What did we use before USB? | Nostalgia Nerd

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  • čas přidán 29. 05. 2024
  • Welcome to the evolution of USB... The path from the original IBM PC to now, has been a relatively short one, but still one tangled in webs of cables. USB seems so common place now, it's sometimes hard to imagine what we used before it? Well, thanks to a multitude of connections such as RS-232 (Serial), Centronics Parellel and the splendid Gameport, we were able to use many a device without issue.... maybe.
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Komentáře • 3,3K

  • @fastfiddler1625
    @fastfiddler1625 Před 5 lety +4286

    Ah USB. The standard connection where you have a 50/50 shot of having it the right direction, but it still somehow always takes three tries.

    • @AutoSia
      @AutoSia Před 5 lety +54

      Lol

    • @kinga6347
      @kinga6347 Před 5 lety +181

      Seriously. Why is that.

    • @mjhunter_classchannel3639
      @mjhunter_classchannel3639 Před 5 lety +70

      Richard Sleeve - Your comment is so true! I'm glad to hear someone else say it! Lol

    • @user-td8if4fb1v
      @user-td8if4fb1v Před 5 lety +217

      No longer true for USB Type C. Horray!

    • @jasonmurawski5877
      @jasonmurawski5877 Před 5 lety +142

      Ashley Boon yeah with usb c it takes 10 tires to position the device so it doesn’t fall out

  • @nobodyuknow2490
    @nobodyuknow2490 Před 4 lety +685

    "What did we use before USB?"
    A dark time of pain and suffering...

    • @johnfoltz8183
      @johnfoltz8183 Před 4 lety +54

      Especially if some of the pins bent or snapped off.

    • @Normal1855
      @Normal1855 Před 4 lety +17

      Exactly. People have it so easy now. They don't know the pain. 🤣

    • @mfhs_kill3r75
      @mfhs_kill3r75 Před 4 lety +11

      The dark age

    • @ianrwood21
      @ianrwood21 Před 4 lety +22

      @@johnfoltz8183 There you sat with a knife trying to straighten the pin - nightmare......

    • @LionWithTheLamb
      @LionWithTheLamb Před 4 lety +27

      @@ianrwood21 People that JAMMED the VGA plugs in when a pin was slightly off, mashed the pins and wonder why they have weird colors on the screen. Then the screwdowns are so tight that you have to wonder if Hercules owned that pc.

  • @arthurgphotography
    @arthurgphotography Před 4 lety +563

    But everyone over 35 has a box of those old cables "just in case."

    • @expansionpack4485
      @expansionpack4485 Před 3 lety +38

      Even I do, and I was born this century!

    • @sbalogh53
      @sbalogh53 Před 3 lety +8

      A big box under the bed and a drawer as well. I should probably dump the contents of the drawer into the box and use it for my various USB cables.

    • @grlt23
      @grlt23 Před 3 lety +19

      Thank God - I am not alone :) I still can - through adapters - to connect USB mouse -> ps2 -> com9 -> RS232.... You know - just in case ;)

    • @xys007
      @xys007 Před 3 lety +10

      My box of old cables takes more space then my PC. :p

    • @vincentschumann937
      @vincentschumann937 Před 3 lety +5

      i am 17 and i have multiple cable drawers with around 7kg of random cables

  • @Rebelnightwolfe
    @Rebelnightwolfe Před 5 lety +1233

    *slaps off-white computer case*
    "This baby uses PS/2 ports."
    "This thing can play PS2 games?"

    • @ametislady2
      @ametislady2 Před 5 lety +75

      Ironic cuz PS2 clone controlers for pc uses usb

    • @Isthatchicken01
      @Isthatchicken01 Před 4 lety +66

      When I first heard about a ps/2 port I thought the same thing. I still have that thought in the back of my mind whenever I see that port.

    • @IdiotStinky02
      @IdiotStinky02 Před 4 lety +20

      isint the ps/2 port a circular port that was once used for 1990s keyboard and mice?

    • @tj71520
      @tj71520 Před 4 lety +23

      @@IdiotStinky02 yes and Many modern desktop/tower computers still have such a port

    • @IdiotStinky02
      @IdiotStinky02 Před 4 lety +1

      @@tj71520 im sorry your about a month late

  • @tubey84
    @tubey84 Před 6 lety +1199

    Just seeing the title of this video sent me into a mid-life crisis due to the overwhelming realisation that I now live in a world where life prior to USB is 'retro' and needs a video reminding people of what the stone age was like.
    Thanks for that. Thanks.

    • @Wokiis
      @Wokiis Před 6 lety +72

      Lee K the future is now, old man!

    • @ChrisSmout
      @ChrisSmout Před 6 lety +55

      Except this is the kind of retro where trying to get equipment that use these old connectors to work is akin to pulling teeth. Totally understand your point. Anyone who didn't live with them will never understand how lucky they are to have easy, plug and play connectivity.

    • @reggiep75
      @reggiep75 Před 6 lety +39

      I remember doing computer training in the late 80's/early 90's at school and carried on when I left school and thought 'What the hell is this lunacy!?' I was always wondering why there was a perpetual faff about trying to get something to work and I quickly learned to fucking hate and despise that side of things with too many legacy type connections and other pointless tech filth.
      The arrival of USB was like harps and angels and if kids today want to know how easy they have it, hand them an AT/XT standard PC and throw them 4-8 cards to fuck about with and deliver the most efficient set up possible with the limitations offered.
      Soft cock millennial types will be crying in a corner within 30 seconds, the braver of the bunch will probably give up a few hours later after getting one thing to work and only the hardcore will succeed.... THE NEXT DAY!

    • @Brew78
      @Brew78 Před 6 lety +22

      Yeah, pretty much. My first reaction to the title was that it hurts a little inside to know that there's an actual generational difference between pre and post USB. Never did have a problem using a joystick on the game port on my sound card!

    • @PayneMaximus
      @PayneMaximus Před 6 lety +8

      Dude, I totally get you. I spent many hours, days, months of my youth trying to sort out how to transfer data fast enough, since serial connections sucked big time.
      Fortunately when I learned to use direct ethernet connections, it all went much better.

  • @meseyc
    @meseyc Před 5 lety +295

    I was going to complain as to why this video was made as I remember using these ports like it was yesterday. But I guess yesterday was 20 something years ago Jesus I have officially felt that first old man feeling.

    • @xjohnny1000
      @xjohnny1000 Před 4 lety +13

      The worst part about getting old is your life slowing becoming irrelevant.

    • @AndyRuddock
      @AndyRuddock Před 4 lety +24

      @@xjohnny1000 It's not that hard to stay relevant, and experience is always a plus. As long as you're willing to learn.

    • @Yora21
      @Yora21 Před 4 lety +11

      There are millions of adults now that were not even born in the 90s.

    • @sheilaolfieway1885
      @sheilaolfieway1885 Před 3 lety +3

      20? your a youngin'

    • @jimfarrell5004
      @jimfarrell5004 Před 3 lety +6

      When I first started working with computers, these interfaces were the only ones I knew about. I agree with you, meseyc, this does make me feel OLD!

  • @bjornerlendur4606
    @bjornerlendur4606 Před 4 lety +49

    28 March 2019
    I just installed a PCI-E WiFi card, and removed the dedicated graphics card, turning my worthless years-old gaming PC into an office PC.
    Few months later, I got a promotion for providing the best office PC my company has ever seen.

  • @erikadunne6855
    @erikadunne6855 Před 5 lety +72

    Ugh, I remember plugging in the mouse in with an godly sized plug that needed screwing in.

    • @sbalogh53
      @sbalogh53 Před 3 lety +9

      At least those cables and connectors were very strong and did not break like all the current flimsy USB cables and sockets.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 3 lety +3

      You screwed it in and could lift the entire machine with it. Same for the VGA (D-sub) and DVI ports. Once they're in, they stay in, unlike HDMI which comes lose just from turning the monitor.

    • @sbalogh53
      @sbalogh53 Před 3 lety +1

      @@HappyBeezerStudios ... I am terrified every time I have to unplug a HDMI plug because I never know if it will go in and work again. Hate them! I have even gone as far as buying an extra media box so I can have one for my projector and another for the TV so I don't have to swap the cables all the time.

  • @Cline3911
    @Cline3911 Před 5 lety +466

    When Ajay Bhatt passes away, I think he's going to get trolled. The pallbearers will start to lower his casket onto the lowering mechanism, lift it up, turn 180° and then lower it again.

    • @visheshl
      @visheshl Před 5 lety

      Lol

    • @IdleLancer
      @IdleLancer Před 5 lety +82

      But then they will have to lift it up again, turn it another 180 and lower it yet again. That's always the way it goes...

    • @thetid8852
      @thetid8852 Před 5 lety +13

      :D Ain't it the truth!! Unless of course they mark one side of his body with the USB symbol (even then they'll probably get it wrong...)

    • @lightningbug6234
      @lightningbug6234 Před 5 lety +3

      They'll probably need to do that a few times before it'll work

    • @chowjingxiang7337
      @chowjingxiang7337 Před 5 lety +4

      Then they will have to open the casket to check the direction before they can lower it in the right direction

  • @richardhead8264
    @richardhead8264 Před 6 lety +552

    25 pins to transmit *_serial_* data.
    Let that sink in.

    • @Burn_Angel
      @Burn_Angel Před 5 lety +63

      Your profile picture matches my reaction.

    • @Deadite9405
      @Deadite9405 Před 5 lety +94

      There's a few reasons for that. First of all, USB uses its two data pins for data going both ways. Old serial ports, on the other hand, couldn't do that. There had to be separate pins for each direction. Additionally, both the computers and the devices you were plugging into them were a lot dumber, and couldn't do nearly as much stuff automatically. Most of the additional pins are there for the computer or device to state that they are ready to send or receive information. Sending that over the data pins would have been possible (it's only about a byte of information), but parsing that information requires a lot more engineering compared to just checking whether the voltage on a particular pin is positive or negative as you need it.

    • @davidioanhedges
      @davidioanhedges Před 5 lety +54

      25 pin serial, and 9 pin serial actually only used 2 pins for data, the rest were signal ground, flow control and out of band signals (like ring indicator)

    • @Hi11is
      @Hi11is Před 5 lety +16

      Twenty-five pins, but sometimes only four were connected and only three wires used. There were a multitude of configurations with devices needing different connections.

    • @morgfarm1
      @morgfarm1 Před 5 lety +18

      I told that sink the plummer would be there ON FRIDAY, I'm not letting him in!

  • @noodleoflake965
    @noodleoflake965 Před 4 lety +245

    Why not UST? Trains are faster than buses.

    • @AsperGoat
      @AsperGoat Před 4 lety +47

      Then USP?
      Planes are Even faster
      And for that matter, go for USJ
      Jets are a thing

    • @noodleoflake965
      @noodleoflake965 Před 4 lety +7

      Capitán Capri sure

    • @stuffsmithonviva2316
      @stuffsmithonviva2316 Před 4 lety +35

      Why not usl?
      Light is faster than any of them by lots.

    • @deryabaygan-robinett1220
      @deryabaygan-robinett1220 Před 4 lety +14

      what about USR? rockets are quick, but since they are not as fast as light they can be affordable!

    • @flamixflame2685
      @flamixflame2685 Před 4 lety +5

      Guys why not USD
      I heard the data travels at the speed of dark

  • @soundguydon
    @soundguydon Před 4 lety +35

    IBM AT ... It was an acronym for "Advanced Technology" - That is why everyone (including IBM themselves) pronounced it "I B M A T" as in each separate letter, not the word "at."

    • @nowthatsjustducky
      @nowthatsjustducky Před 4 lety +5

      Actually, that isn't an acronym. Acronyms actually spell out words, or sounds that can be spoken as if words, like RADAR, NIC (Network Interface Controller), or BASIC (Beginner's All Purpose Symbolic Instruction Code) for example. AT, and XT are just initials for Advanced Technology, and eXtended Technology (though it should have been the PC ET in that regard), or Windows NT (for Nice Try or Not Today).

    • @reh3884
      @reh3884 Před 4 lety +3

      If it were an acronym it would be pronounced like the word "at." What you are talking about in an initialism.

    • @Liggliluff
      @Liggliluff Před 4 lety +1

      Aybimat

  • @BaronVonQuiply
    @BaronVonQuiply Před 6 lety +147

    My introduction to USB was via an ad on the back of a guitarrist magazine reading _"What's Universal Cereal?? And why's it on a bus?"_

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 6 lety +22

      A joke that never get's old.

    • @greggv8
      @greggv8 Před 5 lety +10

      The Universal Cereal is corn flakes.

    • @keithbrown7685
      @keithbrown7685 Před 5 lety +1

      @@greggv8 No it's rice crispies. Just ask the vinyl community. ! : )

    • @mattbaker5757
      @mattbaker5757 Před 4 lety +1

      My introduction to USB was back in the 80's when I bought an Atari 800 computer that used SIO connectors that were the precursor of USB, invented at Atari by one of the two gentlemen credited with the invention of USB (I forget which of the two it was though) Us Atari retro-enthusiasts have our SIO ports transfering at rates of 127K today, and we use SIO2USB adapters to communicate with a PC via USB to transfer or load files from "virtual" disk drives on the PC!

  • @TheSam1902
    @TheSam1902 Před 5 lety +148

    USB, Unicode, HTTP, these are the miracles of modern technology

    • @aviko9560
      @aviko9560 Před 5 lety

      No u

    • @TheLawrenceWade
      @TheLawrenceWade Před 4 lety +19

      Indoor plumbing. Safe food in the grocery store. Vacuum tubes. Silicon. Medical care. Mass-production. Space travel.
      USB, Unicode, HTTP would not have been possible without the above things that, again, we take for granted.

    • @TheLawrenceWade
      @TheLawrenceWade Před 4 lety +16

      And electricity, to our homes, in a safe and reliable supply.

    • @Ahmadsyar
      @Ahmadsyar Před 4 lety +4

      Samuel Prevost miracles are luck. These are innovation. It requires effort to invent.

    • @RyanTosh
      @RyanTosh Před 4 lety +20

      Don't forget about modern encryption...where would we be without AES, RSA, TLS, SSL, etc.

  • @TonyRule
    @TonyRule Před 4 lety +34

    I remember these days well - having to load serial port drivers high to conserve as much base memory as possible, eliminating IRQ and DMA conflicts with sound cards and serial ports and transferring files between computers with parallel cables.
    Meanwhile, video (display) ports have gone the opposite direction rather than the simplification and standardisation across devices of USB.

    • @SuperTux20
      @SuperTux20 Před rokem

      If we could just cut it all down to HDMI and VGA I'd be happy
      (I know some people are happier with analog connections rather than digital)

    • @IANSYT
      @IANSYT Před rokem +4

      @@SuperTux20 hdmi is terrible, displayport is much better, as for analog ports dvi is much better than vga

    • @0LoneTech
      @0LoneTech Před rokem

      @@IANSYT DVI-A isn't much better than VGA; it's the exact same signaling in a subtly different connector. Connectors like DB13W3 used coaxial connections to really preserve analog signal integrity. Incidentally, USB type C has generated a new generation of confusion with different cables and devices doing different things on the same connector; very recently HDMI over type C thankfully died (as has HDMI type B), so type C now has only about 6 different protocols left just for video signals. It's not really helping that every minor revision of USB seems to rename the existing protocols, having started in the perfectly insane order low-full-high-super...

    • @LC-uh8if
      @LC-uh8if Před 2 měsíci

      I got my CompTIA A+ in 2001. Had to learn all about IRQ and DMA deconfliction. Not that I remember how the details now.

  • @JordanViknar
    @JordanViknar Před 4 lety +257

    And USB-C is VERY VERY slowly choking USB...
    At least this one always inserts itself on the first try !

    • @FateStorm
      @FateStorm Před 4 lety +50

      USB-C is USB, what the hell are you talking about?

    • @JordanViknar
      @JordanViknar Před 4 lety +13

      @@FateStorm The ports are different.
      Although I'll admit the technologies used are EXTREMELY similar, they have many differences, and Thunderbolt USB-C have the most differences.
      For exemple, there's no longer a master/slave structure.

    • @liamwelsh5565
      @liamwelsh5565 Před 4 lety +7

      @@FateStorm He's talking about USB 3.0. USB-C is the child of Displayport and USB 3.0

    • @FateStorm
      @FateStorm Před 4 lety +45

      You all are bunch of uneducated people. First if all, there is USB-A, USB-B and USB-C. USB-A and USB-B have Micro and Mini prefixes, and then just no prefix. then there are versions of them. USB 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2.

    • @JordanViknar
      @JordanViknar Před 4 lety +1

      @@liamwelsh5565 No it isn't... Completely.

  • @fluffibuni8663
    @fluffibuni8663 Před 6 lety +85

    In the days before home Wi-Fi, I remember soldering together a very long (trying to think if it was 7 metres or 10 metres) RS232 cable so that my flatmate and I could connect our PCs of the time and play Doom against each other ... it was so much fun playing against each other in different rooms ... I swore at him so much lol

    • @tomf3150
      @tomf3150 Před 5 lety +3

      But with modems you could call your friend modem and play.

    • @ShadowEO
      @ShadowEO Před 5 lety +7

      @@tomf3150 but with a null modem, you don't tie up your phone line. Also OP says flatmate, meaning they were in the same apartment and likely had one phone line, wouldn't really be as efficient/easy as just a null modem cable and IPX packet driver. :3

    • @mephInc
      @mephInc Před 5 lety +4

      My friends dad worked as the IT guy at a large company so he always brought home the latest and greatest networking gear for us to play with. I remember looking at a rack mounted 100mb switch and drooling.
      ...I miss LAN parties.

    • @djhaloeight
      @djhaloeight Před 5 lety

      me and a friend used to dialup into each other’s computers and play. super fun.

    • @MentasmUK
      @MentasmUK Před 2 lety +1

      My neighbour and I did the same thing between our houses with a super long cable, so we could play Populous and Stunt Car Racer. Now that was laggy!

  • @rexy_1000
    @rexy_1000 Před 5 lety +194

    I rely on subtitles often and this video is great for having them and NOT auto-Generated.

    • @MoonLiteNite
      @MoonLiteNite Před 5 lety +27

      I keep CC open, always nice to see when creators actually sub their videos! none of that auto generated trash!

    • @750tiprogamer
      @750tiprogamer Před 4 lety +4

      I'm late but it's also nice that it's not in korean for absolutely no reason

    • @digital_gadget
      @digital_gadget Před 4 lety +2

      It doesn't always match what he says, which is awkward for someone like me who can hear somewhat.

    • @dsgorham
      @dsgorham Před 3 lety

      I love the easter egg at the end :)

    • @TheLegendOfLame
      @TheLegendOfLame Před 3 lety

      @@MoonLiteNite they get better everyday from it's learning algorithms. Providing captions make it so the auto generated captions can be more accurate as they learn what it "sounds like"

  • @Ni5ei
    @Ni5ei Před 4 lety +421

    Funny how Apple is never part of these standardisation groups.
    They've always done it "their way", leading to tons of obsolete hardware.
    In the end they follow the standards, albeit a few years later :)

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Před 4 lety +34

      Boooooo Apple.

    • @miloskukilo7093
      @miloskukilo7093 Před 4 lety +22

      They use USB on their Macs and their iPads. Rumors say that they will start using it on iPhone too.

    • @johanbogg9158
      @johanbogg9158 Před 4 lety +56

      Apple was one of the first manufacturers to use USB, the first to ship all notebooks with 802.11 networking as the base config, they helped intel develop thunderbolt, was part of the development of ieee 1394 and so on. Yeah all those were years ago but still valid things

    • @MattMcIrvin
      @MattMcIrvin Před 4 lety +54

      To their credit, the original iMac bet heavily on USB pretty early on, and that was one of the things that really popularized it.
      Before that, their keyboard and mouse connections were generally done through ADB (Apple Desktop Bus), a system that allowed daisy-chaining and used a round 4-pin mini-DIN connector. The biggest problem with it besides being proprietary was that it wasn't safe to plug or unplug devices with the machine turned on (though people did it anyway).

    • @NFITC1
      @NFITC1 Před 4 lety +5

      Except they still have proprietary RAM so they can charge twice as much as PC RAM costs. It's the effect of using Big Endian memory architecture.

  • @Sadik15B
    @Sadik15B Před 5 lety +27

    Ahhh i remember the days when we used to call usb useless serial bus.
    I swear i saw once a really early 90's compaq with an usb and a ps2 port guess it was a 486

    • @SomePotato
      @SomePotato Před 4 lety +6

      Can't have been early 90s. USB didn't exist back then.

  • @RiasatSalminSami
    @RiasatSalminSami Před 6 lety +142

    Ports have been standardized to single USB. But I still can't manage my wires. The back of my PC looks like Pubic hair.

    • @badspy100
      @badspy100 Před 5 lety

      so am i.after 25 years ,i still cannot put them in order.

    • @mephInc
      @mephInc Před 5 lety +18

      Back then "cable management" wasn't a thing.
      I believe I heard "rats nest" well over a thousand times during my youth. Once you got a piece of gear actually working, you never touched ANYTHING for fear of it crashing.

    • @restlessgoose
      @restlessgoose Před 5 lety +1

      i dont give a damn about cable mangment because i only care about if the pc works or not.

    • @restlessgoose
      @restlessgoose Před 5 lety

      @@badspy100 Its simple. See the square holes on the metal plug then if the holes appear solid black then its the right way. if the square holes are white/dark gray/blue then turn your x postition 180[degreess] right/flip over.

    • @badspy100
      @badspy100 Před 5 lety

      @@restlessgoose i am talking about cable management. lol

  • @fintux
    @fintux Před 5 lety +27

    Thanks for this nostalgia splash! I have some comments, though. At 1:53 - this is actually a 16-bit ISA card, in a slot that accepts 8-bit and 16-bit ISA and 32-bit VLB cards (at 2:13 one can see the shorter, 8-bit-only ISA slots). Also, the card at 3:46 is an I/O card, which in addition to serial and parallel ports has pin connectors for hard disk, floppy disk, joystick (I assume the "game" port refers to that), and another COM port (the third pin header being for jumpers to configure the board).

  • @oooChickenatorXooo
    @oooChickenatorXooo Před 5 lety +37

    2:26 Pronunciation note: nobody ever said "at" to refer to the AT, they always said each letter individually, "aay tee" as contrasted with the older technology, which was XT

  • @Rayzor714
    @Rayzor714 Před 4 lety +58

    I remember SCSI (Small Computer System Interface "Skuzzy")

    • @lokeshchandak3660
      @lokeshchandak3660 Před 4 lety +8

      i know about SCSI only because my SATA to USB adapter shows up as UAS (USB attached SCSI).
      But that makes it:
      Universal Serial Bus Attached Small Computer System Interface for Serial Advanced Technology Attachment
      USBASCSIFSATA.
      Find me a longer acronym, I dare ya.

    • @bwgti
      @bwgti Před 4 lety +2

      Don’t banks and high security data still use SCSI?

    • @thihal123
      @thihal123 Před 4 lety +2

      I hated the thickness of SCSI cables but back then it was a superior connection

    • @johncrowerdoe5527
      @johncrowerdoe5527 Před 4 lety +1

      @@bwgti SCSI provides no extra security. But from the 1980s until the 2010s, hard disk factories have consistently refused to sell their fastest drives (10000 rpm and 15000 rpm) with the IDE/ATA/SATA/USB interface, forcing high speed computers to install SCSI/SAS adapters. Similarly very few companies were selling adapters for plugging in more than 8 disks without SCSI.

    • @yuttadechvejpongsa2070
      @yuttadechvejpongsa2070 Před 4 lety +3

      Yeah, and where is that f**king terminator!!!

  • @dj_paultuk7052
    @dj_paultuk7052 Před 6 lety +71

    Who remembers connecting 2 PC's together with a serial cable and using "LapLink" software in dos to transfer files between machines at a whopping 115k.

    • @FuzedBox
      @FuzedBox Před 5 lety +9

      I did that, but not for LapLink. I used it for DooM, the first Command & Conquer and Red Alert games with a friend, and briefly for Jedi Knight until we upgraded our modems to 56k and moved on to IP games, and later the Zone.
      Good times. I do miss the old days, but I do still use a lot of oldschool console copiers, so at least I still get to fiddle with floppies and parallel.

    • @photovincent
      @photovincent Před 5 lety +1

      f29 retaliator. Couldn’t use the network, but did use a null-modem serial canle for two-player gaming. My graduation took a lot longer because of it

    • @Ozzah
      @Ozzah Před 5 lety

      Nope, but I do remember X-Tree Gold!

    • @e1woqf
      @e1woqf Před 5 lety +2

      The Norton Commander could connect 2 PC's as well for file transfer.

    • @xuNsh1ne
      @xuNsh1ne Před 5 lety +3

      I just opened pornhub on both PC's and used FapLink

  • @stefanl5183
    @stefanl5183 Před 6 lety +11

    Serial ports are still alive and well. They may be less common on your average home PC, but there are still a lot of devices that have them for control and monitoring. Things like industrial controllers, and POS equipment still use it. As do things like commercial satellite receives and dish movers like your local cable company uses to receiver the TV channels they rebroadcast to you. It"s also a common interface for device programmers and things like JTAG adapters. The reason why, is because it's easy to interface to, from a hardware point of view, but even more so from a software point of view. In modern day protected mode operating systems you can easily write software that talks directly to a COM port. YOU SIMPLY CANNOT DO THAT WITH USB. To do the same with USB, you'd have to write a device driver and you'd have to write one for every device you connect. Then you'd have to make your software talk to the driver. And you'd have to get the driver signed by microsoft or else Windows will complain about it. It's a lot more complicated than using the serial port. And on top of that, for low speed devices that don't require massive bandwidth, it's actually less efficient and performs far worse, because USB is a polled bus and not interrupt driven like the COM ports are. If you have a low bandwidth device connected to a COM port that only occasionally sends and receives simple commands, the PC can pay it no attention and do other tasks when there is no activity. When activity occurs it will get an interrupt and can respond then. With a polled bus like USB, the system has to constantly check for activity. This is a huge waste, especially for a device that only needs to send a few bytes back and forth every once in a while.

    • @shannonrhoads7099
      @shannonrhoads7099 Před 5 lety

      And many of the truths we cling to depend entirely on our point of view... (grin)

    • @ch.3.mist123
      @ch.3.mist123 Před 5 lety +1

      True, many embedded systems use them. I think DOS made these old ports more difficult to use, partly because of DOS itself but also the plethora of flexibility.

    • @williamhaynes7089
      @williamhaynes7089 Před 5 lety +1

      I have to set up printers for use in Point of sale that use serial ports to communicate, also Grocery store receiving uses EDI technology called DEX to communicate with vendors making delivery with handheld devices..

    • @Coolman13355
      @Coolman13355 Před 2 lety

      Some POS peripherals I've seen physically connect over USB, but appear and act like COM devices.

  • @tofu_golem
    @tofu_golem Před 4 lety +13

    Ha! I remember when we had to install add-on cards to add some of those ports to computers, and was relieved when they started putting those headers on the motherboard. Heck, I remember being impressed with PS/2 ports when they were introduced ("Gosh" I thought. "Those PS/2 ports are so small!")

  • @Agorante
    @Agorante Před 4 lety +4

    This was nostalgic for me. I taught Data Communications at local colleges in the nineties. I got into it from teaching official Novell networking classes but when I moved to Microsoft certified courses I also began teaching general data communications. Most of my course was a detailed examination of communication protocols which got me into teaching pin outs which in turn got me into identifying connectors. Most of the students were trying to prepare for being some kind of on-site microcomputer hardware guy at some of the many new companies then starting up.
    I was then a manager of such people in my day job and I knew that to be accepted as a PC guru you had to recognize the various cables and connectors. The guru must never say "What the hell is that?" when confronted by a strange cable. And in those days there was a lot of diversity. So I began collecting weird and obscure wires and plugs. I then started to bring them to class and have quizzes to see who could identify them. This was always fun. It was certainly more interesting than my lectures on data packet formats.

  • @Monkey_SK
    @Monkey_SK Před 6 lety +45

    PS2 remember so many people bending the pins on a mouse or keyboard because they were ramming them in the wrong way.

    • @alexhayden2303
      @alexhayden2303 Před 5 lety

      A very common problem!

    • @TheRealTrimBrady
      @TheRealTrimBrady Před 5 lety +2

      sounds kinky

    • @mephInc
      @mephInc Před 5 lety +2

      @Barthy Col
      USB. 50/50 chance of getting it right and you get it wrong 100% of the time.... even after intensely staring at both ends of the connection. lol

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Před 5 lety +1

      PS/2 wasn't meant to be plugged and unplugged frequently.
      Which is kind of a problem for laptop users wanting to unplug the mouse so the connector doesn't brake off when they carry the laptop around

  • @diegofloor
    @diegofloor Před 6 lety +19

    So many companies involved in making the USB and still no one considered making it visually asymmetrical. And it's never the first try and amazingly never the second try either, even though the thing only has two possibilities. Good thing it keeps evolving though, now there are asymmetrical versions.

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 6 lety +5

      I still think jacks would be better as even though the new USB is reversible that just means it can be plugged in two ways instead of 1, a jack has no orientation. If modern jacks can carry 4 or 5 rings and USB only has 4 connections then they missed an opportunity to create a bus that is as foolproof as a headphone jack and even a toddler could plug in easily.

    • @KaitouKaiju
      @KaitouKaiju Před 6 lety +6

      It's already visually asymmetrical given there's a bar of plastic on one side. People just don't bother to remember which direction their ports face.

    • @expendableround6186
      @expendableround6186 Před 5 lety

      diegofloor
      i.imgur.com/7ULpwu4.jpg

    • @TheLaXandro
      @TheLaXandro Před 5 lety +2

      USB-A was always supposed to be the end that stays plugged into your machine, while USB-B, the one with slanted bottoms, was the one that was supposed to get plugged and unplugged all the time. The common mini and micro USB are technically considered USB-B, and you may find the old big USB-B even on modern printers.

    • @decb.7959
      @decb.7959 Před 5 lety

      @@krashd USB C is reversible and has 24 pins, and it can charge a laptop.

  • @denniswalsh8476
    @denniswalsh8476 Před 5 lety +5

    Great video. No one in the USA called the IBB advanced technology the "at" machine. It was always referred to as the letters "A-T". I bought one around 1986. It was killer expensive and upgrading memory took a card and the chips were... er... killer expensive.

  • @AmazinglyAwkward
    @AmazinglyAwkward Před 4 lety +33

    3:57 I can't get over this advert

    • @PilotAwe
      @PilotAwe Před 4 lety +6

      You should have used 4:04 because of meme purposes and it actually shows the picture you meant

    • @persomnus
      @persomnus Před 4 lety +2

      Having the woman just lay on the table with the pc is just awkward to say the least.

    • @johncrowerdoe5527
      @johncrowerdoe5527 Před 4 lety +3

      @@persomnus Floor, not table. That's where we all assembled our PCs.

  • @andrewmorris483
    @andrewmorris483 Před 6 lety +604

    Somebody needs to invent a Cereal Port for computers. Think about controlling breakfast with a specialized port.

    • @LeanyG11
      @LeanyG11 Před 5 lety +57

      Imagine overclocking your cereal lmao

    • @chlum6295
      @chlum6295 Před 5 lety +44

      now introducing intel flakes. compatible with any cereal port. order NOWW

    • @LeanyG11
      @LeanyG11 Před 5 lety +16

      Windows Cereal XP

    • @Burn_Angel
      @Burn_Angel Před 5 lety +13

      And I get beer with the tab key.

    • @therwfer
      @therwfer Před 5 lety +2

      para lel

  • @sl3o
    @sl3o Před 6 lety +52

    8:28 having midi on the joystick port actually killed 3 birds with the one stone as the midi connection could be used by joysticks for force feedback.

    • @BaronVonQuiply
      @BaronVonQuiply Před 6 lety +7

      *connects joystick to sequencer and plays a song*

    • @rashidisw
      @rashidisw Před 6 lety

      Annoying part of bundled joystick port into the sound card is you can only have 1 joystick port and most clone cards did't have more than 1 port, not that i knew of.
      The problem got complicated as you can't install another card due to resources compatibility issues.
      I still remember before that older program can access 2 joystick ports for same/split-screen 2-players game.
      For example: Microsoft GW-Basic supports 2 joysticks, using its STICK & STRIG functions.

    • @tomf3150
      @tomf3150 Před 5 lety +1

      Game port were IRQ driven and that was cool cuz no input lag. On the other hand allocating irq was a nightmare, and usually several devices/components/peripheral had to share the same irq.

    • @big0bad0brad
      @big0bad0brad Před 5 lety +1

      That's why it's a personal computer ;) If your friends want to play, tell them to bring their own and network (or serial link) it all up!

    • @AlexOjideagu2
      @AlexOjideagu2 Před 5 lety +1

      You could buy a cheap 2 player adaptor for midi ports

  • @kght222
    @kght222 Před 5 lety +17

    do a video about how bad "plug and play" and usb in general was when it first came out. in hindsight i am amazed at how well named usb actually turned out to be.

    • @jmemusic
      @jmemusic Před 5 lety

      Your comment just make me remember about Bill Gates and his engineer introducing Windows 98 Plug and Play capacities with a scanner that produced a blue screen. This one a Kodak moment an token in video:
      czcams.com/video/LfNQOOr9aR8/video.html
      At the end it was the scanner fault, lol

  • @zelphx
    @zelphx Před 5 lety +279

    I've never heard AT pronounced as "at".

    • @telephony
      @telephony Před 4 lety +32

      Me neither.
      I've always pronounced it, /ahy'tee/" :-O

    • @giftedone6766
      @giftedone6766 Před 4 lety +3

      well you have now :p

    • @littlegoobie
      @littlegoobie Před 4 lety +8

      for this very reason, it bugged the crap out of me early on every time i heard someone say "SAY-tah" for sata. Chances are, the person pronouncing it that way was not into computers when it was just ATA.

    • @grklein00
      @grklein00 Před 4 lety +7

      Because nobody pronounced it like that back then.

    • @titonysarmiento9641
      @titonysarmiento9641 Před 4 lety +19

      i wonder how he'd pronounce XT.
      ksst?

  • @AntiBunnyStudio
    @AntiBunnyStudio Před 6 lety +34

    Saw the title and said to myself. "What a dumb question, of course we had this mess of gameports, serial ports, DIN ports, PS/2 and all other things both standard and proprietary. Who doesn't remember that?" Then it occurred to me. When was the last time I had a computer without USB ports? It doesn't seem like that long ago that USB made computing so much easier, but it's really been a long time hasn't it?

    • @Kajifox
      @Kajifox Před 5 lety +2

      Just got my very first PC -- as in desktop -- with no other ports onboard but USB, and Ethernet and an unused DP. Not even a PS/2 port anymore.
      It's a strange new world.

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 5 lety +2

      I'm still a holdout for dedicated PS/2 keyboard port.
      A PS/2 keyboard could still be used to operate the machine when USB just wasn't working. Maybe it's an old problem already solved long ago, but I still like having the fallback - even if it's only ever used to access BIOS and toggle the "Legacy USB" option - because not having PS/2 when you _need_ it can be crippling.

    • @maxmustermann1455
      @maxmustermann1455 Před 5 lety +1

      P
      yeah it's solved long ago. To do what you suggested anyway. Haven't had a BIOS/UEFI that didn't respond to USB Keyboards ever.
      The problem was more with operating systems. Like Windows XP/7 not having drivers for your USB controller and thus not recognizing your keyboard.
      If that's fixable by "Legacy USB" (usually isn't) you could still do that with only a USB keyboard.
      Still use PS/2 as well tho. In theory it's still better. True N-Key rollover and in theory lower input lag, as PS/2 can directly interrupt your CPU, USB can't.
      But I just use it, because the cheap OEM keyboard I'm using is PS2 and I can't be bothered to switch to something "better".

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 5 lety

      Max Mustermann Agreed. And even NKRO is a non-issue these days ... except on the very cheapest and junkiest of keyboards.
      26KRO (or better) is available on many USB keyboards ... and I don't have 26 fingers to type with anyways, lol.

    • @Charlesb88
      @Charlesb88 Před 5 lety +1

      The first mainstream computer to use USB was the original Apple Bondi Blue iMac from 1997 and that was a little over 20 years ago now. That means that their may likely be a not insignificant portion of the audience for this video that was born on or after the 1st mainstream USB equipped computers or who was to young in the early early to mid 90’s to remember what sort of ports the family computer used back then.

  • @thomashillebrandt8945
    @thomashillebrandt8945 Před 6 lety +64

    That battery is about to spew its guts all over that motherboard. Get it out of there!!!

    • @magreger
      @magreger Před 6 lety +1

      I was thinking the same thing!

  • @SuperCookieGaming_
    @SuperCookieGaming_ Před 5 lety +4

    I was too young to live in a time of multiple expansion cards but i still like the visual of a bunch of slots being used by expansion cards. so much so that i when i started building an injest machine for converting all the physical storage (cd,dvd,vhs) to a server i went all out and have almost ever slot used up. it looks great.

  • @thedamntrain5481
    @thedamntrain5481 Před 4 lety +60

    Apple: what about no?
    Just buy overpriced adapters from us

    • @Robbnlinzi
      @Robbnlinzi Před 4 lety

      It worked for the apple pockets.

    • @jamesisaac7684
      @jamesisaac7684 Před 3 lety +1

      They introduced lightning because USB C took to time.

  • @drspod
    @drspod Před 6 lety +144

    Nobody misses configuring IRQs and DMA addresses to try to fix hardware incompatibilities!! Oh what's that, you bought a new printer? Now your sound card doesn't work! Oh you bought a new graphics card? Now your modem is crashing!
    I'm getting a cold sweat just thinking about it.

    • @Boba0514
      @Boba0514 Před 5 lety +9

      shit m8, that sound horrible, i'm glad i came after that time...

    • @compgamer89
      @compgamer89 Před 5 lety +19

      > IRQs and DMA addresses
      Ah, the good old days of the *original* "Plug and Play".

    • @leerv.
      @leerv. Před 5 lety +29

      Don't forget editing autoexec.bat and config.sys!
      PnP used to really mean "plug and pray" :p

    • @alicetechtipsytp6250
      @alicetechtipsytp6250 Před 5 lety +6

      The oldest computer I had wasn't even a DOS computer, it was a Windows XP computer and even then after DOS, NO ONE had to configure IRQ and DMA adresses to fix hardware incompatibilities.

    • @photovincent
      @photovincent Před 5 lety +8

      “missing” would be overstating it, but my was it satisfying to get it to work. Oh, and add a good himem configuration to that... bliss

  • @philscomputerlab
    @philscomputerlab Před 6 lety +328

    Took me back to the days of using a null modem cable and ZIP drive :D What I found fascinating was that initially serial communication was inferior, and all the fast technologies used parallel data transfer. And then things changed, and everything went serial (SATA, USB) and outdid parallel technologies.

    • @Colddirector
      @Colddirector Před 6 lety +15

      PhilsComputerLab Makes me wonder, if parrallel was still being developed today, no matter how unrealistic that is, what form would it take? How fast would it be? Would people find a use for it?

    • @srlagarto1
      @srlagarto1 Před 6 lety +36

      The problem with parallel is that because you have so many wires transmitting data in close proximity to one another, interference becomes a huge problem as you increase cable length or speed. Serial allows for better shielding.
      Perhaps parallel could be faster with the proper shielding, but it would be about as thick as eight USB cables bundled together, which isn't practical. If you do that, you might as well use eight USB cables and drive eight times as many devices.

    • @mikgus
      @mikgus Před 6 lety +28

      You are talking about PCI Express, up to sixteen serial lines running in parallel at a speed of 16GB/s (V.3)

    • @mindphaserxy
      @mindphaserxy Před 6 lety +4

      Phil I still used dial-up up until 2001-2002. During the turn of the century everyone was using PCI based WinModems that totally sucked up CPU resources and were generally slow. I did everything I could to round up a serial based hardware modem and it was simply better than those WinModems. It had to be powered but that was a small nuisance.

    • @philscomputerlab
      @philscomputerlab Před 6 lety +3

      David Alan I Han an external US Robotics. All the magazines recommended it.

  • @thomasjenkins5727
    @thomasjenkins5727 Před 4 lety +29

    Once again, CZcams brings me to something "educational" that properly belongs in the horror genre.

  • @jetjazz05
    @jetjazz05 Před 4 lety +5

    USB C and we've finally made it, you can power, transfer data, plug in peripherals, and transmit video in high def on USB. It only took 1/3 of a century! lol

    • @jkobain
      @jkobain Před 3 lety

      It's not over yet! ;D

  • @TheSeanUhTron
    @TheSeanUhTron Před 6 lety +8

    It may have been worth mentioning the USB->PS/2 adapters many keyboards and mice were shipped with in the early 2000's to help support old PC's. I have a small container full of those things!

  • @burretploof
    @burretploof Před 6 lety +9

    "Splendid" is not exactly the word I'd use for the connector chaos that reigned before USB! 😃 But it was indeed kind of fun to figure this crap out back then. I remember being super proud when I managed to connect two computers via their parallel ports and set up Windows 98 correctly to allow transferring files.

  • @DrDroogkloot
    @DrDroogkloot Před 4 lety +5

    The good old days of multiple kinds of connectors. I can do that again with my pentium 1 laptop i bought this week. It has no usb.
    Pure nostalgia

  • @johnalanelson
    @johnalanelson Před 4 lety +8

    I should also point out that the first generation of printers and scanners which used USB 1/1.1 were horribly unreliable and gave USB a bad name which took a while for it to overcome. Useless Serial Bus is how many called it.

  • @SDRob01
    @SDRob01 Před 6 lety +68

    It was fun when you went to unscrew the little thumb screws and both the screw and the part it screwed into both unscrewed out. :-/

    • @maxmustermann1455
      @maxmustermann1455 Před 5 lety +13

      Still happens with VGA and DVI cables quite a lot

    • @kennethbouchard8643
      @kennethbouchard8643 Před 5 lety +2

      Yup that happened a lot so you kept your nut drivers handy.

    • @Ozzah
      @Ozzah Před 5 lety +3

      And then the nut would fall out and possibly short out your card. Those thumb screws were a nightmare also because they'd catch on every cable, making it impossible to pull the cable out from under your desk.

    • @2thinkcritically
      @2thinkcritically Před 5 lety +3

      My favourite was always the clueless customers that tugged and tugged on their monitor cables until the port was physically ripped from the board; and then they'd get all shitty when you pointed it out to them.

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Před 5 lety

      Happened to me when upgrading my motherboard...

  • @DamienCooley
    @DamienCooley Před 6 lety +27

    I remember when USB first came around. The guy at my local computer shop told me about it - and I couldn't quite believe it. It sounded amazing and so cool. First time I used one it was so amazing not having to mess with DMA and IRQ settings. Honestly would have never believed that they would have been as prevalent as they continue to be today at the time.

    • @aaroninclub
      @aaroninclub Před 6 lety

      .....mean while Mac OS users have NEVER had to deal with IRQs.... So it’s ironic when people think of Mac OS as the inferior OS. Sure, it’s not as designed for games as windows is, but Mac OS can do things windows isn’t as good at as well.

    • @DamienCooley
      @DamienCooley Před 6 lety +5

      Aaron Powell Macs aren't inherently bad they just don't cater to the people that want customization and tinkering that you can get with PC. If you like your system out of the box, Macs are good I guess... If not overpriced.

    • @blamauciXXX
      @blamauciXXX Před 6 lety +4

      Actually back in those days you could customize Macintoshes really easily. My Powermacintosh G3 had all kinds of expansion options. It had PCI slots, an AGP Slot, and some other slots I don't quite know what they were. but non customizable macs are something from the recent past.

    • @BraddahSpliff
      @BraddahSpliff Před 6 lety +5

      Also USB is Plug N Play hot swappable. Fucking amazing at the time it came out.

    • @aaroninclub
      @aaroninclub Před 6 lety

      Dragon Chrysophy are you forgetting how customisable the first Mac was 😛😛😛

  • @skyler948
    @skyler948 Před 4 lety +24

    Me: it has 2 USB 2 ports 4 USB 3 ports and 1 Ps/2 por--
    friend: so it can play Ps/2 games?

    • @sidewinder3411
      @sidewinder3411 Před 4 lety +1

      stolen

    • @googa9965
      @googa9965 Před 3 lety +1

      @@sidewinder3411 ok? not like anyone cares.

    • @SabirTheHuman
      @SabirTheHuman Před 3 lety +1

      @@sidewinder3411 Jokes can't be stolen, they can only be shared, because someone says a joke and someone else thought it was very funny and decides to share it doesn't mean it's stolen. By the way, does "stealing" a joke hurt people monetarily like how real stealing does, I'll let you answer that.

  • @dorusie5
    @dorusie5 Před 4 lety +36

    "What did we do before this miraculous connection became commonplace?"
    Suffer.

  • @TehSmokeyMan
    @TehSmokeyMan Před 6 lety +12

    Ahh, yeah! Legacy connectors... Those glorious days of bulky and indestructible (dodgy micro USB, anyone? :P) connectors... :D
    THose evenings where you'd jury-rig a crossover CAT5 UTP for a multiplayer session, or bend that ground pin on your VGA connector to have it fit...
    Yeah, those days a baller PC had all its slots full of all sorts of exotic expansion cards, the more obscure, the better :P

    • @zusurs
      @zusurs Před 6 lety +1

      Sebastian Bemrose Right in the feels, bro..

  • @Cochese
    @Cochese Před 6 lety +11

    there is something i am missing in this video, and pretty relevant. The fact that before plug and play, every connection has to been set manually in facts of DMA and IRQ, sometimes forced using jumpers or dip switches next to the cables

    • @zusurs
      @zusurs Před 6 lety

      Cochese ...and terminator plugs for the internal flat flex cables.

    • @thatdumbguy6171
      @thatdumbguy6171 Před 6 lety +2

      oh the days when something went wrong and spending hours troubleshooting jumpers and irq settings and everything else with no internet and only manuals and you own experience

    • @kallewirsch2263
      @kallewirsch2263 Před 5 lety +2

      @@thatdumbguy6171
      But ... you could trouble shoot it.
      Today if the modern Plug&Pray driver just refuses to work, you are doomed.

  • @jk1138
    @jk1138 Před 4 lety +1

    Thanks for the nostalgia trip! I sold computers and peripherals from the early 1990s to the early 2000s and witnessed most of this first hand. Now it's a USB-C world! I also had an Iomega ZIP drive and it had the dreaded "click of death"...

  • @madmax5923
    @madmax5923 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember using Laplink over serial, then later parallel which was amazing at the time. I always carried my laplink cables and software with me everywhere. I feel old.

  • @AccountInactive
    @AccountInactive Před 5 lety +16

    This makes me feel old and I'm not even 30 yet. Excuse me while I go clean the gunk from my ball mouse.

  • @Petertronic
    @Petertronic Před 6 lety +164

    You only gave SCSI a passing mention, when I worked on making computers for video editing in the late 90's, SCSI and SCSI hard drives were King, everything had to have them.

    • @builder396
      @builder396 Před 6 lety +4

      I actually had a SCSI hard drive back on a Win98 machine.

    • @theoriginalbabycub
      @theoriginalbabycub Před 6 lety +4

      And there's were so many variants of SCSI ports as well.

    • @builder396
      @builder396 Před 6 lety

      Well, I was 6 at the time so god knows what type of SCSI port I had. I was good enough with PCs to run down most of the specs, but not good enough to open the thing up and know exactly what port was what.

    • @tygattyche2545
      @tygattyche2545 Před 6 lety +11

      Yeah, and technically you could connect everything using SCSI, not just storage devices or scanner.
      And SCSI was capable for features 20 years ago they now sata praise for...

    • @BraddahSpliff
      @BraddahSpliff Před 6 lety +5

      SCSI was popular because it was great, but it was basically a flash in the pan in the history of technology. So I can see why it only got a passing mention on a video of the tech that basically made it so obsolete so quickly. I remember when everybody thought SCSI was going to replace everything. Turns out USB did that.

  • @nexus7tablet610
    @nexus7tablet610 Před 4 lety +5

    i like to keep a system with fdd, serial and parallel ports for those rare times i have to use low level programming stuff like motherboard bios chip recovery or old hardware.

  • @obfuscated3090
    @obfuscated3090 Před 4 lety

    Useful video! Most people are NOT hardware literate and vids like this help them learn. Those connectors have many other uses to but the vast majority of CZcams viewers are not techies and don't need to know them.

  • @Wagoo
    @Wagoo Před 6 lety +10

    My motherboard in early 1997 had USB headers, but they weren't hooked up by default.
    One thing I wish USB could do is have a USB 3 link to a hub and then multiple USB 2 streams off of that hub have the full USB 3 bandwidth to the computer.. instead the link runs at single USB 2 stream speed for USB 2 devices

  • @tweakpc
    @tweakpc Před 6 lety +11

    If I remember correctly USB was not so resource-saving in the beginning, compared to serial connections.
    Old serial mice and keyboards were more popular with gamers for a while (because of the polling rate of USB Mouse)

    • @KaitouKaiju
      @KaitouKaiju Před 6 lety +4

      This is still the case, because PS/2 hardware functions as a hardware interrupt instead of being polled like USB hardware.

    • @tweakpc
      @tweakpc Před 6 lety +1

      Hello,
      Yes, of course, I meant something else.
      Earlier in Pentium and K6 times this was really relevant with increasing CPU performance and better implementation in chipsets this became irrelevant over time.
      The gaming part that has lost importance over the years also today allows any keyboard/mouse to change the polling rate etc.
      But for a while, it was really a big thing

  • @Ryan.Lohman
    @Ryan.Lohman Před 5 lety +1

    USB and SATA have made a huge impact in the world of hardware. I remember needing a SCSI for an external hard drive, mouse on the serial port on my first computer- an "IBM 286 AT with PC Front End / DOS"

  • @telephony
    @telephony Před 4 lety +2

    I remember running my BBS *WAY BEFORE* USB came into being.
    Setting up interrupts, being certain that there are no IRQ conflicts, assigning COM ports, blah blah blah. :-)
    How I long for the sound of a 300BPS, 1200BPS, or 2400BPS call coming through (and yes, I was one of those nerds who left the modem speaker on so I could hear my BBS's callers connecting -- and also yes, I could quite easily distinguish a 1200BPS caller from a 2400BPS caller).
    And one of my test instruments from 2001 required a 16-bit ISA slot on the motherboard *AND* a parallel port (DB-25) connector for its security dongle.

  • @srtgrayfrance
    @srtgrayfrance Před 6 lety +18

    Firewire wasn't an Apple-only thing. I have a Dell laptop with a mini Firewire socket, although in the PC world it is commonly known as IEEE 1394 or i.Link. Many Sony laptops also carried it.

    • @magreger
      @magreger Před 6 lety +4

      srtgrayfrance It was developed by Apple but not exclusive to Apple.

    • @rasz
      @rasz Před 6 lety +7

      It was heavily pushed by Apple/Sony, and adopted as standard DV connector for digital cameras.

    • @DooMMasteR
      @DooMMasteR Před 6 lety +2

      IEEE 1394 is a serial bus standard that was collaboratively developed by Apple, Intel, Texas Instruments, Microsoft, Sun Microsystems, Compaq, and National Semiconductor
      it was a real bus, it was low latency, it was DMA capable and it was HIGH Speed compared to USB.
      But it was also expensive and only was used in professional equipment (the Apache attack helicopter) like audio and video equipment, and early external hard drives including the first 3 gens of apples iPod.
      Nvidia Chipsets offered fire wire as a default. And many other PCs hat it too. And it was often the only way to get digital video of a miniDV camcorder.

    • @pseudotasuki
      @pseudotasuki Před 5 lety

      @osp80 AFAIK the only thing it was used for was local multiplayer. Though I guess Sony was already buying the controller chips at sufficient volume for it to be fairly inexpensive. Possible even cheaper than adding ethernet.

    • @sarkybugger5009
      @sarkybugger5009 Před 5 lety +1

      I still have an early 2000s Sony digital camcorder, and it has a Firewire/1394 port. I never had a PC that I could plug it into... Always had to use the RCA connectors.

  • @jmpattillo
    @jmpattillo Před 6 lety +238

    I’ve never heard the AT pronounced “at”. I’ve only ever heard people call it “a-t”

    • @ninjamaster3453
      @ninjamaster3453 Před 6 lety +27

      John Pattillo it is A-T. Like AT ST AT AT.
      he's english/British they say everything wrong.

    • @micglou
      @micglou Před 6 lety +30

      @Ninja Master... British say everything wrong? He says it wrong yes, but it's not the British that are prone to pronounce words wrong... have you ever heard an American pronounce Jaguar? Or aluminium? Just a couple of examples...

    • @sunyavadin
      @sunyavadin Před 6 lety +5

      Everyone calls those Imperial walkers "at"-"at"s, not "a-t" - "a-t"s

    • @ninjamaster3453
      @ninjamaster3453 Před 6 lety +4

      micglou shj-ag-wahr and al-loo-mini-um
      That ain't right either. Ever notice british accents disappear when they sing?

    • @captapraelium1591
      @captapraelium1591 Před 6 lety +13

      Yeh I mean, if AT is "at", then what is XT? ;)

  • @RomrotMechanikos
    @RomrotMechanikos Před 5 lety +11

    As someone who deals with industrial computers and controllers, 9 pin serial is still used to this day.

    • @brewtalityk
      @brewtalityk Před 4 lety +3

      it's used because a lot of companies are too cheap to lose the money from down time and the cost to upgrade to use modern technology. Eventually they all have to upgrade because once your shit from the 80s or 90s breaks then you're dead in the water.
      I'm a controls engineer/system integrator (:

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Před 4 lety +3

      Actually, serial communications is robust, easy to understand and program, and ubiquitous. That's why it's still around.

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier Před 4 lety

      Yep, serial is far from dead. However, that serial (normally UART) connection tends to go into a serial to USB converter on one end ;)

    • @oldtwinsna8347
      @oldtwinsna8347 Před 4 lety

      @@travcollier often those converters don't work reliably with old school serial products. i used to run automated camera controllers that used an old 9 pin and we had migrated to a new server that had no native 9 pin ports. i went through several different vendors for converters and each one of them would cause some weird error that resulted in non-function about 1% of the time. 1% was unacceptable for this application so instead just went for a pci 9 pin serial card and that solved the problem.

    • @travcollier
      @travcollier Před 4 lety

      @@oldtwinsna8347 I never had any issues with FTDI serialUSB, but I was working with relatively modern microcontrollers mostly. The off-brand and counterfeit converter chips suck though.

  • @daraldlee
    @daraldlee Před 4 lety +18

    The old ports are some of the old timey things I feel absolutely no nostalgia toward-- they were just awful.

    • @nowthatsjustducky
      @nowthatsjustducky Před 4 lety +2

      Those old serial ports are one of the ways to transfer files downloaded from the Internet onto systems that normally would not be able to access the 'net. A null modem cable and a terminal program on the PC and the receiving computer lets your PC sorta work like a BBS or otherwise ftp server.

    • @reh3884
      @reh3884 Před 4 lety +1

      Only to morons. Serial port were very versatile.

    • @p3chv0gel22
      @p3chv0gel22 Před 2 lety

      Tbh i like having a hardware com Port instead of a virtual one over USB, even though i sometimes need some level shifters for the logic

  • @jerseyforlife
    @jerseyforlife Před 6 lety +17

    "...The rest of us probably dont care..."
    I care sir, I care.
    The year is 1999, the day is December 25th, and we had just gotten to my grandparents house for my 16th Christmas on earth. My Grandfather has excitement in his eye, I know that means he got someone something good. He could barely contain himself as he hands me my gift. I slowly open it while my mind races with the possible options inside inside this pandoras box. Pulling back the wrapping paper I see "lex...DPI..." I remove the paper and realize its a brand new Lexmark flat bed scanner with the highest resolution and all the DPIs the 90s had to offer.My grandfather wasn't exactly tech savvy (being born in 1919 and all) but with the coaching from family and the Circuit City employee - he knew he had something special. At the time professional level digital photo scanning for the average consumer was still expensive and still quite new. I had just gotten into photo manipulation and Photoshop so this gift was super awesome. Imagine my dismay when I realize it comes with the newest/fastest industry standard - USB. My PC at the time DID NOT have this fancy new connection ( I didnt tell my grandfather since it probably would have broken his heart). My smile was real when I said "THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU I CANT WAIT TO USE IT". I eventually convinced my parents (about a year later) to buy a new PC with USB..
    It took me a year but god damnit I used that scanner and I loved it.

    • @maxmustermann1455
      @maxmustermann1455 Před 5 lety

      I bought a USB scanner in the late 90ies as well - it came with a simple USB controller card right in the box.

    • @robvaillancourt
      @robvaillancourt Před 4 lety

      Great story!! I remember talking my parents into buying a Star NX-2420 Rainbow printer for our Commodore-64 with a non-Commodore configuration (parallel port?) and a Commodore interface, for about 50 bucks more, in anticipation of having a PC in the future...once I got my PC in 1995, I used that printer for years until I got an inkjet, lol..also, cut my teeth on Aldus Photostyler, shortly before Adobe bought them out...put my butt in the museum with the other relics!!

  • @bobz1736
    @bobz1736 Před 6 lety +26

    One thing the designer of the USB plug wants shooting for is the 50/50 chance you have of getting it in the socket the right way around ... grrr!

    • @TradieTrev
      @TradieTrev Před 6 lety +4

      Same way with every other serial device.

    • @mrmimeisfunny
      @mrmimeisfunny Před 6 lety +9

      You think that's bad. Thing about the DIN and PS/2 connectors.

    • @strebornayr
      @strebornayr Před 6 lety +24

      It may be 50/50 but everyone's a liar if they say it doesn't take the 3rd try to get it right.

    • @RandomNoob
      @RandomNoob Před 6 lety +3

      they were not that bad the plugs were round and usually had a flat side which went to the top but you did have to power off the computer before changing a keyboard or mouse for them to be detected as they were how hot swappable

    • @MrCaerbannog
      @MrCaerbannog Před 6 lety +5

      On the one hand, there weren't really any computer ports before USB-C (and Lightning) that worked either-side up. On the other hand, the fix companies came up with to make symmetrical USB-A plugs was so simple you wonder why the designers never thought of it to begin with.

  • @jamestafiltafish5282
    @jamestafiltafish5282 Před 4 lety +10

    These serial ports had one great advantage .NO DRIVERS REQUIRED
    The USB spec is a mess

    • @smartypants4571
      @smartypants4571 Před 4 lety

      Maybe it was better that way !

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Před 4 lety +3

      Serial ports still require drivers on platforms like Windows.

    • @happysmash27
      @happysmash27 Před 4 lety +1

      I need no extra drivers on Linux, although partly _because_ I choose most of my devices for plug-and-play Linux compatibility.
      ...Actually, on second thought, the dreaded printers need drivers. Are you talking about printers? Those are the worst. Everything else works fine though: keyboards, mice, webcams, storage media, some wireless adapters, card readers...

    • @keithd2284
      @keithd2284 Před 4 lety +4

      @@happysmash27 That's because the linux kernal is a monstrosity that includes the drivers for every device ever created.

  • @kiwibryntoo
    @kiwibryntoo Před 5 lety +11

    I started with a C64... then a 386DX, DOS 6.2 and Windows 3.1.... and so my descent into madness began...

    • @telephony
      @telephony Před 4 lety

      I started with a Timex Sinclair 1000, then a C=64, then a C=128, then a PC-XT, then a PC-AT (both running DOS 6.22), then a 286 (Win 3.1), then 386, then 486 (Windows 95),then 586, then Pentium 1 (Windows XP), etc...you can probably figure out where this is going. :-)

    • @keybizzoneg5209
      @keybizzoneg5209 Před 4 lety +1

      @@telephony a Pentium is a 586 :D

    • @nthgth
      @nthgth Před 4 lety

      @@keybizzoneg5209 officially? Or just as a cool nickname

  • @MichaelBennett1
    @MichaelBennett1 Před 6 lety +8

    Kids these days...they don’t know how good they have it, USB was indeed a godsend.

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Před 4 lety

      They sure do have it good. Think back on:
      Pre-on-demand-streaming.
      Pre-wireless networking.
      Pre-internet.Pre-DVDs.
      Pre-DVRs.
      Pre-mobile-phones.
      Pre-compact-discs.
      Pre-networking.
      Pre-cordless-phones.
      Pre-VCRs.
      Pre-television-remotes.
      Pre-microwave-ovens.
      Pre-color-television.
      Pre-television.
      Pre-radio.
      Pre-refrigerators.
      Pre-electricity.
      Pre-indoor-plumbing......

  • @thetacoguyy
    @thetacoguyy Před 6 lety +23

    6:12 but smart watches were released 30 years later o.o

  • @G_Gr00v3
    @G_Gr00v3 Před 2 lety

    I feel somewhat lucky to be an age where I got to see a lot of this change. My Dad had to work with older computers for a while, so it was fascinating to see all our keyboards, mice, etc go from these types of cables to USB when we got a brand new iMac in 2007. Mt dad still has a lot of those cables and parts, and it's fun to look back at those times with them

  • @codygaudet8071
    @codygaudet8071 Před 4 lety

    This was so worth watching! Thanks for this!

  • @nicknarcowich5040
    @nicknarcowich5040 Před 5 lety +4

    Wow, you brought back a lot of memories :-) Well Done!

  • @Michirin9801
    @Michirin9801 Před 6 lety +10

    Yeah, I caught the tail end of the life cycle of these connectors when I was little, so I grew up watching as each one of those got gradually replaced by USB, and I remember what it was like to use them...
    While it's certainly convenient that pretty much everything nowadays uses USB, I'll still gladly use a PS/2 Keyboard and mouse on my PC! It's good too because it frees up 2 USB jacks that I could use to connect gamepads~
    I think I still have a couple of game controllers with that 15 pin connector though...

    • @Theo3350
      @Theo3350 Před 6 lety +1

      Michirin9801 you havent felt how it is to try to plug them in and accidentally bend the pins

    • @KaitouKaiju
      @KaitouKaiju Před 6 lety +3

      God forbid your mouse accidentally comes out of the PS/2 port, you gotta reboot

    • @Michirin9801
      @Michirin9801 Před 6 lety

      I have actually, but only with a PS/2 plug... I just bent it back into shape with a pair of tweezers >w>';

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 5 lety

      Haha, loose connectors which easily wiggle free, fall out, and unplug themselves. A worn USB connector isn't any better ... it might actually be even worse ... except that 99% of the time it can be hotplugged right back in without much delay or much issue.
      Although those anchor screws (on both ends of) old school serial/parallel/video ports were always awesomely secure. I'd love to see a return to this approach on hardware (like monitors, etc) which rarely gets moved or reconfigured.

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 5 lety +1

      I've actually plugged an old PS/2-to-USB adapter into my usually-unused PS/2 port ... to use it as a USB charging port. Only ~100mA but it works fine.

  • @SA77888
    @SA77888 Před 3 lety +1

    3:54 I remember those ports, I remember thinking how clever it was that they had colour coded them lol.

  • @RaifalM3n
    @RaifalM3n Před 4 lety +1

    oh. them memories from 2000+ .... i remember pluging the mouse and keyboard ... nightmare !

  • @kellingc
    @kellingc Před 5 lety +58

    PC-AT (the a and t pronounced separately. It stood for Advanced Technology.

    • @DarrynJones
      @DarrynJones Před 5 lety +2

      I think the "PC @" was the model between XT and AT - it used the 801.586 processor 😋

    • @keybizzoneg5209
      @keybizzoneg5209 Před 4 lety +3

      Yeah... He also said Windows 95 Service Pack 2 which does not exist. :D

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před 4 lety +1

      And was not advanced at all with 286 and dirty Dos compared to 020 mac or amiga

    • @RasVoja
      @RasVoja Před 4 lety

      @@keybizzoneg5209 it Is dubbed win97

    • @phuturephunk
      @phuturephunk Před 4 lety

      @@keybizzoneg5209 : 95's second service Pack was referred to as "OSR2" or Original Equipment Manufacturer Service Release 2. IIRC, MS didn't refer to it's Service Packs on its consumer OS's as 'Service Packs' until Windows XP where they unified the consumer and enterprise workstation OS's into one lineage.

  • @feywerfolevado6286
    @feywerfolevado6286 Před 6 lety +10

    Videos like this make me feel super old and I’m only 22.

    • @zusurs
      @zusurs Před 6 lety +3

      Feywer Folevado Haha, same here. I’m 29, started to fiddle with computers and electronics at very early age (mid 90s). I feel really old when I watch video like these, where they talk about expansion cards, IRQs, null-modem cables and similar stuff that was just my regular everyday challange back in the days, like some ‘retro, vintage’ stuff...

    • @XrisD147
      @XrisD147 Před 6 lety

      You're not old. Wait till you get in you're forties.

    • @CanuckGod
      @CanuckGod Před 5 lety +2

      +Chris Debnam Which I just did (turned 40 last week)... Funny to think, there are people of adult age at present who never knew of a time before the Internet, when I only got on it when I started university.

    • @wolfshanze5980
      @wolfshanze5980 Před 5 lety +1

      Videos like this make me feel super old, and i'm 51.

    • @maxmustermann1455
      @maxmustermann1455 Před 5 lety

      I'm 27, got my first own PC in late 1996. A used 486 running Win95. But I later downgraded to DOS because Win95 sucked. Even as a kid, I rather typed some commands instead of dealing with constant random bluescreens.
      It does make me feel a bit old, but... it was the golden age. Since over 10 years now, everything basically stayed the same. Times were more interesting back then.
      I switched from a Pentium 1 130mhz to a AMD Duron 700mhz. Over 5 times as fast. Next leap 1400Mhz Athlon. Then 2400Mhz Athlon XP (the one with real 2400Mhz, not just 2000 and 2400 Pentium Rating).
      My first USB stick had 16mb and cost 15€, which was a brilliant deal back then....next one up was 128mb, 256mb, 512mb, 1GB, 2GB, 4GB...
      HDD sizes, went from 2GB to 8GB to 40GB to 120GB.
      You almost always doubled what you had.

  • @GBANI
    @GBANI Před rokem

    What memories these ports brings in my mind. Keyboards and mouses, printers and casettes, soundcards and external drives.

  • @zu_1455
    @zu_1455 Před 2 lety

    Thank you for sharing this fascinating information! Having had to use two adapters to get my Alps SM-101 keyboard to talk to modern machines got me wondering how connectors have evolved. Don't get me wrong, I've been raised by computers/ electronics just like most millenials but being able to use that old thing in the present certainly got the wheels turning!

  • @bazza5699
    @bazza5699 Před 6 lety +30

    I longed for zip drive.. proper hankered after one. but by the time i finally could afford it. they'd been superseded by CDRoms.. There is something to be said for ps/2 keyboards/mice over their USB rivals.. speedwise.. I was gutted when I bought my last PC in 2008 (yes I know it's massively out of date now, but it still is working away) but there was no parallel printer port and my £1000 colour laser printer (yes £1000!!! in 2003) was parallel or network only, no USB on that.. I ended buying a parallel port I/O card, which works perfectly :)

    • @Okurka.
      @Okurka. Před 6 lety +1

      Why didn't you use the network port?

    • @thomase13
      @thomase13 Před 6 lety +1

      You know, even most new motherboards have parallel port headers, eh?

    • @krashd
      @krashd Před 6 lety +2

      I had an LS-120 - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SuperDisk
      Big Fat Floppy goodness. I had an internal drive and an external drive but because my mates had neither I always had to bring my external to their houses to show them what was on the disks. Knowing 15 year old me it was probably filth in .mpg format.

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 6 lety

      For using the network port on the expensive printer there needs to be a cable forst. And a free port on the machine.

    • @lurkerrekrul
      @lurkerrekrul Před 6 lety +2

      I bought a SCSI Zip drive for my Amiga. I had two power supplies die on me. The first one died when I unplugged it to move things around. It was unplugged for literally about two minutes and when I plugged it back in, it was dead. I forget how the second died.
      My drive also developed the annoying click. It never damaged any disks, but it was rather annoying to hear it just randomly click while accessing a disk.

  • @Space_Reptile
    @Space_Reptile Před 6 lety +47

    that soldered on battery on that board looks flaky , remove it

    • @macdaniel6029
      @macdaniel6029 Před 6 lety

      Its leaking badly... typical for VARTA crap.

    • @Space_Reptile
      @Space_Reptile Před 6 lety

      yup

    • @HappyBeezerStudios
      @HappyBeezerStudios Před 6 lety

      Remove it anyway because soldered in batteries are bad design by nature.

    • @elmariachi5133
      @elmariachi5133 Před 6 lety +1

      That battery is near to 35years old... Varta once made very good batteries, but this changed to crap in 2002, when the Varta battery brands where sold to "Johnson Controls" and "Spectrum Brands".

    • @jovetj
      @jovetj Před 4 lety

      I've seen worse

  • @onair141
    @onair141 Před 4 lety +16

    I love how I’m watching this as if I don’t know 🥴

  • @YszapHun
    @YszapHun Před 4 lety +2

    somewhat similar happened when IDE cables were replaced by SATA. I still vividly remember the pain of using jumpers to select primary/secondary master/slave, often without a clue, hoping that I chose the right one, knowing one small mistake could lead to a broken hard drive...

    • @dansalmon2698
      @dansalmon2698 Před 4 lety

      those cables really tested me sometimes haha

  • @MihaiOprean
    @MihaiOprean Před 6 lety +17

    i miss the old days :(

  • @spidereyes6290
    @spidereyes6290 Před 6 lety +82

    The days when connectors didn't just snap off.

    • @AliceTheSpider
      @AliceTheSpider Před 6 lety +7

      I mean for most cases they did atleast one without screws, and pins were too easy to bend that ports and cables didnt last long.

    • @mad_cat431
      @mad_cat431 Před 5 lety +5

      I love when those plastic screws get stuck and i forget which way i need to screw them

    • @captain150
      @captain150 Před 5 lety +1

      No instead the pins would bend.

    • @AAhmou
      @AAhmou Před 5 lety +2

      They can... If you're extremely careless.

    • @pwnmeisterage
      @pwnmeisterage Před 5 lety +12

      Try plugging in USB ... oops, upside down.
      Flip over, try again ... wtf, upside down again, extra attempt confirms.
      Flip over, try again ... fits fine, weird.

  • @Windsorsillest
    @Windsorsillest Před 4 lety

    Love these types of videos thanks mate.

  • @montywh
    @montywh Před 4 lety

    the 2nd computer my family owned was a Gateway Astro. pretty much a CRT All-in-One pc. that was the first thing we had which came with usb ports, and since the technology was so new, the pc had a presentation file on it teaching us about usb. that was a fun little tidbit from back in the day

  • @ursumuf2
    @ursumuf2 Před 6 lety +3

    While I'm not one to crave the latest gimmick, I must say that USB relieved us from many annoyances !

    • @drgusman
      @drgusman Před 6 lety

      Only after a few years of caos, pain and tears of blood.

  • @johneygd
    @johneygd Před 6 lety +38

    The very very first USB appeared in 1994 but started slowly to make it’s way out of the factory dour to became mainstream in 1998.

    • @johneygd
      @johneygd Před 6 lety

      Kenny S yes yes that’s true but the prototype USB existed in 1994.

    • @RWBHere
      @RWBHere Před 6 lety +4

      USB was in limited public use before Windows 98 was released. I tried using USB 1 devices with drivers in Windows 95, and later in Windows 98 but it was far too flakey to be of much use. Windows 98 SE support was a little better. Things improved a lot in 2000 when ME became available. So long as you kept your RAM below 256 MBytes!
      Odd that he didn't mention Laplink. I still have a Laplink connector which enabled two Windows computers to 'talk' to each other via USB. Much slower and shorter range than 10 Mbps Ethernet, but it worked, if you had Laplink installed. I ran the free trial version for years, because for some reason it kept working after the trial period had expired.

    • @ChozoSR388
      @ChozoSR388 Před 6 lety

      RWBHere Yeah, I know what you mean; I recently tried to build a bit of a "modern retro" gaming PC running Win98SE out of a system that originally had Windows XP on it. I couldn't even get the USB 1 drivers working for it...

    • @doctorclaw8232
      @doctorclaw8232 Před 6 lety

      True, my Pentium MMX had 2 USB ports, what I needed for keyboard and mouse to install Crunchbang++ OS

    • @NimhLabs
      @NimhLabs Před 6 lety +2

      I specifically remember being generally annoyed about USB stuff... as YES, the Windows.95b version has support... but getting support in Windows 95 was a major pain in the ass, as doing version updates of OS back then was... like getting a root canal done up. "Oh yeah... there is a way to get USBs to run in Windows 95... and literally the hoops you jump through actually make it much easier to just simply not use USB"
      It wasn't until Windows 2K and Windows XP started having a decent market share that most computers were running that... that I did not feel like USB stuff was not a pain in the ass to run. (At which time, I was doing most of my stuff on Linux anyways... which has its own weird USB growing pains)
      The reason USB took so long to get support is because Windows 95 did not support it by default. The Windows 95b version did not support it by default either. No machine with a standard install of Windows 95b could use USB ports. You literally had to pull out the install discs/disks for Windows 95b, begin and Install/Update process with it, and tell it to add USB support. Which... the Install/Update process for OS these days is a simple process... in the 90s it required a lot of annoying stuff, and generally was just as likely to fail as it would succeed. I remember install Linux for the first time in the 90s, and being amazed at how user friendly and intuitive the OS install process was by comparison... and... uh... yeah... that is an install process that generally is not available on most modern day distros for the express reason of it being archaic, clunky, and hard to navigate.

  • @noreply6193
    @noreply6193 Před 4 lety

    so many memories - and such a detailed video - wow .

  • @MarshallGTV
    @MarshallGTV Před 2 lety

    This video brought me back to all the headaches and anxiety I had back in the early 90’s when setting up my early pc’s. Good times... ish

  • @OmegaWolf747
    @OmegaWolf747 Před 6 lety +5

    I remember all those old cables. Do I miss them? Nope. Give me USB any day.

  • @fauzirahman3285
    @fauzirahman3285 Před 5 lety +6

    Many modern desktops still have PS/2 mouse and keyboard ports.

    • @johncrowerdoe5527
      @johncrowerdoe5527 Před 4 lety +1

      Faster response time for gaming, plus the major security benefit of not allowing the "Bad USB" attack where a fake memory stick pretends to be a keyboard and automatically types in the commands to hack your computer.

  • @legalizeme
    @legalizeme Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you for bringing back those old good memories

  • @supernova874
    @supernova874 Před rokem

    Also you left out , fighting for IRQ conflicts between the addon cards like the Multi IO and for example Sound Card 🤣Man so many memories !!!!