Expanding the Smallest Laptop of the 1990s

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  • Опубликовано: 30 янв 2025

Комментарии • 471

  • @Jamato-sUn
    @Jamato-sUn Год назад +249

    Okay, that tiny floppy disc going into a tiny card in a tiny computer is ADORABLE.

  • @Jackpkmn
    @Jackpkmn Год назад +97

    I loved all the goofy stuff you could get for PC Card and PCMCIA. But I especially love having cards that let me plug these laptop cards into my desktop computers by ISA or PCI. Takes jank to a whole new level when you get wifi running off an ISA card.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +19

      Yep, I have one to PCI card. But even more I want a PCMCIA card to PCI slot. Jank it up to 11.

  • @silvestronsbitsandbytes
    @silvestronsbitsandbytes Год назад +90

    I've been enamoured with the Libretto since reading about it in computer magazines in the late 90's, so seeing them still actively used today makes my heart sing. Unfortunately the plastics are just as brittle in the 100CT, so heed a pile of caution if you ever need to take the screen bezel off!

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +18

      I made sure to get some nice close ups of the cracks on mine 😲

    • @widicamdotnet
      @widicamdotnet Год назад +7

      @@JanusCycle My goodness, yeah, that's a lot of cracking on both your Librettos :-/ The plastic parts on my 50CT (which I've had since 2000) are still in much better shape, maybe storing it in a zipped-up leather carrying case helped a bit. I do have another laptop (a cheaply made Maxdata) that's about the same age and its gray plastic has turned very brittle about 10 years ago.
      Are the batteries still working on yours? I recently swapped out the LiIon cells ony mine, but it turns out the old ones still had about half their original capacity, I very much doubt the new cells will last 25 years...

    • @blakegriplingph
      @blakegriplingph Год назад +5

      Museums find such vintage plastics a pain to deal with in terms of preservation. If only there was a way to stabilise them somehow, short of having to remold all of them in a durable resin or something of that sort.

    • @noth606
      @noth606 17 дней назад

      @@blakegriplingph resin wouldn't come within a planetary system of cutting it, the problem is that they get brittle, making even more brittle versions is certainly NOT the answer. To my knowledge there hasn't been much research further into it other than petrochemical based flexible plastics of types I now forget the name of are inherently unstable, polymers basically, but newer ones far less than the older. There is a whole bunch of 90's plastics that have just decomposed which have caused issues far wider than retro computers. I'm talking stuff in space, stuff in industrial and military applications, medical applications etc.
      FAR bigger problem than a few museums getting their panties in a twist.

  • @fab555trainspottingandmore
    @fab555trainspottingandmore Год назад +5

    It's impressive to think, that such a small device back then struggeled to playback 480p Videos but nowadays almost every Phone can Playback 2160p 4K Videos without any problems

  • @fungo6631
    @fungo6631 Год назад +38

    The 32 bit cardbus slot is basically a PCI slot.
    You should try connecting a 3DFX Voodoo 2 card on this thing using some kind of PCI eGPU enclosure.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +11

      I would love this. I've been looking but not found anything yet.

    • @fragglet
      @fragglet Год назад +2

      I think the slot on the Libretto is a 16-bit slot, not a 32-bit one.

  • @borisborisov195
    @borisborisov195 Год назад +17

    Your PCMCIA cards collection is impressive!

  • @digitaldion
    @digitaldion Год назад +23

    I wrote my PhD on a Libretto 50c! I still own the little gem! These days I use an iPad mini 6 with a bluetooth keyboard. I still love ultra portable computing! Thanks so much for the awesome video! By the way, at one point I also owned the Sony UX 180, and an OQO.

    • @21Shells
      @21Shells Год назад +1

      Ultra portable computing is still really useful for travelling. I travel between a lot of places quite often, I dont really like the weight that comes with a large laptop. I currently use an iPad Air with the logitech keyboard case, which even then is a lot smaller (and lighter) than most modern laptops.

    • @conturnplayscounturn6911
      @conturnplayscounturn6911 Год назад +1

      Haha that’s great, i’ve also been driving an iPad 10.5 inch jailbroken with a lenovo BKC700 keyboard. Not as small but still a wonderful little device with a compact footprint. Having to bring a dongle around is a little inconvenient but it’s still crazy how much power is packed into these little machines. :D

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      The UX is of course legendary. The OQOs are intruiging, always wanted to try one.

    • @21Shells
      @21Shells Год назад

      @@conturnplayscounturn6911 How did you manage to get the BKC700 keyboard working with the iPad Pro?

    • @Thedoomslayer2029
      @Thedoomslayer2029 Месяц назад

      Make sure to remove the cmos battery because you risk it leaking and killing your motherboard.

  • @jakeparkinson8929
    @jakeparkinson8929 Год назад +40

    We need people to scan the shell of old computers like this, a point cloud so we can use such as a reference for vertices in a 3d model. Then such can be fed to a 3d printer, and then we can have shell replacements for old machines. Look up at what a point cloud is, then this comment makes more sense.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +10

      There would be some demand for these cases.

    • @Xoliul
      @Xoliul 6 месяцев назад

      Er, it's a bit more work than just scanning. There's almost no case where a scan can be printed without being completely reworked.

  • @WarlordEnthusiast
    @WarlordEnthusiast Год назад +17

    I have two of these laptops, a 50CT and a 100CT, the 50CT belonged to my father who used it as a demo unit when he was a salesman in the 2000's. He said they were impractical to actually use and wayyy too expensive, but executives loved them because they were cutting edge and their compactness was universally impressive. They were expensive toys for showing off but so incredibly cool to me as a kid.
    The 100CT was a gift from one of those executives after I swapped out all their old hardware in one of their offices almost 2 decades after he had bought a 100CT from my dad, apparently he still remembered my dad and me visiting their offices back then.
    The keyboard is broken on the 100CT unfortunately and I'm still hunting for a replacement to get it working. The 50CT has a strange issue with the font scale, its almost impossible to read any text because its so squashed.
    Along with the laptops, I have a "case logic" bag that was bundled with the 100CT along with 3 floppy drive modules, a 56k modem card and a 10mbps ethernet card. I also have a docking station for the 100CT called the "IO Adapter" that has a PS/2 port for a mouse, a printer connector, a VGA out for connecting a second screen I believe and a VGA in which I'm not entirely sure of its purpose.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      Very nice collection. I hope you can source that keyboard part.

    • @tom611
      @tom611 Год назад +1

      VGA in? Are you sure it's not a 9-pin serial port instead?

    • @WarlordEnthusiast
      @WarlordEnthusiast Год назад +2

      @@tom611 Your right, I had another look and it appears to be a serial port

  • @MarcosCodas
    @MarcosCodas Год назад +11

    The HDD card bonking the system IS the real HDD experience haha

  • @fremenondesand3896
    @fremenondesand3896 11 месяцев назад +3

    I miss PCMCIA cards, and Johnny Mnemonic is a great film to show on it.

  • @nanomachines2954
    @nanomachines2954 Год назад +2

    That's why I love Windows and PC. Like stuff is almost 3 decades old and it still just works with drivers auto installing and everything..on Linux you'd spend weeks writing a code from the scratch just to get basic functionality.

  • @Dadniel1st
    @Dadniel1st Год назад +2

    Thanks

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      Awesome, thank you! This pushes me to make even better videos.

  • @SweetSweetCandyBoyz
    @SweetSweetCandyBoyz Год назад +2

    Your stuff needs to reach millions of followers, this is what the people need to crave.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      Thanks! I just pleased there are some people interested in this stuff.

  • @confusinggameplays1687
    @confusinggameplays1687 Год назад +3

    The thumbnail and title made me think it was an MJD video, but the video is also really good.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      Then I'm in good company then :) thanks!

  • @kaitlyn__L
    @kaitlyn__L Год назад +30

    Gosh, I have so much nostalgia for PC Cards. They made older laptops viable for sooo much longer. That MPEG card and Sound Blaster are things I’ve never seen before though!
    XP ran awfully on my P3, so I bet this will hardly manage it. Probably best to keep it as it is.
    That’s one of my favourite AdLib tracks lately, thanks for showing it off 👍

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +5

      XP would just be for the proof of install experience. I just want to know what it would be like.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Год назад +2

      @@JanusCycle haha fair enough. I don’t ever need to go through that again, but if you want to!

    • @CapTVchilenaShootingStarMax
      @CapTVchilenaShootingStarMax Год назад

      @@JanusCycle Perhaps WinFLP might be useful?

    • @TheRailroad99
      @TheRailroad99 Год назад

      P3 and P2 both work rather well with w2k...

    • @fierelier7691
      @fierelier7691 Год назад

      i ran XP on multiple P3s and it's absolutely fine. though on my P1, i personally run W2K with kernel extensions

  • @marvinochieng6295
    @marvinochieng6295 Год назад +2

    I click Janus' videos and instantly i am teleported back to 1998 when my dad used to fiddle with similalr hardware and i just miss those moments more. Keep up the good work sir.

  • @Megabob777
    @Megabob777 10 месяцев назад +2

    Man I still remember my first laptop it was an old gateway and I remember getting a Wi-Fi PC card for it. Good times man

  • @JesseTinkers
    @JesseTinkers Год назад +24

    Another great video! I believe the reason it freaked out when you installed the HDD card is too much power was drawn from the slots. Would explain why the external USB mouse stopped working. Just a theory

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +7

      A very good theory. I think you might be correct there.

  • @isaiasprestes9759
    @isaiasprestes9759 7 месяцев назад +1

    9:03 This sound teleported my mind straight to a quasi-random 1990s day of my life.
    The sound experience of your videos are amazing! It's time-travelling!

  • @conturnplayscounturn6911
    @conturnplayscounturn6911 Год назад +5

    Used to daily drive an old hp compaq wayy after it’s time and i’ve always wondered what the slot on the side was for. Thanks for showcasing my first look into a pc card and all the cool things they can be used for.
    Wonderful channel, will be subscribing for more.
    P.S. Kudos to the tasteful selection of tracker music

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      I'm glad you enjoyed this, thanks!

  • @arpeas_jds
    @arpeas_jds Год назад +2

    As soon as you brought up DVDs I thought about that Margi card, and there it is! Such cool stuff, hardware acceleration. In this form factor especially!

  • @oluscano
    @oluscano Год назад +2

    your videos have something special that makes them stand out from the others, very good video!

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +2

      I really appreciate hearing that.

  • @netzwerk-werkstatt332
    @netzwerk-werkstatt332 Год назад +2

    The sound is amazing.

  • @Ibnu_568
    @Ibnu_568 Год назад +5

    i really enjoy your content dude😁
    ,also i appreciate for caption you make for your video, it's really help me who bad at listening xD love from Indonesia 🇮🇩

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +2

      Thanks, I like knowing the captions are appreciated.

  • @RetroPC
    @RetroPC Год назад +1

    Just one more reason why I need a Toshiba Libretto. Awesome video! Never thought I'd ever see a DVD play on one of these things!

  • @CHEMICmusic
    @CHEMICmusic Год назад +1

    Johnny Mnemonic? Respect!!!🤘😁🤙

  • @HandheldComputing
    @HandheldComputing Год назад +1

    So many crazy PC card options to choose from! Love the Libretto UMPCs, so well made!

  • @die_lokki287
    @die_lokki287 Год назад +1

    The part when you tested soundblaster card was my favorite. Tracker music is so awesome

  • @Resident007TVC
    @Resident007TVC Год назад +1

    I have a Libretto 100CT overclocked to 233mhz with almost all accessories and in almost perfect condition. Absolutely love this piece of 90's tech.

  • @NeoAF10
    @NeoAF10 Год назад +1

    What a delightful video! You allowed me to travel back in time and get access to premium devices. Thank you!

  • @adews7204
    @adews7204 Год назад +3

    I would definitely like to see how Windows XP would run on one of these! It was a lot of fun seeing what different expansion PCMCIA cards there are, and I had no clue that there were that many. Keep up the great work on this channel.🙂

    • @RealEpikCartfrenYT
      @RealEpikCartfrenYT Год назад +1

      I have personally seen Windows XP run on a P166 before. it was kinda usable as long as you don't go online.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Год назад

      @@RealEpikCartfrenYT Maybe it's usable if you have lots of RAM. With the advertised bare minimum of 64 megs there's no free RAM left for programs so you pretty much need to go into swap. I believe this was an unofficial SP4 I was trying on my 166.

  • @EricGrumling
    @EricGrumling Год назад +1

    I used a Libretto 100CT as my personal digital assistant for a time in the 1990s. It was also my go to network jack tester with a 3Com 10/100 X-Jack LAN card. You might recall the X-Jack popped out of the edge and stowed away inside the card when not in use. I think they made a modem too. It also made a great MP3 player for the car, if you could keep track of the 1/8" to 2.5mm adapters. Thank goodness for Radio Shack...

  • @longbottle
    @longbottle Год назад +1

    I love how your video demo is Johnny Mnemonic!

  • @mrtobiastaylor86
    @mrtobiastaylor86 Год назад +1

    Johnny Mnemonic! Great film choice, and some properly interesting cards - I used the Audigy loads as a mobile DAW playback device for band rehearsals.

  • @SockyNoob
    @SockyNoob Год назад +4

    These machines are absolutely incredible. Definitely a form factor I wish became commonplace.

    • @OnlyEpicEmber
      @OnlyEpicEmber Год назад

      What do you think about the GPD devices?

  • @VEC7ORlt
    @VEC7ORlt Год назад +1

    Such a lovely trip that was, Johnny Mnemonic, tracker music, 166MMX.

  • @s3vR3x
    @s3vR3x Год назад +2

    it does have a USB port with the bigger port replicator. it works well! Great video. I love these little machines!

  • @Slot0
    @Slot0 Год назад +1

    I don't know why, but tiny laptops and their accessories that are incredibly niche and underpowered bring a smile to my face.

  • @pirrracy
    @pirrracy Год назад +1

    Had a "Realmagic Hollywood Plus" decoder card back in the mid 90s. Cutting edge stuff. I'm not surprised that card is scorching.

  • @gabriellepe7839
    @gabriellepe7839 2 месяца назад +1

    Voice on this video are very relaxing. Very good time, tone and pitch.

  • @clebbington
    @clebbington Год назад +2

    Really enjoyed seeing the MPEG card - had no idea those were a thing!

  • @AnthonyRBlacker
    @AnthonyRBlacker Год назад +1

    What a fantastic blast back to the past! I loved the Pentium days.. I started in the XT years, I was very young but lucky enough to have a mom who worked in payroll so we had an IBM PC XT clone as our first home computer in the 80s. What a time to be alive!!

  • @aparture_science
    @aparture_science Год назад +4

    i was actualy searching for this machine so thanks for the video

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      Hey cool, I hope you enjoy it.

  • @Inikalord
    @Inikalord Год назад +2

    With retro tech appreciation making something of a comeback within the last 10 or so years (especially in miniature compact form), this little thing would be a natural fit for a modern-ish update.

  • @DevirothS
    @DevirothS Год назад +3

    a beautiful machine with great expandibility.. I reckon it would cost fortune back then, but you'd get a lot of use out of it

  • @Clockwork_Planet
    @Clockwork_Planet Год назад +3

    I had a 50CT that I used a lot in the late 90's, and I only really stopped using it when I got a VAIO PCG C1. At the time I was an IT Technician and I would use the 50CT to listen to MP3 and surf the web. I think I had a PC Card ethernet adaptor. I remember many PC Cards getting hot during use, there was a lot going on in a tiny space. I always liked the look of the 100CT but by the time I could afford the upgrade, the VAIO Picturebooks were the new hotness.
    I just went down to my workshop, and the 50CT is still sitting on my archive shelf, along with the PCG C1 that replaced it and the C1VN that replaced that.

  • @JohnnyWednesday
    @JohnnyWednesday Год назад +2

    If you cut XP down, disable search service, system restore tracking, disable themes, switch to classic mode etc - it can be quite usable - you could dual boot with 98SE and use the XP for experiments. Honestly most of XP chugging on old machines is just the inital search crawl and the restore DB building etc and general snappiness is a case of disabling all of the transparency/blend shadow UI stuff - as well as themes (lots of memory used there)

    • @JohnnyWednesday
      @JohnnyWednesday Год назад +1

      Windows 2000 is also a good option - driver stack is the same as XP and more often than not, XP only stuff is fine for 2000 too. It's slower to boot but can take up less memory overall.
      Generally tweaking paging for the kernel in the registry might let you take advantage of the faster solid state storage and leave more physical RAM biased towards caching userspace stuff like dlls and application memory pools

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      I have been hearing good things about 2000. Always wanted to try it out.

  • @Iskandarko
    @Iskandarko Год назад +1

    Amazed by how much functionality they managed to squeeze into such a small form factor (PCMCIA).

  • @miguelmarin6620
    @miguelmarin6620 10 месяцев назад +1

    I really enjoy these kinds of videos. Great work🎉

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  9 месяцев назад

      Great to hear that :)

  • @colombianguy8194
    @colombianguy8194 Год назад +1

    Thank you so much for this video. I love to see those librettos. Back in 2005 in my first job as an IT tech, a costumer showed me a libretto that i think it was the same as the one in the video. Back then was already obsolete but begged the costumer to sell me the laptop. She declined. 😢. Now i have two classic ThinkPads, a 760XL and monster 770X to remember good Win9x times 😊

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      Nice Thinkpads you have. There are some older smaller models that I really like. I'm glad you enjoyed the video.

  • @wildweasel486
    @wildweasel486 Год назад +1

    Being able to play FM music natively on a Libretto makes it a great little portable music station. I had quite a lot of fun installing SBVGM on my 70CT, and running certain game soundtracks through it, especially the ones for Dune and KGB. I do at some point need to get the right kind of audio cable for it, though; those little 2.5mm jacks don't show up often enough that I have any adapters that'll fit them...

  • @willyarma_uk
    @willyarma_uk Год назад +1

    Ive got that exact same TV tuner card, I bought a few back in the day, one of them failed due to overheating so in the rest I added some heatsink compound and a thin bit of metal to connect the chip to the outer case, this worked very well. I know where the cards are but have no idea where I put the driver disc.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      Nice heat mod :) Do you know if the Mini-DIN connector has composite video input?

    • @willyarma_uk
      @willyarma_uk Год назад +1

      @@JanusCycle I cant remember, I've a feeling it didn't come with the cable. If it did I'll have it but it'll be mixed up with loads of other mini din cables that I threw into a big tub.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      @@willyarma_uk Thanks, no big deal, just wondering. Also the permanently separated dongle/cable syndrome :)

  • @bardo0007
    @bardo0007 Год назад +2

    I sold the Libretto back in the day, it was too expensive for most people. But I do remember all the PCMCIA cards needed to make it work properly.

  • @JessicaFEREM
    @JessicaFEREM Год назад +2

    I remember some of the last PC cards were for USB 3 and firewire
    USB 3 on a mid-2k's laptop was a wild spectacle

  • @TonyJewell0
    @TonyJewell0 Год назад +1

    I still have my Libretto 110CT that I purchased way back when it first came out at the end of the 90s - I have the docking station too. I used to run dual boot with Redhat Linux. It was a perfect companion as a Unix consultant developer and, in those heady days, companies were less reticent about allowing people to connect their own equipment to the network. Its a great machine and still boots fine.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      I'm really glad you still have yours and it's working!

  • @coreybabcock2025
    @coreybabcock2025 Год назад +1

    Miss those days of computing and that Johnny menomic is a great movie

  • @kolkoki
    @kolkoki Год назад +3

    It could - perhaps - be interesing to 3d scans the shell to makje a modern 3d printed case that does not desintegrate by merely existing. 1:35 frame says ouch.

  • @BilisNegra
    @BilisNegra Год назад +1

    An Iomega Click drive in working order after all these years. In PC Card format on top of that. And using the only disk you have. Well, this video is amazing through and through, but everyone will have their personal highlight, so there's mine. I came here for my love of Librettos and was certainly rewarded.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      Libretto and Clik! just seem to go so well together :)

  • @rubberduck4966
    @rubberduck4966 Год назад +2

    The Libretto 100CT can be overclocked up to a 110CT. Mine has a 2,5" IDE to dual-CF Card Adapter and 2 8GB CF Cards.

  • @astral16
    @astral16 Год назад +1

    Absolutely incredible. I always wanted one of those. I Actually used one of those Audigy 2 ZS cards with my gateway laptop from 2005 because i wanted 7.1 surround sound. It always got incredibly hot. Never had an issue with it though.

    • @Tadfafty
      @Tadfafty Год назад

      I had a Libretto 100CT for years, until in 2021, when the shelf it was on failed and it came tumbling to the floor.

  • @td4dotnet
    @td4dotnet Год назад +2

    I really miss this form factor, at work I'd love a modern equivalent. Thanks for posting JC!

    • @Stealth86651
      @Stealth86651 Год назад +3

      It does, GPD and a few others make pocket netbooks still.

    • @conturnplayscounturn6911
      @conturnplayscounturn6911 Год назад

      I’ve seen many people nowadays drive tablets with keyboards...
      though unlike most netbooks i’ve tried from the early 2010’s they’re not really quite as “lappable” and more suited to be on a table or desk but they’re still quite small in footprint
      maybe an equivalent in spirituality then in succession

    • @No_True_Scotsman
      @No_True_Scotsman Год назад +2

      Look up GPD, they make some devices like this

  • @obliteron
    @obliteron Год назад +1

    For those looking for that track that absolutely slaps, it's titled "Milinda" on the album "Psychic Pizza Connection"

  • @angieandretti
    @angieandretti Год назад +1

    This was my very first laptop ever! I got it second-hand in 2001 but still absolutely loved it! I overclocked the 166MHz Pentium CPU to 233MHz by soldering some points on the motherboard according to a diagram I found online.

  • @zaitsxl
    @zaitsxl Год назад +2

    Once I saw an external videocard which connects via PCMCIA, now I saw everything

  • @lordmmx1303
    @lordmmx1303 Год назад +2

    I have libretto 110ct and docking station does have an USB port

  • @danielktdoranie
    @danielktdoranie Год назад +1

    Until the End of the World is one of my favourite films! Good choice!

  • @alexmiranda6107
    @alexmiranda6107 Год назад +1

    I have a bluetooth & USB card and I once saw a 2 port fire wire s400 one that sat flush with the port so it didn't have any sticky-outy bits

  • @YS_Production
    @YS_Production Год назад +1

    That DVD Decoder PC card... Hats off. I mean, how tiny is all that and they fit essentially a fully fledged DVD player's logic (and more as it passes the video to the OS as well), inclusive of 6ch audio processing and output. So it really is almost the whole DVD player box, only omitting the disc processing logic. Shame it doesn't enter a sleep mode when not in use (or perhaps that is a driver issue?)

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +2

      I'd love to take the card apart and see inside. PCMCIA really don't like that though.

  • @donkmeister
    @donkmeister Год назад +2

    4:50 I had one of the Creative DVD decoder PCI cards in 1999, and you had to loop through the VGA. So, this PC card one is quite clever in being able to send the decoded video back across the bus. Maybe that's what the "zoomed" bit refers to?
    I had a triple stack of AGP graphics card (I think an ATI one), looping into a Voodoo 2 for 3D duties, looping into a DVD decoder for DVD duties, then off to the monitor. The DVD card SVHS output was then looped back to the Hauppage TV card for taking screenshots of DVDs (ripping a whole disc wasn't really an option as it took literal DAYS to re-encode movies as VCD on a 450MHz P2). Fun times!

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      Wow, great setup you had there.

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 Год назад

      The Zoomed Video port is indeed a protocol for sending back the decoded video. Regarding your old stack, I remember doing some transcoding on a Celeron 466 (or possibly III-700) and it definitely did not take days. My memories might also be tainted because I might've only transcoded part of a short movie instead of the whole thing.

  • @RetroGadgetMan
    @RetroGadgetMan Год назад +1

    Always liked these machines. I hav the 100 and a couple of 70 models. The 70's are not working. There was a few dock variations available as well that added lots more sockets. Especially for the 100 and 110. Nice video and camera work.

  • @SavageCXV
    @SavageCXV Год назад +9

    I love your videos ♥♥♥

  • @kneel1
    @kneel1 Год назад +1

    man this brings back teenage memories of trying to figure out all kinds of crap like this without the internet being what it is today

  • @josecespedes4551
    @josecespedes4551 Год назад +1

    Incredible video. Best wishes from Panama 🇵🇦

  • @FishyBoi1337
    @FishyBoi1337 Год назад +2

    12:15 I can imagine a DJ in 2024 walking into a club with this mf and blowing everyone's mind

  • @ukrlk
    @ukrlk Год назад +1

    Happy Holidays! Really enjoy your videos!

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      Thank you, Happy holiday season to you too!

  • @lemagreengreen
    @lemagreengreen Год назад

    I loved reading about these Libretto machines back in the 90s. I say read about because I was far too poor to own them, they just seemed impossibly small and yet fully featured.
    PCMCIA/PC Card/whatever else they called it was a very cool standard, I did own a laptop with it in the 90s - some big chunky heavy thing - and being able to add functionality like a modem and network card relatively cheaply was quite neat. Later lots of laptops would have a WiFi card sticking out of the side too.

  • @Thedoomslayer2029
    @Thedoomslayer2029 Год назад +1

    I have a libretto 50ct and a pcmcia cd-rom drive, and it works pretty well. The drive is close to the same size as the computer itself.

  • @sadev101
    @sadev101 Год назад +2

    as always your videos are superb . love it

  • @Thedoomslayer2029
    @Thedoomslayer2029 Месяц назад +1

    I tried running a 110ct with a dvd decoder, a usb 2.0 card, and a usb dvd drive, and it lagged. I now think it lagged on playback because of the processing overhead of the usb 2.0. I'll try to run it again with a PCMCIA dvd drive at a later date.

  • @rpdom
    @rpdom Год назад +1

    I have a stack of Libretto 100CTs. I originally ran Win98SE on them, then switched to Linux. I used a PCCard SATA card on one to run a couple of 250GB external disks. I also had some PCCard ethernet cards. As well as that I have the basic dock adaptors with Serial, Parallel, Keyboard and VGA ports and one full docking station with the same ports plus two extra PCCard slots, two PS/2 sockets for keyboard and mouse, and a USB 1 socket! Are you interested in any of them? I'll have to hunt around to check I've still got all the bits.
    Oh, plus I've got a CD ROM drive/ CD player that plugs into the PCCard slot too.

  • @pekotofo2522
    @pekotofo2522 Год назад +1

    I really like your videos, even if the subject matter is somewhat mundane or not too interesting to me, I still like to watch and enjoy that nice crispy macro video and easy to listen, soothing voice as it calms me down when I'm looking for a little pause from youtube to the hustle and bustle of modern day living. What really peaks my interest is the hacking and novel uses of older cell phones, especially those that have physical qwerty keyboards. I dunno why, but they really shizzle my nizzle! Anyways, much love and thank you for making these videos ^_^

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      I really appreciate hearing that. Thank you.

  • @alexandermirdzveli3200
    @alexandermirdzveli3200 Год назад +1

    Another masterpiece from JC!

  • @SudosFTW
    @SudosFTW Год назад +2

    Although it might not work, PhilsComputerLab should have the Audigy 2 ZS win9x drivers of which he says to use the VXD drivers. Those might work as I believe it's the exact same chipsets in that card.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      I've thought about gluing supports on the inside. These videos may be all that's left one day.

  • @Unan1mouz
    @Unan1mouz Год назад +1

    Oh God I just love mini laptops!! This is a cute one 😍

  • @HowieDue416
    @HowieDue416 Год назад +1

    Interesting video, even more interesting track!

  • @charlesdorval394
    @charlesdorval394 Год назад +1

    Wow, that's some sweet ass cards you've got there!

  • @RealEpikCartfrenYT
    @RealEpikCartfrenYT Год назад +4

    If I had a Libretto like that I'd most definitely stick Windows XP on it just for fun. I don't think it's gonna run well, but it sure will make for an interesting experience.

    • @dieseldragon6756
      @dieseldragon6756 Год назад +1

      My attempts to get XP running on a Libretto were about as successful as Brexit...But IME Windows 2000 works like a dream on them! 😁
      Now...If only it was still safe to connect a Win 2K machine up to _any_ form of network... 😉

  • @viperarc
    @viperarc Год назад +1

    thanks for making this great video!

  • @ravenof1985
    @ravenof1985 20 дней назад +1

    i had one of these waaaaaay back in 2001ish, you can overclock the CPU but it requires hardware mods. it does in fact run XP, with a bit of debloating it runs surprisingly well

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  15 дней назад

      I will have to try this overclocking one day.

  • @MultiWirth
    @MultiWirth Год назад +1

    Just curious but what exact drivers and software packages did you use for the mpeg 2 decoder card?
    I got a Dell branded margi dvd to go card and haven´t had a chance to get it working on my compaq armada 7770dmt laptop.
    Neither in windows 98, nor in windowx xp.
    It has a even faster 233mhz pentium mmx, 144mb total ram and supports pc cards.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      These are the drivers that worked, good luck :)
      www.dell.com/support/home/en-au/drivers/driversdetails?driverid=r20715

  • @MotFPS
    @MotFPS Год назад

    What an amazing collection. Thank you for sharing!

  • @luheartswarm4573
    @luheartswarm4573 Год назад +1

    that song on the opl3 chip sounds like something daft punk would come up with and I love it!

  • @longbottle
    @longbottle Год назад +1

    I dual-booted Windows 98 and Windows 2000 on my 110CT when I still had it. Upgraded that little beast to an 80GB spinning disk (many years before flash storage became affordable). I had a low-profile wifi card and a USB 2.0 card (with a dongle, not integrated ports like yours).

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      You had a nice setup for the time. And the same storage capacity as Johnny Mnemonic before he used the MemDoubler :)

    • @longbottle
      @longbottle Год назад

      @@JanusCycle I sold the whole setup on eBay a while ago to another collector. I also had an ASUS EEEPC 900, and a Viliv N5. The Libretto was always a favorite, though. It did a lot with a little. I even had the docking station with the PS2, cereal and parallel ports.

  • @yeqve
    @yeqve 11 месяцев назад

    I love your videos, I watch them in the evening to relax

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  11 месяцев назад

      That is really nice to hear, thank you

  • @benny_plgraciarz2714
    @benny_plgraciarz2714 Год назад +1

    i have that Libretto :) i still used it about 10 years ago with Sony Ericsson GPRS/WIFI Pcmcia card to free internet in no-secured networks :)

  • @LazyBunnyKiera
    @LazyBunnyKiera Год назад +2

    You have my ideal libretto setup. I've been wanting a 100ct for quite some time, along with all those cards. That zip click drive is amazing, as is the usb card.
    Like i've always genuinely wanted this kind of setup.
    I even had a cool idea for a PCMCIA to external PCI adapter, to pair with desktop PCI cards, maybe even a desktop PCI gpu. Like a voodoo card or something. (not PCIe)
    To add an eGPU to a libretto.. I think that would have been so cool.
    Edit: there's the Magma CB1F external pci expansion, but good luck finding one. :(

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      I would love an external PCI adapter. That would be amazing!

  • @dosdoktor
    @dosdoktor Год назад +4

    I have a 50CT, I overclocked it to 166MHz from 120MHz, since it's a Pentium MMX, works pretty good. I have a Cisco Aironet 350 and browse on it fairly frequently, as with it's 32MB RAM, it's pretty snappy around the web and as I installed a 32GB CF card where the old HDD was, but I'll need to design a new case for it as it's own is very brittle and after going in and out of it to change caps, do jumpers on that motherboard, switches for 200MHz in DOS (windows won't boot at 200MHz but DOS will just fine).That USB PCMCIA card is working in your machine, although in mine it doesn't, and it looks like the 50CT only has 16Bit support, as the slot is a tad different.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +1

      I have started looking into the overclock options. I wanted to get a better thermal camera before doing that though.

    • @justinmohns8279
      @justinmohns8279 Год назад

      Holy shit! That is incredible what you did to that tiny machine!

    • @dosdoktor
      @dosdoktor Год назад

      @@JanusCycle Overclocking is not increasing the machine's heat by a lot, like the PCMCIA is, and the stability is the only limit. You just have to disconnect a PLL pin and ground it through a resistor and wire the CPU BCLK, but I'll get the table for that.

  • @orinokonx01
    @orinokonx01 Год назад +1

    Great video for an amazingly awesome little machine.
    If the plastics weren't so brittle, I'd bring it with me everywhere. It's the best little DOS/ early Win9x laptop in my humble opinion.
    I really should finish that 3D model of the case...

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад

      3D printable? That would help many people if you shared it.

  • @myc0p
    @myc0p Год назад +2

    Johnny Mnemonic had only 160GB worth of space in his head.

    • @JanusCycle
      @JanusCycle  Год назад +2

      And that was with a MemDoubler.

    • @myc0p
      @myc0p Год назад +2

      @@JanusCycle I believe he was running out of expansion options as well :) At that time I had a similar hardware running GeexBox for videos.