The Toshiba Windows 98 Laptop! (435CDS) - Overview & Exploration

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  • čas přidán 24. 09. 2021
  • Thanks to Case for the donation!
    Today we're taking a look at the Toshiba Satellite 435CDS that was recently donated to me!
    Unboxing Video: • Windows XP x64 Edition...
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    #MichaelMJD #Windows98 #Toshiba
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Komentáře • 437

  • @thidasvinnath8017
    @thidasvinnath8017 Před 2 lety +88

    Literally the thickness of all the laptops I've owned combined

    • @thidasvinnath8017
      @thidasvinnath8017 Před 2 lety

      @Mr Pais lmao what's your GPU btw

    • @thidasvinnath8017
      @thidasvinnath8017 Před 2 lety +2

      @Jamal Ramadan I hated my old thin and light as well it's too fragile and gets too damn hot

    • @thidasvinnath8017
      @thidasvinnath8017 Před 2 lety +1

      @Mr Pais lol that's a pretty capable card. Congrats on getting a card during these troubled times, assuming of you didn't get it before the GPU shortage 😂

    • @the_kombinator
      @the_kombinator Před 2 lety +1

      I have an old Armada 1750 that's even thicker than this. Great little PC for portable gaming.

  • @itsmeadam_39
    @itsmeadam_39 Před 2 lety +65

    8:19 Ah yes, Rick Astley will never gonna give this laptop up

  • @Josh101
    @Josh101 Před 2 lety +53

    I remember my dad having an old toshiba satellite laptop, looked slightly newer than this one I would guess, no trackpad, windows 98. I think it was quite expensive for its time around £1000 in the very early 00's. I definately remember the insane screen ghosting playing duke nukem lol.

  • @sonic2000gr
    @sonic2000gr Před 2 lety +114

    The CDS models had the dual scan screens, the CDT models the TFT one, hence the model names. We used to sell the successor of this model in the shop I was working back then. As you said, this model must have been originally sold with Windows 95. Later models had both floppy and CD installed in the laptop.

    • @migueloliveira7103
      @migueloliveira7103 Před 2 lety +1

      I have a 1640CDT and it has a TFT screen and both CD-ROM and Floppy Drive are built-in. When I picked it up from the trash, it had an 6 GB HDD with Windows XP but it was faulty and I replaced it with a 40 GB disk eith Windows 98. My CD-ROM drive lost its front panel and I had to glue the FDD. It's a very nice PC!

    • @the2323guy
      @the2323guy Před 2 lety +1

      i'm assuming the S stands for STN and the T stands for TFT

    • @migueloliveira7103
      @migueloliveira7103 Před 2 lety +1

      @@the2323guy Makes sense

    • @trigger1344
      @trigger1344 Před 2 lety +1

      Whats dual scan screens mean?

    • @Connorplayer123
      @Connorplayer123 Před rokem

      I have a 430CDT

  • @thefray123
    @thefray123 Před 2 lety +125

    I freakin love this channel. It’s so weird yet educational and entertaining.

    • @MichaelMJD
      @MichaelMJD  Před 2 lety +15

      Glad to hear that! Thanks so much

    • @JimOkurku_
      @JimOkurku_ Před 2 lety +3

      @@MichaelMJD I love this channel!

  • @RetroTechIIfx
    @RetroTechIIfx Před 2 lety +50

    I always liked this line of Toshiba laptops. Back when they made really good computers. The form factor started with late 486 and evolved into the Pentium era. Well built, with the power supply built in which is super nice. Date range for these is 1994-1996ish. I have a 410CDT which has a 90mhz Pentium on a VLB bus architecture. The flap for the serial port is broken on mine too. Amazingly the battery in mine is still good and it's from 1995.
    Best part of these is the nice ISA based ESS sound chip, good FM synth. It's also really compatible with many different OS! NT, OS/2, Linux. Nice standard system. The main issue with these today is the clock battery - it's NiCad and it leaks! It's under the keyboard - pull it out or it will destroy the motherboard. CDS version is passive scan always with Toshiba. CDT is active matrix and the one to buy if you find it.
    There is a DOS app you can run to force the fan on - I have it someplace on my NAS. The system will only force the fan on if it gets to the temp of lava.
    If you need a working Toshiba floppy let me know I think I have a spare. The floppy drive can be swapped out of that enclosure.

    • @jacksong6226
      @jacksong6226 Před 11 měsíci

      I has a vista era satellite and it was the first family laptop and it was awesome

  • @bsoundlighting
    @bsoundlighting Před 2 lety +40

    I didn't even exist when this laptop was a thing but it still feels nostalgic.
    ah yes Rick Astley

  • @TeionM83
    @TeionM83 Před 2 lety +203

    Ah, yes. Back when you didn't need more than a few MEGABYTES of RAM and a few hundred MEGABYTES of hard disk.

    • @iThunder
      @iThunder Před 2 lety +30

      20 years from now 500 TB SSD and like 16 TB ram will be like the standard😳 i’m kidding but maybe

    • @masterfunkstuff
      @masterfunkstuff Před 2 lety +8

      I am 12 and I really like to watch this

    • @crayyossef
      @crayyossef Před 2 lety +4

      @@masterfunkstuff you sure?

    • @clementpoon120
      @clementpoon120 Před 2 lety +2

      my dad used a satellite pro 440cdx back in the day. unfortunately though only the power light of it turns on

    • @GenJockey
      @GenJockey Před 2 lety +1

      shut up

  • @Mystic4rrow
    @Mystic4rrow Před 2 lety +20

    You can actually fix that floppy drive by opening it up and relubricanting the floppy disk drive track which moves the head back and forth. When the lubricant dries out, it becomes harder for the drive to move the head to track zero

  • @Eyetrauma
    @Eyetrauma Před 2 lety +27

    Man there’s a lot of things to love about old tech but man alive passive matrix LCDs isn’t one of them.

    • @Jake1702
      @Jake1702 Před 2 lety

      @Jamal Ramadan Even though they're worse than CRTs.

    • @hexagonist23
      @hexagonist23 Před 2 lety

      @@Jake1702 I think they're better than CRTs. CRTs hurt my eyes. They're basically a glowing tube shooting electrons.

    • @Jake1702
      @Jake1702 Před 2 lety

      @@hexagonist23 CRTs don't have headache inducing ghosting that looks like malfunctioning lmao

  • @csbassin
    @csbassin Před 2 lety +7

    The passive matrix display created a really cool fade in and fade out to the desktop windows, in my opinion. Greetings from Brazil

  • @Ed.E
    @Ed.E Před 2 lety +10

    I saw one of these at work. The building was vacated in the early 00s and is basically just used as a meeting point now. In one of the abandoned offices there's lots of old servers and laptops, including a Satellite Pro which I powered on, but the hard drive had failed. I would've taken it home but I don't know the process for that, nor do I think I have the authorisation, and I had to get a train home, so unfortunately it'll end up in the e-waste pile :(

  • @ColdWarAviator
    @ColdWarAviator Před 2 lety +22

    I miss that about old laptops: the direct A/C in connection... No brick to carry around. I think that once they decided to keep increasing clock speeds and trying to keep up with Moore's Law, it got so hot inside the cases that they said: "how can we get some heat out of this machine without it sounding like a jet taking off?" And some guy in a design lab somewhere said, "well if we take the transformer out of the case, that will remove a lot of heat".... He got a bonus and or promotion, and we got extra crap to try not to lose and stuff down in an already exploding laptop bag. Lol

    • @AveragePootis
      @AveragePootis Před 2 lety +1

      No? They wanted for the laptops to be smaller, so the psu had to go.
      Also its not about keeping up with Moore's law but with because laptops cant afford to be any more slower than desktops they already are.

    • @the_kombinator
      @the_kombinator Před 2 lety +1

      Not necessarily. I had a Compaq LTE 4/25 when I was a kid (actually, I have one now, not the same one mind you) and that's quite a bit older than this and it has an external power supply.

    • @AveragePootis
      @AveragePootis Před 2 lety +1

      @@the_kombinator Yes, to be fair it was not the case in all laptops, but i would imagine that it started to be the reason in the late 90s and early 2000s

    • @the_kombinator
      @the_kombinator Před 2 lety +1

      @@AveragePootis Probably. I mean, the LTE was already a chemistry textbook thick unit, imagine if they also integrated the Beta tape sized power supply into it as well?

    • @AveragePootis
      @AveragePootis Před 2 lety +1

      @@the_kombinator Or imagine something like a 2004 Dell XPS gaming laptop with an integrated psu, its already incredibly large, hot and heavy

  • @sethmcdowell1251
    @sethmcdowell1251 Před 2 lety +7

    Never does get old I love that startup sound I just love it

  • @jillsandwich5088
    @jillsandwich5088 Před 2 lety +4

    This is hands down one of my most favorite channel on CZcams! Keep up the good work mate.

  • @UchihaNoble
    @UchihaNoble Před 2 lety +1

    07:57 That sound... Chilling, Relaxing, a Send me back spell

  • @davinp
    @davinp Před 2 lety +13

    Wow, even new laptops still use a brick power adaptor. That is nice this old laptop doesn't require it

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Před 2 lety +1

      "Even"? It's a bit of the other way round. Built in adaptors would be unacceptable for most people in the present era where, besides performance, obviously, thin and light is the most sought after feature . Back when any laptop was chunky and heavy anyway, it was nice to have built in power supplies. And since battery life was not that good then, you had your laptop hooked to mains more often, so... That said, many laptops had a separate brick back then too, so yes, it was very nice a feature.

    • @Reziac
      @Reziac Před 2 lety +1

      Downside is that it heats up the inside of the laptop pretty well....

  • @robertl.raggijr.8278
    @robertl.raggijr.8278 Před 2 lety +30

    Michael: 1.26GB! I’m never going to need more then that!
    *Shows picture of 48TB NAS

    • @UchihaNoble
      @UchihaNoble Před 2 lety +7

      I remember once back in 1999 was debating with my friends on should I get a 10 or 2 GB HDD, I wanted the 10GB my father told me why do I want all of this storage? gonna fill it with a British encyclopedia!!!

  • @princessscotchtape8931
    @princessscotchtape8931 Před 2 lety +1

    My family had a machine like this way back in the day and the same external floppy drive. Loved it for playing computer games.
    The screen died several in 2004. Miss it.

  • @r1ckastl3y86
    @r1ckastl3y86 Před 2 lety +7

    8:19
    It says registered to: *Rick Astley*
    Is that a secret rickroll or something?

  • @andresbravo2003
    @andresbravo2003 Před 2 lety +3

    Yay! A Full Overview!

  • @sirlukas2
    @sirlukas2 Před 2 lety +4

    Love your content so much Michael, keep up the good work!

  • @youdud44
    @youdud44 Před 2 lety +1

    I love these mid/late-90s Satellite models. I've got a 335CDT with 98SE that give me my 9x nostalgic fix and that Yamaha OPL3-SA3 chipset sounds so good.

  • @matthewterry3928
    @matthewterry3928 Před 2 lety +3

    Love this kind of content !

  • @douugl
    @douugl Před rokem

    Finally some piece of hardware that I've actually touched!
    I've foundone of this exact model on thrash a couple years ago and it was working perfectly

  • @lyuboserafimov
    @lyuboserafimov Před 2 lety

    God I love those old tech / geeky videos with my coffee in the morning :))) Awesome channel Michael!

  • @ezequitor
    @ezequitor Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome video! I had a Satellite 220CDS which is extremely similar but it had ONE usb port! Managed to install Linux (on 16mb of ram as well) and get some new USB peripherals working. Sadly I never managed to get wifi working (using a usb wifi adapter) but would had been a great milestone (only managed to get a wireless mouse which is also insane with such low specs for a win95 machine)

  • @medes24
    @medes24 Před 2 lety +1

    My first laptop was passive matrix. You definitely got used to it. I honestly loved it. It was a Windows 95 machine and had better compatibility with my DOS games than my Windows 98 computer did. I used it to play all my old stuff for several years until DOSBox became a thing.

  • @Natures_Intentions
    @Natures_Intentions Před 2 lety

    I love this channel and also love the vintage laptops and desktops.

  • @ShredPhred
    @ShredPhred Před 2 lety

    Had one of these for work. Loved the track point without having to buy a ThinkPad.

  • @blainepalmerza
    @blainepalmerza Před 2 lety +3

    Awesome video, Michael!

  • @talldood2112
    @talldood2112 Před 2 lety

    Im actually very glad you made this, I myself have a 420CDS, the drive died on me and had to get a new one. My problem being that I need to somehow install Windows 98 on it but I don’t have any floppy drives or software to do so.

  • @sriramsundar8388
    @sriramsundar8388 Před 2 lety

    Waiting for your biggest project!

  • @cutieclysm
    @cutieclysm Před 2 lety

    awesome video as always!

  • @pspgamer2006
    @pspgamer2006 Před 2 lety

    Omg. The nostalgia! I had this exact laptop growing up.

  • @SabretoothBarnacle
    @SabretoothBarnacle Před 2 lety +6

    Used to have the 110 model back in the day... Had a whopping 810Mb hard drive if I recall correctly.
    Always loved that little thing, screen was blurrier than a night on the town when gaming but it didn't really matter to be honest.

  • @dan3a
    @dan3a Před 2 lety

    Currently have a 420CDT, really nice machine, especially with the active matric screen. The external drive also works, got a Compaq ball mouse and even got a second hard drive with win95, a few startup diskettes and a leather case! All that for 2€, battery even work. One of the best findings I ever did.

  • @balocava
    @balocava Před 2 lety

    Soo cool! I have a 200CDS that I saved from e-waste that I need to find a replacement screen for. really neat machines!

  • @fellipec
    @fellipec Před 2 lety +4

    Oh god, my first laptop was a model very similar to this one, how much nostalgia

  • @RetroPC
    @RetroPC Před 2 lety

    Reminds me of my Satellite 410CS! Mine also came with an external floppy that doesn't work, modem card, and a battery that still works, sort of. I reinstalled Windows 95 on it. Great machine! 👍

  • @drPeidos
    @drPeidos Před 2 lety +1

    BIOS/Clock batteries in Toshibas usually leak all over the place, I recommend removing them as quicly as possible. Nice video. Great laptop.

  • @daniel_lucio
    @daniel_lucio Před 2 lety +1

    Around 2010 Toshiba Satellite notebooks could be found in the trash here in Brazil, I took several for myself, but in the end I only had the most complete of all, a 335CDS with backpack, manual, brochures, PSU. It has a Windows 95 seal but the installed system is a W98SE

  • @thedungeondelver
    @thedungeondelver Před 2 lety

    In '98/'99 at my office we still had a lot of those as legacy machines knocking around; we gathered all of them up and replaced them with better P2 and early P3 Compaq laptops, then wiped the lot of them, did a basic '95 + Drivers reinstall on them, and gave them away to employees. I enjoyed the time I spent doing the refresh on all of 'em...

  • @microsoftword92
    @microsoftword92 Před 2 lety

    Watched the entire video love your videos michael

  • @AlejandroFerrariMc
    @AlejandroFerrariMc Před 2 lety

    I love the Toshiba Satellite line of laptops. I still have my Satellite 2805-S302, which was my first laptop ever as a kid. It came with windows ME, has a DVD drive and a floppy drive, 128mb of RAM. As a 10-year-old, it was a dream!

  • @shawngoral3987
    @shawngoral3987 Před 2 lety +4

    I found the 430 CDS model and was able to swap out 3 parts from the CDT model by looking at the service manual to get the better TFT screen. This was years ago when parts were easy to find and no one wanted them. Glad I did it. Also see if you have the C&T 65550/4 graphics chip. My 430 needs the vexp commmand program to run at start up or resolutions that are less then native will have black boarders around them. The hardware was not able to scale the lower resolutions up to fill the screen for some reason, so there is software that does it.

  • @bramvandenbroeck5060
    @bramvandenbroeck5060 Před 2 lety +1

    To fix this door, you could open up the laptop, and glue a small magnet on the inside of the plastic with double sided tape (or something stronger if you want to make this perfect, and then, you glue a piece of metal or another small magnet (if you have broken optical drives from desktop computers, in the laser assembly, you can find tiny neodimium magnets) and make sure the 2 magnets/magnet piece of metal lign up with eachother. I did this once to a powerbook and i have to say, its a good permanent solution, its not factory perfect, but you will see that the door will stay closed and it is still easy to open. I love those old machines and i come up with cosmetic and structural fixes for these, even newer machines that are weak i can fix, i have a lenovo g580 with a fixed hinge that was broken off completely, now? Its sturdy like new again, it will never fail again. I will make a video about this laptop very soon!

  • @stephanieiwaniuk6088
    @stephanieiwaniuk6088 Před 2 lety

    I hope you have a great weekend Michael!

  • @phildo87
    @phildo87 Před 2 lety

    OMG this was my first laptop! I fell in love with PC's thanks to this laptop.

  • @fourtrax4ever
    @fourtrax4ever Před 2 lety

    Holy nostalgia trip, it's the first laptop I've ever owned! Only difference is mine ran 98se so it may have been a slightly newer version (though I distinctly remember the green track point and the curved mouse buttons . I used to play the Tonka games and roller coaster tycoon for hours on mine

  • @thedarkdragon89
    @thedarkdragon89 Před 2 lety

    I had a Toshiba Tecra 510 CDT, I loved that computer, had 95, 98, and 2000 on it, 64MB of Ram, 10Gb HDD, Floppy and CD swappable and usable with enclosure externally! It was a great laptop at the time. It looked almost exactly like this one. Thanks for the nostalgia trip!
    Edit* I also had the huge dock-station for it, that thing was awesome.

  • @philipmurphy2
    @philipmurphy2 Před 2 lety +2

    Always a wonderful day when you see a Micheal MJD video for sure.

    • @fifaworldcup1994
      @fifaworldcup1994 Před 2 lety

      Always a wonderful day when you see people misspelling Michael

  • @jargon343
    @jargon343 Před 2 lety

    Ayyy! I actually used to have a model like this somewhere, I will tell you if I find it, thanks for reminding me about this laptop!

  • @Oldgamingfart
    @Oldgamingfart Před 2 lety +2

    Similar build to the 110CS I once had. Upgraded to the full RAM expansion of 40MB, though it was an older P100 model. Yes the screen always had that look about it like it was grubby and needed a clean!
    They faired much better in low light conditions, and not bad for word processing use as I found the TFT version way too bright for my eyes!

  • @wotchermuch
    @wotchermuch Před 2 lety

    My parents had one of these! My childhood was spent playing sims 1 on one of these during school holidays at my mums shop!

  • @NoahClevinger
    @NoahClevinger Před 2 lety +3

    Windows 98 was such a great operating system.

  • @insanebasterd6168
    @insanebasterd6168 Před 2 lety

    Instant nostalgia i had one exactly like this one back in the 90's 8t was for school. I loved it still have it but as i moved from place to place it got damage form the move. I loved it. And tell you guys 1.5 gig was a lot back then.

  • @darkungels1274
    @darkungels1274 Před 2 lety +1

    Man you a legend

  • @Lauch-Melder
    @Lauch-Melder Před 6 měsíci

    Oh yes, I really love this one. I have the exact same machine with everything, the external floppy-drive and the dock. This was my very first PC when I was 6 years old I updated it to Windows 98Plus and used to play Tomb Raider II.
    Now it won't start, the only thing I get is a blank screen, also on the external Monitor.

  • @2tailedfox711
    @2tailedfox711 Před 2 lety

    I grew up with this exact model. So much Starcraft.

  • @pdxyyz
    @pdxyyz Před 2 lety

    Had an earlier version of this around 94. The docking station was motorized. And if you think that thing is huge, the docking station was massive, not to mention the CRT monitor.

  • @computerkid1416
    @computerkid1416 Před 2 lety

    I'm addicted to collecting these beige 90s Toshiba Satellites. I don't know why, there's just something about the design that really intrigues me.

  • @vifgull
    @vifgull Před 2 lety +1

    Aaah! DooM II Hell on earth, the classic from 1994. I had It on floppy disk. I love this channel! I sub strait away

  • @Twohill
    @Twohill Před 2 lety

    yoooo a new mjd vid

  • @lululock
    @lululock Před 2 lety

    I still own a 4000CDT I upgraded to a Celeron to play DOS games. I got it at a flea market. The poor thing seemed to have been thrown to the ground a few times but still work amazingly. Yes, the original hard drive too.

  • @zakariahan3900
    @zakariahan3900 Před 2 lety

    I remember playing Microprose GP2 in this laptop. Awesome for the time.

  • @the2323guy
    @the2323guy Před 2 lety +2

    this video was uploaded the same day I had a dream about a very similar toshiba laptop

  • @letsseewherethisgoes
    @letsseewherethisgoes Před 2 lety

    I have a very similar 430CDT. Makes a pretty solid DOS machine.

  • @Rysysys
    @Rysysys Před 2 lety

    Yay, at the early 2000s i had buy for cheap firstly Satellite 100CS (P1 75MHz), and couple years later Satellite Pro 470CDT, pretty similar to this machine. Even battery had same model number (I remember as back in the days I've tried to fix it, unsuccessfully). Unlike that 435CDS 470CDT had 2 pretty loud speakers combined with Yamaha OPL3, also, i believe, USB 1.0 at the back which is pretty amazing for the 1997/98. Main reason I bought it then was that I've already got ton of fun with older Toshiba, but i want to play Fallout 2 in the bed, and play mp3s I record on CD-Rs. 100CS only had PC-Speaker :D. It do both flawlessly (well... at least good enough) and never let me down. In fact I think I have those in some box at attic. 10+ years ago i used to use 470 to diagnose older Ford cars at my garage (those operates EEC-IV ECU, with blink codes, counting them by dedicated application were just more convienient), and friend of mine literally run through it by a car, guess what? LCD and the cover broke, but Toshiba were still operative with external display xD inside it is build like a tank, like nothing produced nowadays.

  • @Sheepish16
    @Sheepish16 Před 2 lety +1

    Hey! I saw that little Eddie "Reliable" Trustman at 1:14

  • @TheVoyager3301
    @TheVoyager3301 Před 2 lety +2

    8:18
    Damn i got rickrolled
    btw great video as usual

  • @Mr_L1n4x
    @Mr_L1n4x Před 2 lety

    This reminds me of the toshiba satelite my father had back in the 2000s it was a beast of a laptop with a huge screen but what I remember most about it is that in order to connect to the internet via wifi, we needed to use a card and if he didn't bring it on vacactions well we were screwed LOL how times had changed

  • @eastfrisianguy
    @eastfrisianguy Před 2 lety

    The boss of my father had such a notebook (think it was more likely a 435CDS), I remember that, I was at most seven years old and I was amazed that a computer can be so small 😀 At that time, only the boss had a notebook for accounting, the secretaries had an electronic typewriter and only two-three years later a computer, my father had as a sales driver in his truck a little later a handheld (super heavy, unwieldy, crashed constantly) with black and white screen and a small dot matrix printer with continuous paper to print out invoices.

  • @hullauttttt
    @hullauttttt Před 2 lety +1

    I have a Toshiba Satellite from 2004, although I don't use it now since I got a HP Victus. Either way, both AMAZING computers
    Also don't think we wouldn't catch that "Registered to Rick Astley"

  • @marksmith9566
    @marksmith9566 Před 2 lety +2

    I had a Fujitsu with two inserts and you could do CD-ROM. Floppy or battery. It had an external floppy case as well.

  • @eppicshotgun1281
    @eppicshotgun1281 Před 2 lety

    My grandma's first laptop was a Toshiba Satellite 1555CDS. She still has it somewhere around here but it needs a new screen and keyboard but other than that its mint

  • @HoldHimClose_MyPetDog
    @HoldHimClose_MyPetDog Před 2 lety

    The effects seen in the game because of that Passive Matrix stuff was damn cool. Blurriness can actually sometimes improve the appeal of something which normally anyone gets to see full of pixels and sharpened. Here we see that case.

  • @freezinfire
    @freezinfire Před 2 lety

    Very cool. Even tho I was born in 2003, I have used windows 98 for around 2 months when I was 7-8 years old.

  • @davidkshow
    @davidkshow Před 2 lety

    I love that laptop!

  • @riotix1196
    @riotix1196 Před 2 lety +2

    as a 14 year old kid, these videos interest me alot. love your work michael :)

  • @Connorplayer123
    @Connorplayer123 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I got the 430CDT with the original hard drive in 32 MB of ram, but with an active matrix display and I think I showed it on my YT channel!

  • @WalnutSpice
    @WalnutSpice Před 2 lety +1

    Yo these laptops are great, I have the 4000CDS. Up until around early 2020 Toshiba still had drivers for all these listed online. Sadly they had since removed all of it. But they can still be hunted down, and these could run -anything-. From DOS 5.1 with Windows 3, to OS/2 up to Windows XP era. These are fun, trying to get that Mac Rhapsody beta running on mine. Edit; Just checked the website. Drivers for NT 4.0 / 95 and up are still available, but all DOS/ OS/2 era drivers were removed. Surely they could still be found tho

  • @dinkyeepy
    @dinkyeepy Před 2 lety +2

    I actually have 2 laptops similar to this one, its a Toshiba t5200 (running MS-DOS), and a Toshiba T2100CS (running Windows 95) sadly both have a broken floppy drive and the one with W95 has no CD drive so I have no way of getting files to and from these machines, its still fun to mess around in windows though and just do simple things on it :D

  • @Kaitanji
    @Kaitanji Před 2 lety +1

    8:32
    “Registered to: Rick Astley”
    Michael did it again.

  • @cleverlyblonde
    @cleverlyblonde Před 2 lety +1

    While the display may not be ideal, you can still connect an external monitor to it and that helps a lot.

  • @sburton015
    @sburton015 Před 2 lety

    This is just like my oldest laptop that I still have which is a Toshiba satellite 330cds. A sticker on mine says that it was made on 11/14/1998. It has a 266 mhz Pentium mmx cpu with 96 mb of ram and a 4.1 gb hard disk drive. I have it running Windows 98 second edition.

  • @pseudoforceyt
    @pseudoforceyt Před 2 lety

    Doom II with motion blur 👌

  • @MCBuilder
    @MCBuilder Před 2 lety

    good video!

  • @migsvensurfing6310
    @migsvensurfing6310 Před 2 lety

    I had a Toshiba T1000 long time ago... What a beast... 😂

  • @georgelincolnrockwell14

    Bro the crash zoom at 1:00 killed me rofl

  • @omegaO_O
    @omegaO_O Před 2 lety

    I have a Toshiba Satellite 330CDS and it’s pretty cool

  • @x3mality160486
    @x3mality160486 Před 2 lety

    Nice! Father got 430CDT in 1990-s

  • @AlejandroRodolfoMendez

    Nice computer. I wonder if it's posible to change the display for something more responsive? I saw a similar idea on a old compac portable but requires a raspberry pi for converting the signal to the modern LCD screen.

  • @ChannelIsMissing
    @ChannelIsMissing Před 8 měsíci

    omg i love tis laptop. or maybe "Schlepptop" because in germany we say this to such old machines Because they are really heavy and you have to "Schleppen/Schlepp" (i know german words are weird and confusing) them. and to "Schleppen" means something like “take it with you”, or to carry is more accurate.
    In any case, this is the perfect device to simply sit down at your desk in the evening with a warm cup of cocoa and write stories in Word from 1998.

  • @TheCzele
    @TheCzele Před 2 lety +2

    You sound exactly like my japanese friend Toshiba :O

  • @wildfluffyappeared
    @wildfluffyappeared Před 2 lety

    One funny thing abt this channel is like, every time he mentions PS2 ports and stuff I always think of the Sony Playstation 2 because most of my CZcams content consumption is more gaming oriented lmao

  • @WedgeStratos
    @WedgeStratos Před 2 lety

    We have watches that have more memory than this has storage.
    I have a 2505CDS myself, and the comments ring true, CDT is the model to look for. I remember bringing mine into a pre-summer half-day in high school, and I just carried myself with no shame rocking a 98 machine that can play NES games and barely does Doom, while my friends could play Call of Duty Zombies on their phone or Magic The Gathering around us.

  • @AJ-po6up
    @AJ-po6up Před 2 lety +2

    Very interesting, Active Matrix displays still had this sort of ghosting all throughout the late 90s and early 2000s, is just that the refresh rate is faster and so is more difficult to notice, even cheap TFT LCDs have it till this day but this is like watching a recording of those screens in slow motion, I was wondering what's the refresh rate of a screen like this? because is not 60hz that's for sure.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před 2 lety

      The refresh rate is probably 30 or 60, but refresh rate ≠ pixel response times. You see this with 120Hz screens that undoubtedly can send new pixels to the screen that often, such as with mouse movement, but they can’t get rid of the old pixel for like 30ms. Thus technically being 120Hz for some uses, but for full screen purposes it’s functionally 30Hz.

  • @nvignesh
    @nvignesh Před 2 lety

    Oh god, i had one of these Toshiba Satellite laptops around '06 , i was so dumb back then, i used to brag to my school friends that i have a laptop which can connect to satellites in space and even hack them.

  • @atiatyagamer8050
    @atiatyagamer8050 Před 2 lety

    Good video.