparison to microcontrollers and other microprocessors of the time?

    • @smoguli
      @smoguli 4 месяца назад +48

      Fun fact: the MOS 6502 processor was created in the mid 70’s and is still produced commercially to this day

  • @Flashjacks
    @Flashjacks 4 месяца назад +121

    I am privileged to have precisely one entire silicon wafer of this processor.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 4 месяца назад +4

      The entire wafer was defective? Unusual.

    • @Flashjacks
      @Flashjacks 4 месяца назад +12

      @@raylopez99 some chips are marked with a dot as defective but not all. There are a few healthy ones.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 4 месяца назад +4

      @@Flashjacks Don't they sell the healthy ones? Or was this a wafer they decided to keep as a memento despite it having chips you could sell? An expensive paperweight.

    • @Flashjacks
      @Flashjacks 4 месяца назад +10

      @@raylopez99 Well, it is a whole wafer, uncut. I bought it many years ago. It is designed to be framed together with the complete CPU, which I also have. I don't know how much this could cost now, honestly.

    • @raylopez99
      @raylopez99 4 месяца назад +12

      @@Flashjacks it's priceless ;)

  • @jordansean18
    @jordansean18 4 месяца назад +29

    Over 30 years later I still have to support x86 architecture in all my apps 😅

  • @ratnadas7659
    @ratnadas7659 4 месяца назад +42

    I still get fascinated by how humans even made these beautiful objects, such tiny details and how far we have came from this.

    • @saito125
      @saito125 4 месяца назад +15

      And yet we still can't stop killing each other for the most mundane reasons.

    • @agnisinatria3520
      @agnisinatria3520 Месяц назад +1

      It is from terestrial being, taught us to make a silicon chip.

    • @pbettselectric134
      @pbettselectric134 Месяц назад

      Microscopic

    • @ender5023
      @ender5023 23 дня назад

      ​@@saito125 It seems that being smart doesn't mean people will make good choices. Intelligence is simply a tool. How you use it is up to you (up to a certain point of course, given your ability to escape certain consequences).

    • @ryelor123
      @ryelor123 17 дней назад

      @@saito125 That's why we're able to make these amazing things. If we were peaceful, then we'd become decadent, poor, and miserable.

  • @ctbsancho2516
    @ctbsancho2516 4 месяца назад +53

    Mind boggling. I want to see the machines that build these things.

    • @TheMrTape
      @TheMrTape 4 месяца назад

      Look up "microchip lithography" and there's many videos that will show you.

    • @robbdudeson346
      @robbdudeson346 2 месяца назад

      There are videos about it, look for silicon Photolithography

    • @robertherman58
      @robertherman58 Месяц назад

      ruclips.net/video/dX9CGRZwD-w/видео.htmlsi=lsXHDfL-3Gv_t6-e

  • @roycun5013
    @roycun5013 5 месяцев назад +68

    my first pc runs on that CPU.. still keping the CPU for old days memory.

    • @NotMe-ej9yz
      @NotMe-ej9yz 4 месяца назад +11

      I sold my first gaming computer to a guy I knew in highschool and we lost touch shortly after. A couple months ago I got back in touch with him because my best friend died (who he also knew) AND HE STILL HAD THE COMPUTER YEARS LATER! And it all still works! I bought it back from him just for the sentimental value. Thing is though the motherboard and the GPU were both parts I bought from my best friend that had died so they really mean a lot to me now that he's gone. I spent countless hours with him playing videogames on that computer so it's really nice to have it back again. I'm thinking about turning it into some sort of art piece for my wall (non-destructively of course since I might want to use it again later). Might put it in a big shadow box or something but I'm not sure yet. If anyone has any ideas lmk!

    • @JoaoPedro-ki7ct
      @JoaoPedro-ki7ct 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@NotMe-ej9yzI am sorta against the idea of letting any functional hardware being kept powered off for years and years in a row.
      I am unaware how much electricity that particular machine of yours consumes, but whatever you do I think it would be more interesting if you let it running at least for some amount of time with some frequency, especially if it can be used by trustworthy people who never touched a computer from that period, or who wants to relive their experience.
      In a nutshell, let the machine happily live throughout the coming years for as long as it can.

    • @microdesigns2000
      @microdesigns2000 Месяц назад +4

      ​@@NotMe-ej9yzyou can construct a picture frame with an LCD on it so your artwork can be played. If you have a photo of you two playing a game, that would be a nice addition to the frame. I would lay out all necessary pieces flat on a board. Everything doesn't need to be original. For example you can find a much smaller modern power supply and hard drive if you can get into work. Compatibility will be a problem. I would focus on keeping the motherboard and video card. If none of that will work, then I would power the motherboard and fan but hide an entirely new (and very small) computer that can run the project with modern hardware. You can run your old games in a virtual machine.
      When you construct this exhibit, be careful it doesn't turn into idolatry. Your friend is very important, but don't let your mind get caught in a trap because the people you still have are also important. That sounds religious because it is, but I mean it as a warning for your own mental health. Sorry you lost your best friend. :(

  • @youuuuuuuuuuutube
    @youuuuuuuuuuutube 4 месяца назад +19

    This CPU was a monster and a game changer at the time.

  • @markissboi3583
    @markissboi3583 4 месяца назад +15

    Always good to see inside chips its a city so small you cant see the atom people working 24/7

  • @lGuileWilliamsl
    @lGuileWilliamsl 4 месяца назад +21

    I still have my i486 DX-4 100 MHz CPU. still works

  • @DuchalvanWyngaard
    @DuchalvanWyngaard 2 месяца назад +4

    I'm from South Africa, I remember when this CPU was launched in 1992, I camped out at our computer shop for two days in order to be 1st in line to get my hands on it. What leap of technology it was back then.

  • @TheBlaert
    @TheBlaert 4 месяца назад +38

    We had 286, 386 and 486's in our computer lab at school. Everyone rushed in to get to the 486's first. Long time ago but we learned so much on those machines

  • @owenkegg5608
    @owenkegg5608 5 месяцев назад +49

    Beautiful chip layout

    • @bonbonpony
      @bonbonpony 20 дней назад

      Naah, too orthogonal for my tastes. I like spirals :J

  • @philippelhaus
    @philippelhaus 4 месяца назад +17

    Had this in 25Mhz with 4MB of RAM, loved the machine.

    • @JulianSortland
      @JulianSortland 4 месяца назад +1

      Same here! Did have a few people say that they did not realise that they existed.

    • @adammoss5284
      @adammoss5284 Месяц назад

      Daily driver back in the 90’s then went dx2 and dx4 after

    • @hunkydory419
      @hunkydory419 Месяц назад

      Yeah, I had the SX variant @ 25mhz and 4mb of RAM. Getting the latest version of dos was important back then. lol. Until ‘95 came out.

    • @danx7143
      @danx7143 21 день назад

      @@hunkydory419 Yess SX25+4MB gang!

  • @Xingularity
    @Xingularity 4 месяца назад +6

    Many, Many of these early CPUs have amazing details that can only be seen under a microscope..

  • @paulvild
    @paulvild 4 месяца назад +13

    I worked at the plant that made the PGA that you popped that out of. Alcoa Electronic Packaging. This is pre-Pentium.

    • @franciscorompana2985
      @franciscorompana2985 23 дня назад

      Maybe you can tell why the (P5)
      Pentium had a bug. I had to change it and send it to the factory.

  • @christ2290
    @christ2290 4 месяца назад +6

    My first new-bought PC from my parents when I was a kid was a 486DX2/66. So, so many memories made with that machine. Lots of games, BBSes, learning the nuts and bolts of what make computers tick at the hardware and software level. Back when computers required knowledge to operate and repair.

  • @peanutheadrules
    @peanutheadrules 4 месяца назад +30

    who else finds it absolutely beautiful we, humans, can build things on such a small yet technical scale??

    • @TwistyTrav
      @TwistyTrav 19 дней назад

      I'm not convinced humans are capable. Its easier to believe in alien technology.

    • @Mercy4Yemen
      @Mercy4Yemen 5 дней назад

      Although we think we reach some level of "development", the only we reach is more destruction of planets nature... it is a kind of curse

  • @tubegor
    @tubegor 4 месяца назад +17

    That was my first PC, pure nostalgia with 4 MB RAM later retrofitted with a sound card and CD (with a proud 4X:) drive. Operating system with DOS 6.22 and Norton Commander. HDD 160MB and a hundred 3.5" flopies (drilled through to double capacity). My first and last game was Wolfenstein (wolf3d) and can even be played today with Raspberry PI 5 and DOSbox.

  • @qwertytheone
    @qwertytheone 4 месяца назад +12

    Had a Compaq with a 486 DX2/66. Great computer for tweaking and adding components for performance.

  • @TurboTronics11
    @TurboTronics11 3 месяца назад +3

    I always wonder how something so complicated yet so small in size works that good! This is not but seems like a magic!

  • @wipeout97
    @wipeout97 3 месяца назад +3

    Damn I had one of those back in the day, cool video bro and RIP Packard Bell.

  • @datathunderstorm
    @datathunderstorm 4 месяца назад +3

    This was the exact same CPU in my first ever computer. That machine was a hand built computer that cost me £1,200 including a 14 inch colour monitor. The PC had the 486 DX-33 CPU, a 252 Megabyte HDD, CD-ROM drive, a humongous 4MB RAM and a 1MB VESA Local Bus Graphics Card - the latter which was the icing on that digital cake. It came with Windows 3.1 pre-installed, and was the machine that catapulted me into my life long IT career. It was not a brand name machine. It was expertly cobbled together by an experienced Computer builder who knew exactly what he was doing; the machine never failed on me once, and kept running faithfully even after I upgraded and gave it away.
    The 486 DX-33 chip had a maths coprocessor which made it a great CPU back in the day.
    It handled all the games of the day that I threw at it and was also excellent for desktop publishing apps of the era. That CPU opened a whole new world for me!
    I remember it most fondly.

  • @rickmccl71
    @rickmccl71 4 месяца назад +7

    I remember when the 486 DX2/66 came out they sent me a sample, the HEATSINK WAS AS TALL AS IT WAS WIDE WOW MAN LOOK AT THAT HOLY COW

    • @Fighter4Street
      @Fighter4Street 4 месяца назад +3

      yeah, I believe I replaced my original 486 33, to a 486 66.

    • @camartinez6
      @camartinez6 17 дней назад

      I had one of the gateway 2000 66mhz 486dx2

  • @controlfreak1963
    @controlfreak1963 4 месяца назад +5

    My first really stable computer was running Windows NT on a Dell i486-DX2 66Mhz with whatever maxed out memory was back in the day. I was astounded at having such a stable platform for engineering work.

  • @kenloughman6384
    @kenloughman6384 4 месяца назад +4

    It’s now 30 years since I bought my first PC which had this as the CPU!

  • @timypp2894
    @timypp2894 Месяц назад +3

    I remember when CPU first out with 1 million transistors , I thought then that it was truly amazing piece of engineering ..

  • @ReadieFur
    @ReadieFur 4 месяца назад +9

    I find it crazy how much detail of things there are in something that small, as in all the x y and z planes

  • @karlm9584
    @karlm9584 4 месяца назад +4

    My first real CPU... 8088 before that one. So sweet. Soundblaster with MKEP optical drive. Doom. Good times.

  • @Dhalin
    @Dhalin 4 месяца назад +25

    I used to own one of those, it was actually my very first PC. A DX 486/33 running Win95. Couldn't tell you anything about the rest of the PC though as I don't remember what else it had in it. I eventually got that upgraded to a 66 and then eventually a 100Mhz, and I remember the day I had the 100Mhz put in it, the difference while running Warcraft: Orcs and Humans, how suddenly the whole game ran at nearly twice the speed. Night and day difference!

    • @HongVanKhangTruong
      @HongVanKhangTruong 4 месяца назад

      ⁰⁰

    • @Brave2standalone
      @Brave2standalone 4 месяца назад +1

      Maybe Windows 3.0 or 3.1 and DOS 6.0? Win 95 came 5 yrs after CPU 486dx-33 was released.

    • @Dhalin
      @Dhalin 4 месяца назад +5

      @@Brave2standalone It was definitely Win95. I was on a budget at the time as I didn't have a lot of money and wanted a PC, and at the time, Pentiums were out, but I was buying a used 486 because it was like half the price of a new Pentium-based system.

    • @orsonstarbuck
      @orsonstarbuck 4 месяца назад +1

      Omg. I loved that game!! Thanks for reminding me of that!

    • @SeersantLoom
      @SeersantLoom 4 месяца назад +1

      I still own a 486DX4 100 computer, simply because it is a bit different (not a normal MB but has CPU on a card), MB is just a backplane with ISA slots. Has GUS audio, internal UPS card, HD controller card, ethernet and, I vaguely recall, Trident video. Runs Win95, had some games on it (XCom, HMM, Doom...)
      I also have 286 laptop somewhere, 10MB HDD. Don't recall make and model ATM. Not much on it, just DOS and some serial terminal emulator.

  • @IT10T
    @IT10T 4 месяца назад +1

    Appreciate the focal length changing, that really helps me understand the depth since I never seen once IRL that magnified.

  • @RusparD
    @RusparD 4 месяца назад +4

    My first "IBM Compatible" computer had one of those in it. Before that our family computer was a Commodore 64. I miss both, honestly.

  • @TheDiosdebaca
    @TheDiosdebaca 4 месяца назад +5

    It definitely wasn't my first processor (MOS 6502, Commodore 128 y'all!), but I have fond memories of building PC's with the 486DX 33/66 and 368 w/math coprocessor. I miss when computing was simple, games were made for fun not flash, and the world was simpler.

    • @floks700
      @floks700 16 дней назад

      В 486 процессоре математика была уже встроена внутрь.

  • @user-xi4zn4ly3o
    @user-xi4zn4ly3o 4 месяца назад +2

    Congratulate for engineer and architect all around this world your works has been one place completely, amazing…

  • @boyekaperrol2118
    @boyekaperrol2118 Месяц назад +2

    In 1990, 1991, i still was playing on the streets with kids in the neighborhood, exploring cheeks, fighting when it was necessary, playing with old tires in a race against more kids, and playing arcade games when we got some money after selling some soda cans we collected, 90's was an amazing decade, im sure ppl who was lucky to get a beautiful processor like this can miss such first days with computers when they were young and use some computers with a green screen.
    What a wonderful memories brings this short video 😮

  • @antigravity2206
    @antigravity2206 4 месяца назад +3

    I have one of these. kept it for the memories of those days .

  • @RobEspinoRealEstate
    @RobEspinoRealEstate 4 месяца назад +5

    This is simply amazing.

  • @fefnireindraer144
    @fefnireindraer144 4 месяца назад +1

    It is so cool to look at chips so up close.

  • @MisterHolaMan
    @MisterHolaMan 4 месяца назад +1

    the level of complexity here is beyond what my mind can fathom

  • @Scapularbore
    @Scapularbore 4 месяца назад +12

    33 and a pyramid now that is not a coincidence.

    • @tbas8741
      @tbas8741 4 месяца назад

      But it has no meaning or reference to actual pyramids or any conspiracy like the illuminate as the latter is not even a real thing.

    • @rundmk00
      @rundmk00 4 месяца назад +1

      @@tbas8741 he says, guessing

  • @Premier-Media-Group
    @Premier-Media-Group 4 месяца назад +3

    Man, that was top of the line with the built-in math coprocessor...

    • @JasonKaler
      @JasonKaler 4 месяца назад +2

      ahh yes, the coprocessor. That chip was great.
      I had the 486DX2 and it was faster than the first gen pentiums.

  • @N4CR5
    @N4CR5 2 месяца назад +1

    I have the DX2 in my collection. Beautiful to know it can look so amazing.

  • @deanlawson6880
    @deanlawson6880 4 месяца назад +1

    I totally had my first self-built tower PC running a 486dx50 processor! That thing was a screamer at the time! I still have that box in my old systems closet!!

  • @donniev8181
    @donniev8181 4 месяца назад +3

    Absolutely amazing!

  • @wallpaperroll3904
    @wallpaperroll3904 2 месяца назад +5

    this is what people spent their time on before Factorio came out

  • @wendy12354
    @wendy12354 4 месяца назад +2

    It still amazes me how complex and intricate these things are, and this is a 35 y o chip

  • @En1337Rich
    @En1337Rich 4 месяца назад +2

    its so beautiful looking, my first computer was a 486DX2 66Mhz

  • @amitb1423
    @amitb1423 4 месяца назад +7

    I had a 486 DX4.. It had costed me a bomb! It had 32MB RAM. Super costly config. I think it was in 1993 or something

  • @michaelrivard4879
    @michaelrivard4879 4 месяца назад +1

    I find what you do is fascinating, please keep up the excellent work

  • @imambargahhaidria8607
    @imambargahhaidria8607 4 месяца назад +1

    This was my 1st cpu in 1992. Everyone was amazed by its performance. It had 4 Mb of ram with 260Mb of hard drive. With dos 6 and windows 3.1.

  • @pheapkim978
    @pheapkim978 4 месяца назад +3

    It’s crazy how insane our technology really is under the microscope

  • @Ceagon
    @Ceagon 4 месяца назад +1

    had this chip, growing up. was really solid for the time!

  • @HepauDK
    @HepauDK 4 месяца назад +1

    My first "IBM compatible" PC had the i486 DX2-66. :)
    I bought it back in November '94.

  • @joshstucki4349
    @joshstucki4349 4 месяца назад +1

    Great memories.
    My dad got a 486DX2/66 CPU with 8MB of memory and a hard drive controller that actually had a tiny bit of solid state memory that gave him down to 0.9ms access time in certain scenarios. Combined with a Tseng Labs ET6000 graphics card, it was an incredible computer that could do anything.
    I inherited his Northgate 386DX/20 at the time. I had a Tseng Labs ET4000 card and I believe 5MB of memory. I could play Doom but only at the smallest graphics window. :)

  • @channelfunnygoose163
    @channelfunnygoose163 4 месяца назад +1

    Chips are so beautiful. I wish I could open different ones up all day long. Amazing things at such a tiny scale.

  • @alantripp6175
    @alantripp6175 4 месяца назад +2

    The laminated ceramic package was an amazing component itself.

  • @sypoth
    @sypoth Месяц назад +1

    I used to have one of these back in the day, it was my second personal computer I could call my own right after a 386 I bought used. I eventually upgraded to the 66mhz version through allot of work. Both was honestly nice considering that at the time the only other computers in the house were my sisters 8088, a TI 99 that no longer worked, and the family computer which was built in an era before hard drives were common meaning you had to boot from a 5 1/4" floppy and the only software we had for it were for Taxes, a Word processor, and a couple of primitive games that are nearly impossible to play today without emulating the slower speeds of the 386. Alley Cat was very much a favorite, there was also a helicopter one where you had to take out certain targets then evacuate people from a building.

  • @jaxnaturals
    @jaxnaturals 4 месяца назад +2

    The first computer I built was a 486 dx4 with 428mb hard drive and Windows 3.1. This was the last chip made before Pentium

  • @changedpepe7745
    @changedpepe7745 4 месяца назад +1

    Damn, there is so much going on inside these small chips. Also this microscope shows some sick details. I'm just amazed how people came to this point and come up with all these amazing things. Texting from a phone while watching youtube. Astonishing if you ask me

    • @EvilmonkeyzDesignz
      @EvilmonkeyzDesignz 4 месяца назад +1

      I agree! It's amazing how far we've come, and just how much is abstracted away that you don't need to think about when using a modern electronic device.

  • @isaacjjones
    @isaacjjones Месяц назад +1

    The CPU in the first PC I built was the slightly newer i486DX2-66. That chip was amazing. Surprisingly, I think I still have it.

  • @ericneering6357
    @ericneering6357 3 месяца назад +1

    Every time you show a picture like this, it’s all I can think of it. Look at the gold look at the gold.

  • @sumansaha295
    @sumansaha295 Месяц назад

    That focus tracking on the varying layers of metal contacts is awesome.

  • @reecep4016
    @reecep4016 3 месяца назад +1

    I’d love a documentary on the invention of the micro chip, how they work how they’re made. Etc.

  • @KyleRuggles
    @KyleRuggles 3 месяца назад +2

    My first CPU! Got it with my first PC, a Dell 486 DX 33mhz with 8 mb of ram a 512k cirrus logic video card and a 14 inch monitor that is at 640x480 but if I lowered the color to 16 bit I could go up to 800x600!
    I miss those days.

  • @shix13
    @shix13 3 месяца назад +1

    I love all the little icons that mask designers included on the old chips. One of them has a cactus too :)

  • @pbettselectric134
    @pbettselectric134 4 месяца назад +1

    Photo etching circuits and before that bread brooding . We have come a long, long way!

  • @bigjack470
    @bigjack470 Месяц назад +1

    Such a workhorse cpu, that and the dx2 at 66mhz were phenomenal!

  • @swinde
    @swinde 3 месяца назад +1

    One of my older computers that I no longer have was a 486-DX2-66 at the time I thought it was so fast!.
    After a couple of heathkit IBM style computers, ALL of my computers , I have built from scratch, that is, case , motherboard and supporting boards bought and then assembled by me, and I bought Windows and other programs to use with them. It cost a little more, but I got the hardware I wanted. Ready built PCs usually have a few cards that are substandard to lower their selling price.

  • @painful-Jay
    @painful-Jay Месяц назад

    My parents got our first computer with a 486 dx2 50mhz. A few years later I used the processor upgrade slot on the motherboard to upgrade to an Evergreen 586 at 100mhz. I fell in love with computers with that thing and learned so much.

  • @woreno
    @woreno 4 дня назад

    Dx2 the first cpu which I used win 3.11. So good times. I just understood this piece of tech so many decades after

  • @rohitlkv
    @rohitlkv 3 месяца назад +1

    I still have this processor ❤

  • @fiuhh9873
    @fiuhh9873 2 месяца назад +2

    My first ever interaction with computer. Running dos and lotus 123 using floppy disk

  • @Littlestrawberryfox
    @Littlestrawberryfox 2 месяца назад +1

    Ahhh what a flashback, this was my first chip I ever had, that with a companion Math-coprocessor what a power house it was back in the day love it. I think I still have the chip somewhere.

  • @hammabuckshot5062
    @hammabuckshot5062 Месяц назад

    I still have the same one among others from 90's .looking back feels weird given how far this technology has evolved

  • @EvexiansVideoworks
    @EvexiansVideoworks 3 месяца назад +1

    Whoooa… I‘ve never seen into a CPU like this before…

  • @coopbossman
    @coopbossman 5 месяцев назад +2

    Yippeeeeeee this is so cool there's so much there and it's silly that there's lil Easter eggs in these too.

  • @defaultHandle1110
    @defaultHandle1110 4 месяца назад +1

    I needed one of these for such a long time. Those laggy graphics in MK2/3.

  • @gdrew4171
    @gdrew4171 Месяц назад

    Just watched a great video of how these are made, fascinating technology.

  • @GalbadrakhDuna
    @GalbadrakhDuna 4 месяца назад +1

    still wonderful this old cpu ❤

  • @Viki-zo1bc
    @Viki-zo1bc 4 месяца назад +2

    That thing is like a metropolitan city when you zoom in.

  • @alekdaciputat
    @alekdaciputat 26 дней назад

    meticulous job, thanks for your effort for this video presentation 😊

  • @pjmorgan
    @pjmorgan 4 месяца назад +1

    I had a DX4. I forget the clock speed but 100MHz rings a bell.

  • @JosephArmbruster
    @JosephArmbruster Месяц назад

    I remember my old 486 had one of these... I still have some of these chips around.

  • @alfredshort3
    @alfredshort3 Месяц назад

    Those of you that have these, keep them. Something big is coming that will make these extremely valuable.

  • @spacepolice3227
    @spacepolice3227 5 месяцев назад +2

    Just bought every single one of the coins and 5' 003 from your website because they're just fucking cool and so is this content keep going man!

  • @jbsimmons54
    @jbsimmons54 19 дней назад

    How far we came! My first CPU was the first of the 8 series - 8008 in the Altair. Then the 8080, 8085, 8086, and so on. I did not use the 4004 or the 4040 before them.

  • @C_Corpze
    @C_Corpze 19 дней назад

    Makes me wonder how modern Intel and Ryzen CPUs are made.
    Probably looks even more complex and fascinating.

  • @TreacherousFennec
    @TreacherousFennec 13 дней назад +1

    Even though I understand the logic of how it works, stuff like this will always sound like magic to me. It's basically teaching a piece of rock how to think.

  • @superpandabacon
    @superpandabacon 22 дня назад

    Man, the memories! I started gaming on a relative’s 486 DX2 66mhz

  • @YoungBars26
    @YoungBars26 4 месяца назад

    Crazy i never knew this existed. Cool videos i learned something new!!

  • @azharcassim2795
    @azharcassim2795 4 месяца назад +2

    This stuff amazes me.

  • @nagume
    @nagume Месяц назад

    It looks like a complicated futuristic city and i think it looks pretty

  • @michwashington
    @michwashington Месяц назад

    I really pushed the limits of what that CPU could handle ❤

  • @eTraxx
    @eTraxx 4 месяца назад

    I bought a 486DX2 at the PX at Ferris Barracks, Gr -- my friend took one look at my new machine and he ditched his 386SX .. and traded up in a couple day. Ahh the memories ...

  • @peterhayden7136
    @peterhayden7136 4 месяца назад +1

    Its the machines that make the machines that amazes me