What happened to Miniscribe is kind of a funny story. Apparently, the company began hurting for cash, so what they did was ship out packages of what were supposed to be hard drives but what were, in reality, bricks. The idea was that Miniscribe would deliver the "drives," get the money, and then recall the "drives" and then send back packages with real drives. Unfortunately, Miniscribe was also laying people off. Guess which ones were among those who got pink slips while all of this was going on?
@@Danielrs3 Appeasing stockholders... It's still the bane of many companies. Philips for example, shrunk from a conglomerate like Samsung is now, to a skeleton with only the medical division left to sell off.
They actually didn't ship ANY masonry. They fudged their inventory numbers to prevent showing losses at the end of a quarter, and used the fake inventory to secure a very large business loan from overseas. When the bank came to value their inventory, they did a pre-round to check everything and found tens of thousands of dollars missing! Overnight, several shareholders and executives supposedly boxed masonry in a separate rented warehouse to be counted as physical inventory. Miniscribe qualified for the loan, got the money, and then promptly used it to pay off other debts instead of fixing anything else. This was a problem with management - Floor managers were incentivized not to be short any inventory, and were paid higher if they did. Good idea on paper, but it makes people more likely to lie! Wound up being the biggest fraud in the technology world to that time, a bust of tens of millions of dollars before most of their upper management served prison time and the rest of the company was sold off to Maxtor in 1990. At least, that was until Enron showed up and took their cake.
I like how your monitor looks like it's broken with that big hole in the middle and you can see the boards inside but I know it's just a wallpaper effect. Finally, someone played an MP3 stored on an old hard drive. Thank you.
Nice! I remember that by then Maxtor was among the most reliable harddrives (contrary to Seagate ones). I had a couple ones and they never let me down.
I had an 80 mb drive that was even thicker, would plug it in just so I could wave it back and forth to feel the centrifugal force, effect the gravity, felt weird.
ROFL! I was still using an Apple II in 1990. No HDD. I remember my buddy in elementary school bragging about how his computer could run "windows". I was like: Why would I ever need something like that?
I worked on the predecessor to this model during 1986 - 1988. We weren't trying to make the hard drive quiet back then. People actually liked the auditory indication that the hard drive was working.
@@thegeforce6625 - well,...... I worked on the 3053. It was Miniscribe's first rotary actuator drive. Us servo engineering folks didn't understand the intricate characteristics of rotary bearings. This was exacerbated by a lack of micro processor power and lack of firmware memory. The spindle controller was largely done with an SSI device to control a brushless motor with hall effect sensors. Most of the servo electronics were analog. The PC board was "through hole" still. We were transitioning to surface mount on other programs. The product testing was a mess for the 3053 program. At that time drive testing was done with separate tester. This was a whole different set of electronics to get working. Miniscribe had a separate company design and build the tester then get it working in the factory in Singapore. Miniscribe was a grinder for me. Even though I only worked there for 2.5 years it took about 7 years out of my life-force.
Thanks very much for the video! Miniscribe made several very nice drives from a technical/ aesthetic standpoint, including the wonderful 5.25 inch 3053 (MFM) and 3.5 inch 8051A IDE. The 8051A is a very interesting drive because it uses a patented moving magnet / stationary coil actuator, rather than the ubiquitous moving coil voice coil design. It was also interesting because users could choose to format in either native mode (some 730 cylinders/ 4 heads and 28 sectors per track) or in translated mode with 17 sectors per track. My understanding is that the LAST drive(s) developed at Miniscribe, before the Maxtor buyout, were the 7040A and 7080A. These two ‘next-gen’ IDE drives lived on to form the basis of a new model range for Maxtor with gradually incremented capacities onward into the future.
Lots of drives had a translated mode, in fact almost every IDE mode 0 drive supports this method of operation. It's for retaining compatibility with XT and AT class machines which expected 17 sectors per track for MFM controllers, whose BIOS otherwise rejected it!
@@AiOinc1 Back in those days the translated drives in the BIOS table were close in capacity to the drive’s native capacity. Some BIOS allowed you to either custom input native drive specs (eg; 28 sectors per track in the case of the 8051A) or use a translated pre-determined drive in BIOS defined with 17 sectors per track. This also allowed us to easily RLL low level format hard drives like the Miniscribe 8053 from 40 megabytes to over 60 if we hooked them up to an RLL rather than MFM controller board (depending on motherboard and BIOS capability).
@@toddb930 yes, the 8051A was a big seller for Miniscribe and Maxtor (the first ever ‘intelligent’ IDE drive I believe), preceding some excellent drives of varying design philosophies from Connor Peripherals. An early CP that was quite advanced is the low-profile CP3044, a single platter, 40 Mb IDE that needed a paddle board just like the 8051A.
This one I got off eBay. Other old HDDs I have are from a good friend. Yes it's absolutely possible to install Windows 95 on it since Windows 95 doesn't take much space. Not sure, though if 40 MB is enough. Anyways I could install Windows 3.11 & DOS 6.22 on a 20 MB hard drive without problems.
Well, I ask because of my want to build the slowest Windows 95 PC I can, then make the fastest one I can. Fastest one is done, with a 533B MHz Pentium III, 512MB RAM, 20GB Hard disk, and an nvidia Riva TNT 2 16MB.
A brilliant drive (expensive at $550 new) and a favourite Miniscribe with me (as is the superb 5.25” ST506/MFM 3053 which sounded even better perhaps) thanks for the video :-) My recollection is that final Miniscribe production included the 8051A’s successors: the Miniscribe branded 7040A and 7080A (single and double platters respectively) which designs gave rise to a whole stable of increased capacity 3.5” low-profile units from Maxtor and look-alikes from Western Digital, Connor Peripherals et al. Of course, the 8051A was among the very first IDE drives, using a small ‘paddle-board’ to interface the ‘intelligent’ drive to the 16 bit AT bus. PS: can you please give me details of that interface card you’re using-would love to spin up my 8051A...
Hi! I'm the Lee mentioned on the Red Hill page, and yeah, I had one of these back in 1999-2000 or so. It turns out they're something of a transitional model; the servo is similar to what the early 7000 series used, but the actual hardware is closer to the 8425SA MiniScribe did for Apple a few years before (the 7000s used an 80C196 instead of the 63B03). I was wrong about the DiamondMax; it was actually a clean-sheet redesign based on the TMS320 DSP. They used the same nomenclature and revision tracking, though.
Hi, glad and proud to have you as a viewer in my video! Thank you for the information, it is very interesting to know on which microcontrollers the hard disks are based on, that indeed makes some significant differences when comparing the microarchitectures of the µC and the DSP.
Hi and thanks for the memory of how this HDD sounded like. Second computer my Dad purchased had one of these drives in it. Worked very well for Win31 OS2 and Slackware Linux. One thing people take for granted now how easy it is to install and setup nowdays. When we purchased a second 100MB Fujitsu drive I was on hold for 2 hours to Fujitsu Australia to get Dip switch Settings to get master slave setup right - No internet to find info quickly back then. BTW your museum is really great. Cheers.
I imagine hard drives can last a long time. My old Toshiba Satellite laptop still has its original 4.1 GB hard drive and it said it was manufactured in October of 1998 and runs Windows 98 second edition.
Nice! I have an old 486 computer with a similar model and a slightly newer IDE 20GB Maxtor drive, do these use the same kind of connectors as Maxtor D740X-6L? The 40MB of space just seems too small for me...
I have a Quantum ProDrive 210S, It is 210MB SCSI and the date on it is 1985, however it appears that the ROM chip may have been replaced as that says it was made in 1988. no idea if is still works though :p
It's sounds like a coffee grinder, but it still works. LOL Conners was the more worst HDD's at that time. The newest HDD's will never run that long time.
Hey that's cool, I got a drive that looks and sounds just like that one! Checked it out, and it apears to be a Miniscribe 42MB drive. The startup sound it makes is realy nice I think, the motor revving up, the little 'beep' it makes and the idle humming sound it makes is realy nostalgic. Tested mine with HDTune once and it only has 1 bad sector :P Great video!
Thank you! I will check out that video now and I am glad to hear that yours only has one bad sector! Well mine has, as I might have said in the video, many bad sectors after the first 20 MB. That's why I decided to create a partition for the first 20 MB and only to use this for some random fun data.
I'm not sure exactly when SMART began being included in hard drives, but I'm quite sure that a hard drive that old (1990) would not feature SMART implementation. Edit: According to this Wikipedia article at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T., IBM introduced an early predecessor to SMART called Predictive Failure Analysis in 1992 for use in their AS/400 server systems. SMART itself would not come to be until 1995 when Compaq released their IntelliSafe technology to the public domain, allowing the SMART technology to be developed.
Nice speakers. Creative Labs Gigaworks T20 Series II I think? I got the same ones and they sound great! Also. Very cool you got the hard drive working in windows 7 with no problems! The smallest hard drive and flash drive I own is a 64mb flash drive and a 20gb WD hard drive.
Yes exactly, Creative Gigaworks T20 Series II and they have outstanding sound quality for this price. Well interesting and thank you for sharing. My smallest flash drive has 32 MB of storage hehe ;-) A smaller hard drive than this is being delivered and I expect it to arrive tomorrow. It's a Kalok Octagon KL-320 with 20 MB capacity and MFM interface. The drive was labled as the most unreliable drive ever. Let's see!
BigPurpleCarrot The CPU isnt bottlenecking the most computers while booting or starting programs, its the harddrive that does. Even an old Pentium 4 with 2Ghz can boot Win7 really fast with a cheap SSD. But looking at 1080p videos, video editing or gaming isnt a good idea with old CPUs :D
Hehe, thank you for your encouraging words and subscription. Your help is greatly appreciated ;D I think mostly because I didn't do any vlogs with my real voice yet and I didn't upload videos regularly. Quite difficult for me at the moment since I'm right in between graduation exams. Hope to get much more time after all this. :)
Need to get with 2016 man, just kidding lol. Yeah some PCs still have that old-school type, but most newer PCs from the past like 6 years or so should have the newer kind where you can actually (wait for it...) use your mouse and stuff lol.
+dracenmarx lol that has been supported for a few years now, dell has a bios that does this but is more basic, almost all motherboards that are decent these days have that feature
recently is what i meant, most computers still don't have that bios design because it is considered "luxury" i know that dell uses those bios designs now, most asus, asrock, and msi boards use that now.
This hard drive is so quiet, I barely can hear it.
No! It isn't quiet at all! It's just your headphones or hearing. No offense. (Nvm)
that hdd is as loud as my vacuum-cleaner:E
Lol
how much coal/hour it burn?
1337 xD
What happened to Miniscribe is kind of a funny story.
Apparently, the company began hurting for cash, so what they did was ship out packages of what were supposed to be hard drives but what were, in reality, bricks.
The idea was that Miniscribe would deliver the "drives," get the money, and then recall the "drives" and then send back packages with real drives.
Unfortunately, Miniscribe was also laying people off. Guess which ones were among those who got pink slips while all of this was going on?
@@Danielrs3 Appeasing stockholders... It's still the bane of many companies. Philips for example, shrunk from a conglomerate like Samsung is now, to a skeleton with only the medical division left to sell off.
They actually didn't ship ANY masonry. They fudged their inventory numbers to prevent showing losses at the end of a quarter, and used the fake inventory to secure a very large business loan from overseas. When the bank came to value their inventory, they did a pre-round to check everything and found tens of thousands of dollars missing! Overnight, several shareholders and executives supposedly boxed masonry in a separate rented warehouse to be counted as physical inventory. Miniscribe qualified for the loan, got the money, and then promptly used it to pay off other debts instead of fixing anything else.
This was a problem with management - Floor managers were incentivized not to be short any inventory, and were paid higher if they did. Good idea on paper, but it makes people more likely to lie!
Wound up being the biggest fraud in the technology world to that time, a bust of tens of millions of dollars before most of their upper management served prison time and the rest of the company was sold off to Maxtor in 1990.
At least, that was until Enron showed up and took their cake.
@@AiOinc1 Great details there. Thanks.
that's an interesting story
Really amazing how quickly tech has grown. What was it's growth rate? Exponential?
Just amazing
You should install Windows 1.0 and try with it.
Noisy Old HDDs are the best, sounds like The Computer Is Doing Important Things
I like how your monitor looks like it's broken with that big hole in the middle and you can see the boards inside but I know it's just a wallpaper effect. Finally, someone played an MP3 stored on an old hard drive. Thank you.
Nice music from old hardware
Hey don't laugh 40 MB in 1990 was a very sophisticated piece of technology. You could load Win 1.0 in less than 3 hours
@Semmal Kumar obviously a joke lmao
Nice! I remember that by then Maxtor was among the most reliable harddrives (contrary to Seagate ones). I had a couple ones and they never let me down.
I really wished you did a error scan on it!
I'd really like to know which converter card you're using, which model of SATA to IDE converter.
If you didn't hear that windows 7 startup sound while in 1st grade at least once. You have no childhood.
I had an 80 mb drive that was even thicker, would plug it in just so I could wave it back and forth to feel the centrifugal force, effect the gravity, felt weird.
Joshua Pierre i know tht
That's a great way to kill the drive, though...
ROFL! I was still using an Apple II in 1990. No HDD. I remember my buddy in elementary school bragging about how his computer could run "windows". I was like: Why would I ever need something like that?
sell it as an antique
I worked on the predecessor to this model during 1986 - 1988. We weren't trying to make the hard drive quiet back then. People actually liked the auditory indication that the hard drive was working.
then a little LED was enough to indicate hdd activity
Is there any more information you’d like yo share about this drive’s predecessor’s development?
@@thegeforce6625 - well,...... I worked on the 3053. It was Miniscribe's first rotary actuator drive. Us servo engineering folks didn't understand the intricate characteristics of rotary bearings. This was exacerbated by a lack of micro processor power and lack of firmware memory. The spindle controller was largely done with an SSI device to control a brushless motor with hall effect sensors. Most of the servo electronics were analog. The PC board was "through hole" still. We were transitioning to surface mount on other programs.
The product testing was a mess for the 3053 program. At that time drive testing was done with separate tester. This was a whole different set of electronics to get working. Miniscribe had a separate company design and build the tester then get it working in the factory in Singapore.
Miniscribe was a grinder for me. Even though I only worked there for 2.5 years it took about 7 years out of my life-force.
i love that "overshoot" as i call it when i spins up.
+Zachary many Quantum drives exhibit a similar thing.
This is really neat!
Thanks very much for the video! Miniscribe made several very nice drives from a technical/ aesthetic standpoint, including the wonderful 5.25 inch 3053 (MFM) and 3.5 inch 8051A IDE. The 8051A is a very interesting drive because it uses a patented moving magnet / stationary coil actuator, rather than the ubiquitous moving coil voice coil design. It was also interesting because users could choose to format in either native mode (some 730 cylinders/ 4 heads and 28 sectors per track) or in translated mode with 17 sectors per track. My understanding is that the LAST drive(s) developed at Miniscribe, before the Maxtor buyout, were the 7040A and 7080A. These two ‘next-gen’ IDE drives lived on to form the basis of a new model range for Maxtor with gradually incremented capacities onward into the future.
Lots of drives had a translated mode, in fact almost every IDE mode 0 drive supports this method of operation. It's for retaining compatibility with XT and AT class machines which expected 17 sectors per track for MFM controllers, whose BIOS otherwise rejected it!
@@AiOinc1 Back in those days the translated drives in the BIOS table were close in capacity to the drive’s native capacity. Some BIOS allowed you to either custom input native drive specs (eg; 28 sectors per track in the case of the 8051A) or use a translated pre-determined drive in BIOS defined with 17 sectors per track. This also allowed us to easily RLL low level format hard drives like the Miniscribe 8053 from 40 megabytes to over 60 if we hooked them up to an RLL rather than MFM controller board (depending on motherboard and BIOS capability).
I didn't realize they actually shipped the moving magnet design. I've got an early prototype around here somewhere.
@@toddb930 yes, the 8051A was a big seller for Miniscribe and Maxtor (the first ever ‘intelligent’ IDE drive I believe), preceding some excellent drives of varying design philosophies from Connor Peripherals. An early CP that was quite advanced is the low-profile CP3044, a single platter, 40 Mb IDE that needed a paddle board just like the 8051A.
I have that exact same IDE to SATA adapter. Yay, AliExpress!
Where can I get this type of drive? And can I install Windows 95 on it?
This one I got off eBay. Other old HDDs I have are from a good friend. Yes it's absolutely possible to install Windows 95 on it since Windows 95 doesn't take much space. Not sure, though if 40 MB is enough. Anyways I could install Windows 3.11 & DOS 6.22 on a 20 MB hard drive without problems.
Well, I ask because of my want to build the slowest Windows 95 PC I can, then make the fastest one I can. Fastest one is done, with a 533B MHz Pentium III, 512MB RAM, 20GB Hard disk, and an nvidia Riva TNT 2 16MB.
AIO inc. Buy a gaming Pc
And just torture your components by installing win98
I did that once, but instead I tortuered myself instead with Windows ME.
You could use Windows 2000 and be just fine.
*****
Clock speed or performance overall?
Забавно. 30 лет назад стоил целое состояние.
It's 2016 and I still have a WD 30GB PATA drive with Windows 7 on it. Works like a champ.
A brilliant drive (expensive at $550 new) and a favourite Miniscribe with me (as is the superb 5.25” ST506/MFM 3053 which sounded even better perhaps) thanks for the video :-) My recollection is that final Miniscribe production included the 8051A’s successors: the Miniscribe branded 7040A and 7080A (single and double platters respectively) which designs gave rise to a whole stable of increased capacity 3.5” low-profile units from Maxtor and look-alikes from Western Digital, Connor Peripherals et al. Of course, the 8051A was among the very first IDE drives, using a small ‘paddle-board’ to interface the ‘intelligent’ drive to the 16 bit AT bus. PS: can you please give me details of that interface card you’re using-would love to spin up my 8051A...
It's just a "SATA to IDE" adapter:) Nothing special
nice video. i want that background :D
Hi! I'm the Lee mentioned on the Red Hill page, and yeah, I had one of these back in 1999-2000 or so. It turns out they're something of a transitional model; the servo is similar to what the early 7000 series used, but the actual hardware is closer to the 8425SA MiniScribe did for Apple a few years before (the 7000s used an 80C196 instead of the 63B03).
I was wrong about the DiamondMax; it was actually a clean-sheet redesign based on the TMS320 DSP. They used the same nomenclature and revision tracking, though.
Hi, glad and proud to have you as a viewer in my video!
Thank you for the information, it is very interesting to know on which microcontrollers the hard disks are based on, that indeed makes some significant differences when comparing the microarchitectures of the µC and the DSP.
Love the background. Where can I get?
40MB was a pretty small HDD in 1990, I think 200MB or so was the average. Kind of like having a 128GB SSD now (*cough* Apple).
Is it really supposed to make that sound? Sounds like grinding.
could you share your tools folder in mega or something?
A 40 MB Hard Drive will not be enough for me.
oh really?
Me either, luckily I have a usb drive. :D
I want one.
Me too
Celeron + Gtx 560 Ti. Jesus pls help me!
looks fake sorry
@Semmal Kumar thats not what i meant. it just looks fake.
Please come back to RUclips. It has been years since your last video.
У меня до сих пор такой есть, только ещё с логотипом Miniscribe. Живой, тоже под Win7 проверял. Да он и под 11 скорее всего заработает. 😊
nice I still have 30 meg from IBM PS1 2011
Hi and thanks for the memory of how this HDD sounded like. Second computer my Dad purchased had one of these drives in it. Worked very well for Win31 OS2 and Slackware Linux. One thing people take for granted now how easy it is to install and setup nowdays. When we purchased a second 100MB Fujitsu drive I was on hold for 2 hours to Fujitsu Australia to get Dip switch Settings to get master slave setup right - No internet to find info quickly back then. BTW your museum is really great. Cheers.
I imagine hard drives can last a long time. My old Toshiba Satellite laptop still has its original 4.1 GB hard drive and it said it was manufactured in October of 1998 and runs Windows 98 second edition.
That's a fast drive though... I was thinking the music wouldn't play at all...
Lol the hard drive sounds like a train that started moving
i wonder what crystal disk info has to say about this one
I would like to put this Beast In My DELL DIMENSION 2400
you know that hard Drive would work better with Windows XP or Windows 2000
Why didn't you connect it directly into your motherboard's IDE port and used SATA instead? What's the point of doing that?
modern motherboards don't have IDE ports...
from 40MB in a single HDD to 20TERABYTE in a single HDD. man technology grows fast
Nice! I have an old 486 computer with a similar model and a slightly newer IDE 20GB Maxtor drive, do these use the same kind of connectors as Maxtor D740X-6L? The 40MB of space just seems too small for me...
I have a Quantum ProDrive 210S, It is 210MB SCSI and the date on it is 1985, however it appears that the ROM chip may have been replaced as that says it was made in 1988. no idea if is still works though :p
this disk is working proof that its the speed of your boot drive that matters in most cases, and not where your documents are stored.
please do a error scan (sector scan) please.
Hi from France
Mine is from 1989, March 4th . With Miniscribe sticker, not Maxtor. And work after 29 years ( see my video )
I have a 120 mb hard disk from 1989 that still works great in my T3200SX doesn’t even have bad sectors on it.
I love the sound of Noisy Hard Drives Where do you Get Them?
It's sounds like a coffee grinder, but it still works. LOL
Conners was the more worst HDD's at that time. The newest HDD's will never run that long time.
my child's PC runs on a hard drive from the 09 of august of 2007
on what os?
Hey that's cool, I got a drive that looks and sounds just like that one! Checked it out, and it apears to be a Miniscribe 42MB drive. The startup sound it makes is realy nice I think, the motor revving up, the little 'beep' it makes and the idle humming sound it makes is realy nostalgic. Tested mine with HDTune once and it only has 1 bad sector :P Great video!
Thank you! I will check out that video now and I am glad to hear that yours only has one bad sector! Well mine has, as I might have said in the video, many bad sectors after the first 20 MB. That's why I decided to create a partition for the first 20 MB and only to use this for some random fun data.
Geez, that drive is LOUD! Especially with the clicking!
I tried connecting my old harddrives to a logilink, doesn't work. Can I have a link to the device you are using?
Are you germann ?
I have two of these drive as Miniscribe. On standby if the seagate in my 386 has a problem.
Windows 10 😀
any other of these maxtor ide hard drives upto 640mb in size? and if so im interested in purchasing one from you
Why is your computer in German?
***** Haha, 6 months later you give him that answer, but time isn't a problem for him, he still has Win 98.
I need to ask, what was the jumper setting when you initialized it?
Sehr niedrig HDD-größe
It's either a real old HDD or a small-sized Concorde engine.
why are all these guys copies of windows in german?
Lizrad Sceptile because they're german lmao
Louie I.
This is Dutch.
THERE IS A HUGE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN GERMAN AND DUTCH.
with the loud motor and worn bearings it really sounds like theres alot going on in there.
But... Can it run crysis?
my maxtor 8051a have 0 bad sectors haha!
Celeron? get out of my browser!!!.....
a Sandy Bridge Celeron
Crystaldiskinfo?
Hard drives of those years didn't have S.M.A.R.T which shows the status and health of the drive
Installed a 20gb SO on 40mb? Sounds fake
He has the os on another fucking hdd, idiot.
Tikko SSD
Is it really 3.5"? Seems like 5.25" to me.
S.M.A.R.T.?))
I'm not sure exactly when SMART began being included in hard drives, but I'm quite sure that a hard drive that old (1990) would not feature SMART implementation.
Edit: According to this Wikipedia article at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/S.M.A.R.T., IBM introduced an early predecessor to SMART called Predictive Failure Analysis in 1992 for use in their AS/400 server systems. SMART itself would not come to be until 1995 when Compaq released their IntelliSafe technology to the public domain, allowing the SMART technology to be developed.
My first drive.
why dont you put the speaker on the harddisk ... :S
so it takes longer to assess than my internet has ping? wow
Nice speakers. Creative Labs Gigaworks T20 Series II I think? I got the same ones and they sound great! Also. Very cool you got the hard drive working in windows 7 with no problems! The smallest hard drive and flash drive I own is a 64mb flash drive and a 20gb WD hard drive.
Yes exactly, Creative Gigaworks T20 Series II and they have outstanding sound quality for this price. Well interesting and thank you for sharing. My smallest flash drive has 32 MB of storage hehe ;-)
A smaller hard drive than this is being delivered and I expect it to arrive tomorrow. It's a Kalok Octagon KL-320 with 20 MB capacity and MFM interface. The drive was labled as the most unreliable drive ever. Let's see!
Cool. I hope the drive at least works for you!
same bios as me!
How did he even install windows 7 on a 40 mb drive? windows 7 is over 1 gb?
ahhh thx for the answer!
+Sebastian Kjær Lauridsen It was literally all described in the video if you actually watched any part of it.
hey i used to have that same motherboard
IDK if it's a glitch or not but if it isn't then that's amazing speed for a celeron!
BigPurpleCarrot The CPU isnt bottlenecking the most computers while booting or starting programs, its the harddrive that does. Even an old Pentium 4 with 2Ghz can boot Win7 really fast with a cheap SSD. But looking at 1080p videos, video editing or gaming isnt a good idea with old CPUs :D
Install 386 dos 😂😂🤣🤣🤣
this is the anthem of IDE disc!
nice background
fake
real
DUDE SAME BIOS INTERFACE :D
OMG!
Wow , i expected someone like you to have hundreds of thousands of subscribers .... well , i subbed . maybe you will get there someday :D
Hehe, thank you for your encouraging words and subscription. Your help is greatly appreciated ;D
I think mostly because I didn't do any vlogs with my real voice yet and I didn't upload videos regularly. Quite difficult for me at the moment since I'm right in between graduation exams. Hope to get much more time after all this. :)
HARDWARECOP :D
Wow my motherboard :D
Like
Nice
WTFF????? HOW TF IS THIS SO FAST
what do you mean
the pc run on a ssd but as drive d he run a hdd
autofocus :D
what kind of freaky bios is that?
+Skippy1411 What do you mean? I have the same BIOS. His is in German though.
+Steven Tyler just never seen anything graphic like it before, i still have that 80s style bios on my i7 machine
Need to get with 2016 man, just kidding lol. Yeah some PCs still have that old-school type, but most newer PCs from the past like 6 years or so should have the newer kind where you can actually (wait for it...) use your mouse and stuff lol.
+Steven Tyler wahaha mouse usage is pretty cool
how do you get that shutdown menu that only appears for me on classic shell winxp skin
no, it's for the current application
Benedani Alt F4 on Desktop brings you this shutdown menu :)
well i kind of know that already but k
A bios with mouse support? What kind of motherboard is that?
+dracenmarx lol that has been supported for a few years now, dell has a bios that does this but is more basic, almost all motherboards that are decent these days have that feature
Zachary Pitts depends on what you mean with "these days". My 2011 phoenix bios has the classical type of bios gui.
recently is what i meant, most computers still don't have that bios design because it is considered "luxury" i know that dell uses those bios designs now, most asus, asrock, and msi boards use that now.
+dracenmarx UEFI...
lol should have formatted it to NTFS it increases the size of the HD
it doesnt inscrease the size it enables bigger files to be on the hdd
it doesnt inscrease the size it enables bigger files to be on the hdd
but that is a moot point