LGR - IBM PS/2 Model 60 Lives Again!

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  • čas přidán 7. 02. 2016
  • Fixed up this classic piece of IBM PC history and figured I'd show it off inside and out! Here's the original video this is a follow-up to:
    • LGR - IBM PS/2 Compute...
    ● LGR links:
    / lazygamereviews
    / lazygamereviews
    / lazygamereviews
    ● Here's an archive of the CNC files:
    archive.org/details/lgr-cnc-m...
    #LGR #Retro #Computer
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 866

  • @LGR
    @LGR  Před 8 lety +24

    *For those wanting to poke around the CNC folder:*
    Here's an archive of the files! archive.org/details/lgr-cnc-model60

    • @jerther_
      @jerther_ Před 8 lety +4

      +Lazy Game Reviews Cool! Some source included! It looks like the machine was hooked to the COM2 port, which is hard coded with interrupt 0x2f8. kind of... bad idea... no config file. and there's a scary comment that kind of says they "hope" it works. this makes me laugh so hard knowing that this thing was used to send CNC data files to a machine that's worth in the 100 000$, and they have to recompile the thing whenever there's change in the pc hardware, which we'll agree did not happen often in the days before PnP but STILL. Incredible ;)
      The data files are probably generated with another software.

    • @rimmersbryggeri
      @rimmersbryggeri Před 7 lety +4

      You can write the CNC programs in notepad. That's what I did when I wrote cnc programs. The machine itself couldnt hold more than a few programs so you had to use a computer like this as storage. Even if the hard drive was only 15 megs it would be plenty because a cnc file would hardly take up a kB most of the time. I think the machine I mostly ran had 4 or 8 program slots in it.

  • @multani82
    @multani82 Před 8 lety +130

    "Hear this thing turn off."
    *see's the note that reads "Please do not turn off"*
    o.o

    • @Fuzy2K
      @Fuzy2K Před 8 lety +39

      +multani82 Even the computer sounded like it was going "Nooooooooooooo...." :P

    • @TheNugettinage
      @TheNugettinage Před 8 lety +2

      +Fuzy2K "Clinteyyyyy, Cliiiinteeyyyyyy..."

    • @Jackmawer
      @Jackmawer Před 8 lety +1

      +multani82 *sees*

    • @xanx3572
      @xanx3572 Před 6 lety +6

      I'm pretty sure a server somewhere went down when Clint turned it off.

    • @dialupdave6276
      @dialupdave6276 Před 5 lety

      that is quite funny.

  • @vwestlife
    @vwestlife Před 8 lety +67

    I noticed the SCORBOT directory. That was software used to control a robotic arm, often used in industry and higher education for robotics training. They still make Scorbots today, except now they're controlled through weenie modern USB ports.

  • @dondon4720
    @dondon4720 Před 8 lety +186

    You should record the turning off sound and use that at the end of your videos 😋

    • @WickedMuis
      @WickedMuis Před 8 lety +21

      +dondon4720 That's actually a great idea :D Clint should totally do that, in combination with the turn on sound just before the intro :D

    • @ericwood3709
      @ericwood3709 Před 4 lety +1

      You can get a similar experience using a more modern server chassis, I think. I got a server-type tower made by Chenbro a while back, and the fans in that thing are LOUD by modern standards. I actually ended up swapping them out, they were so bad.

  • @jakecobovic9091
    @jakecobovic9091 Před 8 lety +116

    Some company's servers probably died when he turned it off.

    • @fast0025ify
      @fast0025ify Před 8 lety +19

      Ubisoft it's time for you to upgrade your damn servers!

    • @jakecobovic9091
      @jakecobovic9091 Před 8 lety +35

      Nah, that thing sounds way to reliable to be the uPlay server

    • @user-qz2yf6hi8m
      @user-qz2yf6hi8m Před 8 lety +5

      +Jake Cobovic god died when he turned it off

  • @johannesparkmann3899
    @johannesparkmann3899 Před 8 lety +26

    The red huge power switch is pure authority

    • @Aleph-Noll
      @Aleph-Noll Před 4 lety +3

      modern pc cases should have a big red switch like that, love it

  • @LGR
    @LGR  Před 8 lety +96

    *More info on the MFM hard drive:*
    Many PS/2 Model 60/80 machines used ESDI drives instead of MFM, but that is not the case here!
    Looking on the sticker you'll see IBM P/N 6373507, which is a Seagate ST-4053 MFM hard drive. There were also cards like the 90X6768 that supported MFM drives on MCA hardware.

    • @TamalPlays
      @TamalPlays Před 8 lety +1

      +Lazy Game Reviews Very cool. I wish I can have that machine.

    • @cadelfowl7724
      @cadelfowl7724 Před 8 lety

      +Lazy Game Reviews I was just thinking about when you would follow up with your great haul the other day! Glad to see such a nice setup!

    • @HarukaJad3
      @HarukaJad3 Před 8 lety

      Dude, you could go surfing with this thing, it's so freakin' big!

    • @maginfo4234
      @maginfo4234 Před 8 lety

      +Lazy Game Reviews I have one question of this machine, I hope you can answer it. How many Watts do it use?

    • @Retromicky82
      @Retromicky82 Před 8 lety

      cool to see it alive . makes a lot of noise like me when I wake up

  • @LazerLord10
    @LazerLord10 Před 7 lety +11

    I've used an old machine for CNC work before, and it's great. IT wasn't neaerly as old as this thing, but it's pretty much the same.
    G0 X1.2 Y3.3
    Such memories!

  • @philscomputerlab
    @philscomputerlab Před 8 lety +18

    What a BEAST of a machine!

  • @EposVox
    @EposVox Před 8 lety +23

    This was really cool to see - the modular PSU was epic!
    And that massive number of expansion slots makes me a little too happy.

  • @syn010110
    @syn010110 Před 8 lety +32

    It sounded like a spaceship powering up when you turned it on.

  • @JeffSense
    @JeffSense Před 8 lety +40

    That thing is honestly sexier than a few of my ex-girlfriends.

  • @SirRunk666
    @SirRunk666 Před 8 lety +5

    0:58 Fuck yeah, THAT'S what a proper computer sounds like.

  • @Grumpydrawer
    @Grumpydrawer Před 8 lety +8

    That switch and turn on/off sound was just plain awesome! It just screams power...even though it's so old.

  • @Barnacules
    @Barnacules Před 8 lety +18

    My first PC was a LaserPal 286/16 from Sears :D

    • @LGR
      @LGR  Před 8 lety +5

      Nice! "The power package for the budget conscious" as their tagline went, hehe.

  • @SimonChristensen
    @SimonChristensen Před 8 lety +13

    0:56 getting ready for take-off!

  • @SJ-co6nk
    @SJ-co6nk Před 8 lety +14

    Love the knowledge of the ancients on display.

  • @lucianodinino
    @lucianodinino Před 8 lety

    This is absolutely incredible, dude. I really enjoyed the video, just showing off a machine really quick. Nice and simple, really chill.

  • @Spacemutiny
    @Spacemutiny Před 8 lety +4

    Your enthusiasm for older technology is infectious!!! I love it!

  • @Aecidius
    @Aecidius Před 8 lety +1

    Hey man I absolutely adore these videos, keep them up. I can't say there are many people on CZcams who get me on the edge of my seat watching things like this as you do.

  • @hobbified
    @hobbified Před 7 lety +6

    My school had some of the EduQuest Model 40 machines (basically a one-piece PS/2 Model 40 sold directly to schools), and I do remember the floppy mechanism on them just being nicer than average. Other machines would load a disk with a pretty serious "thud", but the PS/2 would accept it with more of a "snik". And the heads had a minimum of gronk-gronk to them, mostly you were just treated to the whisper of the disk media spinning against the padding inside the disk.

  • @coltonpurchasevlogs5566

    LGR this makes me so happy to see I’ve been following for a while but just now seeing it I just recently got a IBM ThinkCentre and this just makes me happy

  • @littleNorwegians
    @littleNorwegians Před 8 lety +28

    0:58
    Damn me, LGR. Can you just make one ASMR vid of computers, monitors, printers, whatever you have in there turning on, off and working. Only ASMR vid I'd ever crave.

    • @LGR
      @LGR  Před 8 lety +15

      Something I've considered, for sure!

    • @2Cerealbox
      @2Cerealbox Před 8 lety

      +Lazy Game Reviews Do it entirely in your Duke Nukem voice!

    • @room___
      @room___ Před 8 lety

      +LittleNorwegians sounds like a ephemeral rift thing

    • @Bukkarooo
      @Bukkarooo Před 8 lety +1

      +LittleNorwegians Yesss, and include the nice clunk of the power switch, too. The switch on this computer in particular sounds wonderful.

    • @AmayirotAkago
      @AmayirotAkago Před 8 lety +1

      +Lazy Game Reviews Do it

  • @ReiDuran
    @ReiDuran Před 8 lety

    Congrats on getting it working! The sound of this thing powering on and off is REALLY satisfying.

  • @Intellmac
    @Intellmac Před 8 lety +1

    I really like your recent videos! Keep coming with new oldies!

  • @monos33
    @monos33 Před 8 lety +2

    As a computer tech, i like seeing your reviews of old hardware. Keep 'em going!

  • @thedesucomplex4365
    @thedesucomplex4365 Před 8 lety +1

    Wow, that is a beautiful piece of older tech. Even though I know it is now outclassed by anything that has been on the market for years, I still can recognize a beast when I see one.

  • @greenefieldmann3014
    @greenefieldmann3014 Před 8 lety

    I love this video! PC gaming and the PS/2 series don't usually go together, so I'm pleased as punch to see PS/2 stuff on your channel, of all places.

  • @scottgfx
    @scottgfx Před 8 lety

    Around 1988-89 I was at a local college where the art professor had a PS/2 Model 60 in his office with a HUGE 4MB MCA memory card, 8514/A Graphics and monitor and a big IBM Postscript laser printer. Windows 2.1 was installed! I learned a lot about editing WIN.INI files by hand to get Aldus PageMaker *AND* Adobe Illustrator to *BOTH* print to the same printer with the same driver. I also learned a lot about finding the right memory drivers so that software could actually use that fancy MCA memory board. Apparently the professor had friends, high up at IBM and they couldn't find the drivers to make the memory work. One day I found the original disks that came with the machine. There were the drivers... Suddenly, you could use high-res 256 colors in Electronic Art's Deluxe Paint. I credit my extensive work with Amiga computers for the problem-solving skills. :)

  • @SawedOffLaser
    @SawedOffLaser Před 8 lety

    I love seeing videos about old PCs like this. Can't wait to see more!

  • @speedysandisk78
    @speedysandisk78 Před 8 lety

    Wow, looks so clean and new on the inside... good job!

  • @gibgun
    @gibgun Před 8 lety +2

    Thanks for all the great content! I'm sure I speak for many here when I say that you're keeping my inner child of the 80s alive and well.

  • @Carambal81
    @Carambal81 Před 8 lety

    Awesome machine! Very nice to see one, never saw the insides of this model before :)

  • @burger1113
    @burger1113 Před 6 lety

    Super cool! I would never have the combination of time, love, and resources for doing that myself, but i can watch this!

  • @RosePhoto1
    @RosePhoto1 Před 8 lety

    Great video! I enjoyed this immensely. I watched it twice so far and emailed it to all my geek friends. I'd never seen the inside the Model 60. Thanks.

  • @BethVictorsson
    @BethVictorsson Před 8 lety

    Omg! Thanks so much for this Clint. I had this whole set up except the mouse back in the day. I remember it weighed a ton! I had to use a hand truck to get it up the stairs. LOL😝 What a blast from the past.

  • @Horzuhammer
    @Horzuhammer Před 8 lety +3

    Man, that's seriously the coolest thing I've seen in a whlie. I was smiling throughout the video. If someone had shown me that hard drive and told me it's an electric coffee grinder or something, I probably would've believed it.

  • @diavo009
    @diavo009 Před 8 lety

    I love this thing. the sound, the way it works and the looks!!

  •  Před 8 lety +2

    The startup - AH, MEMORIES. I visited a few server halls when I was a kid and I remember specifically one time I visited Volvo and needed ear protectors!
    I needed that trip today, thanks.

  • @keigezellig
    @keigezellig Před 7 lety

    Ahh great video, brings back memories.. we had one these beasts at home back in the day (and later on even a Model 80). I did my first steps of programming on this machine and also played games (like crystal caves and commander keen). Although i was kinda jealous about my friends having computer with a sound card :)

  • @RockyBergen
    @RockyBergen Před 8 lety +1

    Your casual reviews are every bit as awesome as your well-produced affairs.

    • @LGR
      @LGR  Před 8 lety

      Thank you!

  • @MaxiM_PL
    @MaxiM_PL Před 8 lety

    Another nice one. Man, your videos were an inspiration to build my '97 dream machine. I didn't feel the need to go all the way back to DOS machines, but I do have a soft spot for my first proper computer running on Windows 95/98 wit h3dfx VooDoo card. So I have built a super beefed up version of that computer that I couldn't afford back then and now I'm re-living the dream :P
    Pentium 3 @450MHz
    64 MB RAM
    3dfx VooDoo 3 3000 (brand new!)
    SounBlaster 128 PCi with the awesome 8MB wavetable (that the card that I had originally).
    A good PC for both DOS and Windows games from mid-90's (where my nostalgia hits the hardest). If I had this machine back in 1997 I would be in heaven, but a PC with half that power had to suffice up until 2001. Thanks again for the inspiration, Clint!

  • @determinedtoimprove8077

    Great to see the classics alive and well, especially when it can play Commander Keen: Goodbye Galaxy. That game was my childhood. I beat it more then 10 times back in the day and still played it. My uncle had a LOT of DOS games in his floppy disc containers and I had about 30 of them installed on my computer. He's a computer programmer so you can bet he had some great lunch breaks with all those DOS games, back then.
    I love your reviews of old computer stuff Clint. Keep up the great videos and fun.

  • @JediJohnn
    @JediJohnn Před 11 měsíci

    I had one of these 286-12 mhz. My mom made me throw the case when i purchase my first Pentium, but i still have that IBM monitor in my storage room and still using the "King of Clicks" keyboard today!
    I love your machine.

  • @MrDwsii
    @MrDwsii Před 6 lety

    Really nice machine. I had a model 60 myself back in the mid-90s when I was a teenager. It had the same configuration as your except for the hard drive being an 80MB ESDI drive. I traded a Tandy 1100FD laptop for it and got the machine along with a model M and 8512 monochrome display monitor and an external tape drive. The man was a manager for the old Waldenbooks chain of bookstores and they had upgraded to new hardware. They let him have the model 60. I remember having to deal with the battery issue one year after I had the machine. Since the CMOS setup was not stored on ROM, I remember my parents taking me to a local computer store to acquire a copy of the IBM Reference Diskette needed to give the machine its date, time, and config data back.

  • @Jezez
    @Jezez Před 8 lety +3

    I LOVE THE ON/OFF SWITCH.. Nostalgia..

  • @JeffDeWitt
    @JeffDeWitt Před 8 lety

    Great video and I love those old machines, especially the sound it makes starting up. The model M keyboard is something else again, those are GREAT keyboards. Where I work we deal with IBM's end of lease stuff and those keyboards show up once in a while so I use one at work (with a ThinkPad). At home I've got a new machine I built myself in my home office, it may have a i5 processor but it's also got a 1995 vintage Model M (which I'm typing on now).

  • @GrapeVineRecording
    @GrapeVineRecording Před 7 lety +2

    Man I would love to record and capture all of these awesome sounds. The Power Off sound was insane!

  • @PCUSER486
    @PCUSER486 Před 10 měsíci +2

    These 1980s IBM ps2 models were a one type fixed design. You couldn't just swap in a normal 3.5 ide hard drive from a AT pc. I remember working on these back in early 90s. Very complex and one off design for sure. Stock up on these now because parts are getting more and more scarce. Thx for sharing this!

    • @IMONFIREPLEASEPUTMEOUT
      @IMONFIREPLEASEPUTMEOUT Před 8 měsíci +1

      I just picked up a model 57 and did not expect to find a 50 pin SCSI drive. Luckily SCSI to SD adapters are readily available!

  • @RetroGamePlayers
    @RetroGamePlayers Před 8 lety

    Love seeing (and hearing) this beast!! My first computer job around 95/96 was at a business only computer store and onsite service provider. We had rooms filled with these older pc's and servers. Most of them were too old back then and we would be upgrading and/or replacing them entirely with newer servers. Love those old 5 1/4 hard drives too, but I can't help but think of those awful Quantum Bigfoot drives that continued throughout the 90's.

  • @2010stoof
    @2010stoof Před 4 lety

    I can't wait for the model 95 server video!!
    I remember when my dad was teaching me about computers back in 96-97 he started me on old acers with no hard drives and booting and using DOS, then up to a model 60 like this I think. I remember how huge the hard drive was in it and only like 15mb, then onto the 386/486 variants and stuff with Windows 3.1 and also 3.11 workstation and troubleshooting through DOS. Then he allowed me to use Windows 95 and up from there.
    I'm glad he went that route instead of straight to windows 95. Got a good base of knowledge through DOS.
    I could have sworn it was a model 60 but I do know it was in a very tall tower and had an incredibly physically huge hard drive

  • @cMaXeJIJIo
    @cMaXeJIJIo Před 8 lety

    That booting sound...takes me right back to kindergarten/1st grade. Thank you, Clint!*tears of happiness" ^^

  • @snagglemiesteralpha3998
    @snagglemiesteralpha3998 Před 8 lety +6

    That power switch is almost sexual in its operation. Every computer should have a big red switch on the front that looks and sounds like a breaker box switch, that is a world in which I would like to live.

  • @homeycdawg
    @homeycdawg Před 8 lety +1

    Fantastic machine. Cheers from another Clint.

  • @AmayirotAkago
    @AmayirotAkago Před 8 lety +9

    That is a sexy machine and it sounds terrific when it boots up.

  • @JimPlaysGames
    @JimPlaysGames Před 8 lety +37

    Holy crap that giant thing is the hard drive? And the processor has no fan or heatsink? Dude. Strange things are afoot.

    • @MR_FIAT
      @MR_FIAT Před 8 lety +9

      +JimPlaysGames with the insanely low frequencys the 286 chips ran at its no suprise realy.

    • @vwestlife
      @vwestlife Před 8 lety +16

      +JimPlaysGames CPUs didn't need fans or heatsinks until the 486DX2 era.

    • @PropaneTreeFiddy
      @PropaneTreeFiddy Před 8 lety +3

      +JimPlaysGames Welcome to the late 80's man.
      Anyone who lived during that time has a bit of a love/hate relationship with the technology. Nothing as amazing as a solid IBM PC...but at the same time I'm not willing to give up my Lenovo Think products now.

    • @pswitch9553
      @pswitch9553 Před 8 lety +1

      Today:
      44MB hard drives = 1cm x 2cm

    • @nilswegner2881
      @nilswegner2881 Před 7 lety +3

      +Can of Soda no, 128 gb micro sd-cards 1 cm * 1.3 cm or something like that

  • @LovelyAlanna
    @LovelyAlanna Před 7 lety

    Once again LGR, once again you made me remember one game from my early childhood that was completely forgotten, crystal caves man, I used to play that game all the time so long ago, I might shed a tear or something...

  • @d3xbot
    @d3xbot Před 8 lety

    That is such a satisfying PC. The hum when it turns on takes me back to when I was 4 and my family got a Dell XPS with a Pentium 3. Not exactly old compared to a PS/2 with a 286, but it hummed just like one.

  • @stridermt2k
    @stridermt2k Před 8 lety +5

    I had one of the later models back in the day after they were considered junk, and yes I swapped the SX33 with a DX2/66, maxed out the ram and filled it with as many drives as I could.
    What I created was a POS that also weighed a ton, but maaaaan was that thing cool in its way.

  • @ElixirOfEuphoria
    @ElixirOfEuphoria Před 8 lety

    The sounds of the keystrokes, the flip of the switch, the machine turning on.. they sound so satisfying. Sweet jesus.

  • @TheKaappari
    @TheKaappari Před 8 lety +2

    The power switch looks so satisfying to use.

  • @GregotheGreat1
    @GregotheGreat1 Před 8 lety

    Great video! love this stuff.

  • @thetman0068
    @thetman0068 Před 8 lety +3

    I dig the startup sound. You should do a HQ maybe ASMR video of a bunch of different machine's boot sounds, and beeps and such.

  • @jakesteven1980
    @jakesteven1980 Před 8 lety

    Love this gold tech, Clint.

  • @InternetLobster
    @InternetLobster Před 8 lety

    The click of the power switch and that whir to follow is so satisfying.

  • @teamhex
    @teamhex Před 8 lety +1

    Dat start up and shut down sound....so nice. This was a bit before I got into computers. I think the first computer I had was a Pentium 3 Micron computer.

  • @JoeoftheWest
    @JoeoftheWest Před 8 lety

    That's one beautiful machine you got there.

  • @NormanRafferty
    @NormanRafferty Před 8 lety

    Deja vu! I remember working at an office building where someone threw one of these away. That freakin' hard drive.
    Eagerly awaiting a video on the madness that was Micro-Channel Architecture!

  • @TerryMcKean
    @TerryMcKean Před 7 lety

    Years ago I had fond and assembled basically that same system with all those peripherals, only the tower was a Model 80, with the 386 cpu and a 387 co-processor. I found all that stuff on a trash-day after someone had cleaned out an abandoned, boarded-up house and all that PS/2 stuff and some more was all piled up in a heap on the sidewalk next to the trash cans, to be hauled away in a trash-truck. I dragged all that computer stuff home and sorted it out and got the Model 80 going ... it also had a card in one of it's MCA slots that had a 468 cpu socket and a couple of RAM slots, so that Model 80 was running as a 486 with a DX2 chip in that card's cpu socket. I tried a DX4 in it, but it made the system run erratically, so I kept the DX2 in that system and it ran great. I also eventually found a 14.4 K MCA modem and an IBM MCA sound card and it's driver programs that included all those 58 gazillion tiny .WAV files that each contained a single note from an actual recording of an actual musical instrument, and that thing played .MID files that literally sounded like actual live music instead of electronicky-sounding synthesized music. I eventually got that rig all fine-tuned and running IBM PC-DOS and IBM Windows 3.1 and it was totally awesome :-)
    You're not kidding ... those systems back in their day were insanely expensive. I dug through IBM's archives in their website and calculated that what I had found and assembled from a pile of discarded junk found on the sidewalk on trash-day into a working PS/2 system based on a Model 80 Tower, and the price tag for all the stuff inside that tower including the two 72 megabyte full-sized hard drives was $180,000.00... approximately... and that is in late-1980's prices!!... :-O

  • @shinjiku01
    @shinjiku01 Před 8 lety

    Love your vids keep them coming

  • @trylleklovn
    @trylleklovn Před 8 lety

    I got one of these as well recently, it just looks, feels and SOUNDS amazing! Of course i had to get a network isa card and run the mtcp pack on it, for some irc goodness.

  • @Tramwithacam
    @Tramwithacam Před 8 lety

    oh the nostalgia as soon as you hit the power switch. I didn't realize how much I miss the rush of fans and power surging though these big old boxes.

  • @crapper1
    @crapper1 Před 8 lety +1

    wow that thing is a total beast congrats on a good pc score

  • @trekchu7103
    @trekchu7103 Před 7 lety +1

    Damn near twenty years after I first switched on a computer (386 with Win 3.11, even came with Raptor, SimCity and I think Crystal Caves, since I know I played it somewhere) I still love the sound they make in the first few seconds after you flip the switch/press the button.

  • @howard81
    @howard81 Před 8 lety

    Wow, I thought my IBM AT was big but that thing is huge! Fantastic machine!

  • @tedboggs4569
    @tedboggs4569 Před 5 lety

    I set one of these up to run some lab equipment back in the mid-90s. It was old then, but I wouldn't be surprised if it is still in use. It was a beast that just wouldn't die.

  • @Hitman47grim
    @Hitman47grim Před 8 lety

    The fact that you found this near my area residence along with the rest of the lot mildly makes me jealous. I have been hunting for a Model M for years now.

  • @RanFuRe
    @RanFuRe Před 8 lety +6

    You can hear the love in his voice =)

  • @armankordi
    @armankordi Před 7 lety

    I love how all IBM PS/2's have a similar sort of fan hum. It just sounds so nice paired with the machine.

  • @Rolee33
    @Rolee33 Před 8 lety +1

    i love your videos so much, thank you :)

  • @TheLORDMJ
    @TheLORDMJ Před 8 lety

    That power on and off sound... wow, I don't know why but I find them extremely awesome. :)

  • @francoisfritz198
    @francoisfritz198 Před 4 lety

    you make the disk drive sound perfectly!

  • @nftmonkey4506
    @nftmonkey4506 Před 7 lety +4

    1:00 listen to the beast slowly waking up

  • @Drinkabeerandplayagameofficial

    This is so cool, great vid

  • @stewartfullerton1965
    @stewartfullerton1965 Před 8 lety

    My very first PC was a Compaq Deskpro 286e with 1mb RAM that I got in 1994 (it was made around 1989 so it was already obsolete when I got it), I had Crystal Caves and Commander Keen on it so I'm used to the slow load times on your video, haha.
    One thing I was very proud of was when I got Wing Commander 2 to run on my 286 which came in 14 disks, it ran like a dog though but man I was blown away.

  • @reynolds_live6949
    @reynolds_live6949 Před 8 lety

    Miss that boot sound. Always reminded me of a spaceship. Epic!

  • @austintripp5331
    @austintripp5331 Před 3 lety

    now that is a cool machine right there. what i would give to find some of those old ps/2 machines to play around with myself

  • @JoneKone
    @JoneKone Před 8 lety

    That monitor power button is so nice too =D I had an instant flash back when i was pushing one of those monitors on.. back in the day.. =D

  • @omegamay9771
    @omegamay9771 Před 8 lety +2

    I watched your first vid on the IBM lot. my dad used to programming for IBM's .when they got rid of the model 60 we had 34 of them at home for £1 go clear them. they are so well. built and tons of room inside for a modern PC build. if anyone has one and lives near Brighton in UK please let me know if love to have one again.

  • @Captain.Scarlet
    @Captain.Scarlet Před 8 lety +3

    Even my USB floppy drives are louder, takes me back to people comparing the smoothness or how fast their CD drive ejected.

  • @PatriciaCross
    @PatriciaCross Před 8 lety +1

    That machine seems to be in absurdly good shape. I don't think I even remember machines I used in the 80s running that smooth,
    Envy!

  • @chbrules
    @chbrules Před 8 lety

    I remember we had those back at my grade school in 1990, but I'm not sure which specific model of it. Loved those old IBM mechanical keyboards. Look at all those classic games I played :D! Memories

  • @jobsgarage
    @jobsgarage Před 8 lety

    That is one of the machines I found in regular service (well more or less: as a non networked standalone machine) when I started my job in 2000. Some other ones included a Macintosh Plus with PhoneNet ADB adapter and external hard disk, and a Macintosh SE used as a file server. In a closet I found a working recently decomissioned Apple IIc. In AD 2000.

  • @coc0_nut6993
    @coc0_nut6993 Před 8 lety +4

    $300 for that whole lot?! That's a steal!

  • @politelyupset
    @politelyupset Před 8 lety +1

    Clint, you're such an awesome dude! Watching your videos gives me the warm feeling of knowing that not all the people in USA are braindead, and because of geeks like you there's still hope for your nation!

  • @lactobacillusprime
    @lactobacillusprime Před 8 lety +1

    The title of this video brings joy to many of us. PS/2 IBM computers were built to last. Love the quality of those machines and it's always good to see one functioning 100%. The granddaddies of modern PCs.
    Love the design language, the mouse is amazing and that power button that's just awesome. The blue eject button on the floppy drive, it even has 1.44 in white lettering on it. The slanted angles.

  • @truckerallikatuk
    @truckerallikatuk Před 8 lety

    Love to get hold of some samples of the sounds from that old HDD. I remember the awesome noises the old 10MB drive in my XT used to make way back.

  • @gdukofficial
    @gdukofficial Před 6 lety

    I WANT ONE OF THOSE CASES SO BAD. Incredible shell for a Sleeper PC... Must find one!

  • @gooseguse
    @gooseguse Před 8 lety +3

    LOL to the floppy disk sound effects lol.

  • @masterrhyno
    @masterrhyno Před 8 lety

    that looked and sounded beautiful