Upgrading a 1996 AST Advantage PC to 32MB RAM

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  • čas přidán 20. 03. 2023
  • 8 megabytes of RAM? Time to QUADRUPLE that and test some games!
    A follow-up to this video on LGR: • This 1996 PC Was Obsol...

Komentáře • 404

  • @LGRBlerbs
    @LGRBlerbs  Před rokem +238

    The first upload broke somehow, so here’s another shot at it!
    Comments, views, likes, and other things weren’t showing publicly or updating at all, even though I saw things happening on the backend. Should be good now I hope.

    • @sanityormadness
      @sanityormadness Před rokem +11

      Well, I can see the pinned comment at least.
      (Such a weird feeling seeing "1 view 12 seconds ago" on an LGR video)

    • @lullobiertje
      @lullobiertje Před rokem +3

      Damn I had second comment on previous upload

    • @Death_MTL_Dude
      @Death_MTL_Dude Před rokem +4

      Saw that Happen on another channel I follow. YT glitching out today

    • @thepirategamerboy12
      @thepirategamerboy12 Před rokem +4

      Still tried to leave a comment and don't see it afterwards. Says 0 comments for me, too. I give up.

    • @LGRBlerbs
      @LGRBlerbs  Před rokem +23

      ^This is the first of yours that I’ve seen, CZcams is a tad screwed it seems :/

  • @johnwalden7638
    @johnwalden7638 Před rokem +86

    "I found a bag of ram under my stairs" may be the most LGR thing I've ever heard.

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack Před rokem +4

      Duke Nukem: Yeaaahhhhhhhhhh, piece of cake

  • @karl-erikkald8876
    @karl-erikkald8876 Před rokem +226

    A brief moment of silence to those poor souls who ran Win95 w/ only 4MB of RAM installed...

    • @snufftherooster93
      @snufftherooster93 Před rokem +60

      Legend has it, they're still waiting for Quake to load 🙏🏻

    • @Tsukizero
      @Tsukizero Před rokem +16

      Appreciated, still quite a sight when Tomb Raider runs like Extreme Winter sports.

    • @Skidd2
      @Skidd2 Před rokem +15

      *plays taps on a kazoo*

    • @JenniferinIllinois
      @JenniferinIllinois Před rokem +9

      Jeez, did I actually do that? Yep and I never want to experience that trauma again.
      🤣

    • @juanstdio
      @juanstdio Před rokem +5

      4megs? Try to install it extracting cab by cab file...

  • @dataterminal
    @dataterminal Před rokem +105

    I remember upgrading from 8MB to 16Mb and it was like having a brand new PC. It was, and still is the best upgrade I ever put in my PC.

    • @CoyoteSeven
      @CoyoteSeven Před rokem +23

      Still holds true today. Upgraded my dad's laptop from 4 gigs to 16 and it was night and day for him. Then I replaced the hard drive with an SSD and he was like OMG.

  • @retropuffer2986
    @retropuffer2986 Před rokem +13

    Good 'ol stair ram!

    • @LGRBlerbs
      @LGRBlerbs  Před rokem +14

      Stair RAM: Quadruple your memory in only a few steps!

  • @TheNostalgiaMall
    @TheNostalgiaMall Před rokem +150

    Your first video on this computer really made me appreciate the fact that my dad opted for a 16MB system for our first computer in 1995. I never realized how limited Windows 95 was with only 8MB of RAM.

    • @LGRBlerbs
      @LGRBlerbs  Před rokem +68

      Especially when paired with other lower-end components and specs!
      And same, I didn’t know how good I had it with the 32MB Acer my parents saved up to get us in ‘97

    • @howaboutsomesoyfood
      @howaboutsomesoyfood Před rokem +7

      latest version of W95 at the very least requires 12 MB. don't know what they were thinking only putting 8 MB in it.

    • @bluesmcgroove
      @bluesmcgroove Před rokem +25

      @@howaboutsomesoyfood They were thinking the same thing PC manufacturers these days do (did?) selling full Windows 10 PCs with only 32GB eMMC storage. Saves them money and it does "work" just terribly

    • @howaboutsomesoyfood
      @howaboutsomesoyfood Před rokem +7

      @@bluesmcgroove makes sense. and my lord that sounds terrible.

    • @Pasi123
      @Pasi123 Před rokem +10

      @@bluesmcgroove And of course 2GB or 4GB RAM and a slow Celeron to go with the 32GB eMMC storage

  • @ian_b
    @ian_b Před rokem +50

    My 486 DX2 went from 4MB to 12MB to 36MB over its lifetime. Days of wonder, the 90s.

    • @seanwieland9763
      @seanwieland9763 Před rokem +4

      Same with the 486 DX2 I had in my youth. Arrived from Gateway 2000 with 8MB, but upgraded to 16MB and eventually 32MB before replacing the motherboard for a Super Socket 7 / AMD K6-2.

    • @ian_b
      @ian_b Před rokem +3

      @@seanwieland9763 I Duke3D'ed the heck out of mine!

    • @derwegi3413
      @derwegi3413 Před rokem +2

      32 MB was a lot back then and it is still amazing what you could do with it.

    • @ian_b
      @ian_b Před rokem

      @@derwegi3413 I thought I'd never need more than that, it seemed like a crazy amount of RAM!

  • @jonathankleinow2073
    @jonathankleinow2073 Před rokem +57

    Someone in 1996: "Carefully remove the RAM from the anti-static bag, make sure you're grounded... careful, that thing cost $300!"
    Clint in 2023: "I think I have a bag of RAM under the stairs."

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Před rokem +3

      That would be me if it was SD RAM from just a bit later, not to mention early DDR RAM. That cost me so little I treat it like crap.

    • @TheDerpsKast
      @TheDerpsKast Před rokem +3

      You know how many random sticks of RAM I've just got lying around? In a bag, in storage bins, in a dresser. RAM everywhere! RAM for all!

    • @shogakusha
      @shogakusha Před rokem +4

      My first Pentium computer, an Acer Pentium 75 purchased in I believe early 1995, we went to buy 8 more MB of RAM, and the store accidentally gave my dad two 16 MB sticks. That was an expensive mistake in those days. Like a "you're fired" level mistake. I had more memory in my home PC than anyone I knew for quite a while.

    • @BilisNegra
      @BilisNegra Před rokem +2

      @@shogakusha So that was 40 MB total?

    • @shogakusha
      @shogakusha Před rokem +5

      @BilisNegra Yes, computer came with 8, we were trying to upgrade to 16 total. Somehow, the guy managed to give us two unbelievably expensive 16 MB SIMMS instead of the two 4 MB SIMMS we had paid for.

  • @davefarquhar8230
    @davefarquhar8230 Před rokem +4

    Retailers loved these underspec'ed machines because it meant people would be back for upgrades sooner rather than later. I worked at Best Buy in the summer of 1995 and this PC was exactly what they told us to expect. Except for the brand that is. Circuit City sold AST. The strategy was to have everything underpowered except for the top end machines that sold for over $2,000, as it made the highest end PCs easier to sell. And if you couldn't afford the most expensive machine, you bought whatever you could afford, then upgraded it over time.
    And yes, 32 MB was a luxury in the early days of Win95, but that changed over time. Memory prices were volatile because Win95 increased the demand for RAM dramatically, but eventually the memory makers overproduced and that caused memory prices to fall out of the sky. It seems to me that was sometime in 1997 it happened.

  • @j.w.techchannel
    @j.w.techchannel Před rokem +61

    I imagine that 32MB of RAM was basically a dream back then.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +10

      Felt like 32 or 64GB today! (Not necessarily in affordability but in terms of space to breathe etc)

    • @bltzcstrnx
      @bltzcstrnx Před rokem +7

      ​@@kaitlyn__L 32 GB is not that bad. It's my go to RAM capacity when building new PC. With DDR4, 16 GB is the absolute minimum. Going lower doesn't have good price to performance ratio.

    • @bankaa9293
      @bankaa9293 Před rokem +11

      I ran win95 on a 2MB 386SX back then, despite that the min requirement was 486 w/ 4MB ram

    • @MattExzy
      @MattExzy Před rokem +8

      I remember as a kid in '97 there used to be informercials on TV selling computers. "...it comes with 16MB of RAM, that's right, 16MB of RAM!!" But still, 32MB quickly became the baseline with '98. It always seemed to be a juggling act of what you could get away with using virtual memory. But honestly, today, doing basic stuff on a PC, there's no difference between 8, 16, 32, or even 64GB of RAM. Even if you have to dip into virtual memory, SSDs are stupendously faster than IDE drives of old.

    • @KR-hg8be
      @KR-hg8be Před rokem +3

      ​@MattExzy I didn't realize that my parents gateway they bought in 98 or 99 was as much of a beast as it was until recently. Had 3 128mb ram sticks in it and a voodoo 3 gpu with 16mb. I played so much age of empires with it.

  • @o1phoenix79
    @o1phoenix79 Před rokem +20

    So happy to see you do more with the AST. So glad you took the email I sent and got it from eBay. Can’t wait to see you spec this thing out to the max 😃

  • @davidt3563
    @davidt3563 Před rokem +7

    I had one of the 97 models of this computer!
    Edit: Man seeing these ASTs brings back tons of memories. These machines are what got me into computers. From games to the internet to building my own web pages and making my own games and levels. Those were the days!!

  • @cromulence
    @cromulence Před rokem +34

    I'm sure one of the draws to this machine is that it is unaccelerated, but I'm curious to see just how much of a difference a 3DFX Voodoo would've made to a Pentium 100 back in 96.

    • @LGRBlerbs
      @LGRBlerbs  Před rokem +34

      That’s certainly a thing I wanna try. It’s been a while since I’ve gone Voodoo with such a middling machine from ‘96

    • @karl-erikkald8876
      @karl-erikkald8876 Před rokem +5

      @@LGRBlerbs Can't wait for a potential video!

    • @Zerbey
      @Zerbey Před rokem +2

      I had an X5-133, so around the same as a Pentium-90. Adding the Voodoo 1 made a big difference, but you really didn't get the full advantage. Once I updated to a P200MMX it was really sweet.

  • @joeschmo2693
    @joeschmo2693 Před rokem +11

    I think we all accumulate a bag of RAM under the stairs as we get older.

  • @micahottaway8455
    @micahottaway8455 Před rokem +3

    I had Pentium 133 MHZ and 32 MB of ram in 1997. Ram prices drastically reduced in price from 1996 to 1997. Ah the 90s, it seemed like a crazy time.

  • @Christopher-N
    @Christopher-N Před rokem +16

    _Having defeated the monster, Clint searches the cave and finds a bag containing RAM sticks._
    But seriously, good video. Much appreciation for keeping older machines running. Still got my Win 95 machine, though it needs a few things to get it back up and running (I'll get around to it eventually).

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack Před rokem +1

      My parents bought a Windows 98 Gateway Essential mid-level tower in 2000 for me for future use and education and stuff. By the 2010's it got lost to time by giving it to another brother who lost it in a house repo. Thankfully the original PC desk bought for it remained in my house. I'm more nostalgic now for vintage PC games and wanting the house to look like how it used to be, so I set off on eBay and Goodwill over the course of the last few years buying up the hardware I need. I still had all the original documentation and paperwork thankfully for the PC so I just looked at the build sheet and plugged that into eBay searches. I got the entire PC back now (including the exact monitor, that was the most expensive part) as an exact match but it's not fully set up yet. I am having a hell of a time finding the DVD-ROM drive I remember that was in there, it had to have been a transitional model drive because I found matching ones in black for XP era machines but not in beige.

    • @Christopher-N
      @Christopher-N Před rokem

      @@MrWolfSnack: Same here. At the time, it made sense to donate our 8088-1 Headstart LX-CD computer to the school, but in retrospect, I deeply regret doing so. Who knew? That machine was a historical piece, and I would love a trip to the HomeComputerMuseum in the Netherlands.

    • @MrWolfSnack
      @MrWolfSnack Před rokem

      @@Christopher-N yeah for sure.

  • @thejackal007
    @thejackal007 Před rokem +8

    Every time one of your Windows 95 machines is used and the startup theme plays, I always close my eyes and smile. For just a few moments, I'm spirited back to when I messed around with my Packard Bell back in that time frame and I'm younger for just a few moments. Thanks for that, Clint.

  • @gratefulvideo
    @gratefulvideo Před rokem +10

    RAM was so expensive in 1996. We sold it for $37 per MB

    • @knerduno5942
      @knerduno5942 Před 9 měsíci

      If I recall correctly, there was only two factories in the world which made a special adhesive (or something like that for them) for the RAM. One of the factories blew up.

  • @MadMac5
    @MadMac5 Před rokem +1

    "I found a bag of RAM under my stairs." Somehow that statement just makes perfect sense for a LGR Blerb!

  • @leetymcleet6490
    @leetymcleet6490 Před rokem +2

    I had a similar spec PC at the time, only mine had a Cyrix P133 with 16 MB of memory. * Derp. I added a Voodoo and an extra 16 MB of RAM and it was like getting a new PC. What a difference it made! I made do with it until I could afford a shiny new Pentium III 450 system a few years later 🤘

  • @ZipplyZane
    @ZipplyZane Před rokem +7

    I'm more a fan of doing it your way: put in all the memory, then only go back to one at a time if I have to troubleshoot. That way, if they do all work, you save a lot of time.

  • @pupaepedorra
    @pupaepedorra Před rokem +15

    DUDE!, i KNOW these machines!, they hired me to install 5 of them, and upgrade them with overdrive, cd drives and network cards in 1999! It was the first proper job i ever had!, they originally had just a 1.44 floppy drive and windows 95, i set them up, installed the upgrades in them, networked them and patched them to osr 2.5
    It is EXTREMELY rare for a school to choose branded PC's here in Argentina, and even more back then.
    Amazing video! :D

  • @dereckh
    @dereckh Před rokem +3

    My Packard bell pentium 100 came with 8MB ram and windows 95. I couldnt play doom with sound without it locking up. I saved and saved and finally bought 32MB of EDO ram and it was wonderful!
    There was also a jumper on my Packard bells board that took it to 133mhz CPU clock

  • @--Zook--
    @--Zook-- Před rokem +3

    6:50 "The swearing is correct." Perfect way to measure game performance

  • @blinddog1212
    @blinddog1212 Před rokem +4

    "I just wanted to....doooo this." I feel you, I feel you.

  • @hi-friaudioman
    @hi-friaudioman Před rokem +4

    That's the exact computer I had in 1996 and those 8mb of ram were definitely not enough.
    I remember when we got back from the computer store with 40mb total. It blew my mind. Hover never ran so fast. 😂

  • @NoNameForNone
    @NoNameForNone Před rokem +3

    For the fun of it I put two 128MB modules in a 486 machine I had laying around. Won't boot with just those in it, but if you add a smaller module in the first slot it will, and then you wait for the endless ram test 😆(the memory can be addressed, it just doesn't like high mb edo ram for some reason)

  • @JohnMichaelBradley
    @JohnMichaelBradley Před rokem +2

    IIRC upgrading my 486's RAM from 4 to 16MB was the first PC upgrade I ever did. I remember the owner of the repair shop in town coming back to the counter with a flimsy cardboard box full of old sticks with a look on his face that said both "have at" and "good luck" all at once. Man, did that upgrade make a difference.

  • @horatio50000
    @horatio50000 Před rokem +1

    "THE RAM UNDER THE STAIRSSSSS!" sounds like a great nerd horror movie spoof!

  • @Pasi123
    @Pasi123 Před rokem +8

    I have two ICL Ergo x451 Pentium 133MHz systems from 1996 which originally came with 32MB RAM but were later upgraded to 64MB and 128MB. They were still somewhat usable for web browsing in the mid to late 2000s

  • @ulle85
    @ulle85 Před rokem +1

    The win95 startup sound is just to soothing..!

  • @niqhtt
    @niqhtt Před rokem +3

    My first comp, in 93, was an Acer 486 SX25, 4meg ram, 170meg drive, and no L2 cache. Just playing Doom, going from 4 meg to 8 in ram doubled the 'smoothness' (no one talked FPS then), and then convincing my dad to get the L2 cache doubled it again.

  • @nerwin
    @nerwin Před rokem +5

    I think you should make a series on upgrading this to the max using period correct components! That would be fun.

  • @chemergency
    @chemergency Před rokem +5

    This was a nice computer with the exception of its RAM amount. A crucial upgrade if I do say so myself. Throw in some more L2 cache and an early Voodoo and you'll be ballin'.

  • @theodorerelic2718
    @theodorerelic2718 Před rokem +1

    Oof, that brings back memories....my first 286, and my little sister's then-boyfriend upgrading my computer, since at the time I didn't know anything about working on a computer. Takes the chips (I think they were 256k each) to one of his former hacker friends who ran a computer shop. He traded (I was there watching him) these chips for 2 1MB SIMMs, which I am pretty sure were pulls from another system, and then charged $40 each per MB. It was 1996. Just think, now I can pay $50 or less for 16GB DDR4. Ahhh, those were the days...they can KEEP 'em :)
    Thanks for the video...serves as a reminder of how we did things back in the day!

  • @springer1985
    @springer1985 Před 3 měsíci

    I watched your other video unboxing this PC. We had what I believe was this same AST computer. Then on my next PC, I had the same monitor you show in this video, the AccuSync 70... just crazy. We upgraded the RAM on this PC to 24 MB back in the late 90s. This video and the other one brought back so many childhood memories. Thank you!

  • @gejamugamlatsoomanam7716

    Went from a 16mb ram to 64mb ram. Felt like i ascended to gaming heaven.

  • @telengardforever7783
    @telengardforever7783 Před rokem +3

    Going from 2mgs of RAM to 4mgs of RAM on a 486SX just floored me. Windows 3.11 ran like a dream.

  • @rubyvolt
    @rubyvolt Před rokem +2

    I have one large box of hunreds of those. They are all 4 and 8s as I have used up all the bigger ones. I have one of those AST machines. I bought it and the laser sticker was still on it so it had never been opened. That was cool. It was hardly used to. Nice machines.

  • @HiddenRefuge
    @HiddenRefuge Před rokem +6

    You should try getting Total Annihilation run on these; the game itself had very low minimal settings for an early windows era and was an impressive feat in terms of tech/graphics. Really nice benchmark, especially considering it still required CD for the soundtrack and some data, depending on your installation type.

  • @tommim4353
    @tommim4353 Před rokem +1

    I love this man. Thanks Clint, really hoping to see the upgrades on this "beast" !

  • @TheDemocrab
    @TheDemocrab Před rokem +2

    I vaguely remember the old family PC with a Cyrix 6x86 and Tseng Labs ET6000 (I think, maybe an ET4000) getting upgraded from 32MB to 192MB RAM so my aunt could install WinXP on it for us. Then a few years later we got a 2Ghz Athlon XP with 256MB DDR and promptly upgraded it to 1GB.

  • @TehSmokeyMan
    @TehSmokeyMan Před rokem +2

    Hahahaha, that bit at the very end (no spoilers) was hilarious and relateable🤣

  • @FunzieOne
    @FunzieOne Před rokem

    wow! its almost like you knew i was binging this channel today!
    many appreciations my good sir

  • @acw2099
    @acw2099 Před rokem +1

    takes me back to the good old days

  • @Linuxpunk81
    @Linuxpunk81 Před rokem +2

    I saw this video in my notifications and then I went to look for it and there was no video so then I thought I was going nuts 😅

  • @FatNorthernBigot
    @FatNorthernBigot Před rokem +7

    Anyone else remember those old motherboard power connectors where you had to make sure the two black wires were adjacent?

  • @vanguze
    @vanguze Před rokem +1

    Brings me back. Thanks man.

  • @moosemaimer
    @moosemaimer Před rokem +4

    I had to jam some laptop memory into a tiny Dell box yesterday, and yes those "jam it in and angle it over" slots are awful

  • @uniktbrukernavn
    @uniktbrukernavn Před rokem +9

    Spent so much time tweaking my computer back then just to get a couple more FPS. Felt like a victory every time. This carried over to Win 95 and XP, eventually I stopped clocking my boot time etc :)

    • @Skidd2
      @Skidd2 Před rokem +3

      First time i heard of a 10 second boot time i was amazed.... now that i have that, it's old hat, but a hat i won't give up 😅

    • @Kara_Kay_Eschel
      @Kara_Kay_Eschel Před rokem

      I read tweaking as twerking.

    • @Pasi123
      @Pasi123 Před rokem

      @@Skidd2 10 second boot time? My main PC takes like 20 seconds just to post lol
      Though I don't really care about boot times because my PC is running 24/7 anyway

  • @dur7021
    @dur7021 Před rokem +1

    “I found a bag of ram under the stairs” 😂

  • @the_beefy1986
    @the_beefy1986 Před rokem +1

    Love those Cambridge Soundworks speakers.

  • @PenguinRevolution
    @PenguinRevolution Před rokem +1

    Back in the day I had an NEC AccuSync 70 monitor. Good choic of a CRT monitor!

  • @quantumleaper
    @quantumleaper Před rokem +1

    I remember upgrading my P75 from 8 megs to 40 megs and I also had to upgrade my CDRom from 2X to 4X, mainly because it died after a year or so of use.

  • @brettrudy2245
    @brettrudy2245 Před rokem

    You should definitely scour the globe to find the VRAM and cache modules. Really put this beast to the test!

  • @AlejandroRodolfoMendez

    Congrats on getting more ram for the pc and at the first try.
    Yes I also have a box with old ram sticks too

  • @GikeroMage
    @GikeroMage Před rokem +1

    Hey Clint!
    You might be interested in the MemTest86 RAM stress testing/diagnostic utility. I believe Memtest86 supports hardware back to 286 era CPUs and RAM types.

  • @GizmoFan1
    @GizmoFan1 Před rokem +1

    I just randomly watched the original video with this computer on my lunch break today, what a fun coincidence.

  • @bungwohlio
    @bungwohlio Před rokem +1

    Throw a 3dfx in. You’d litterally have my childhood pc.

  • @NamesGolden
    @NamesGolden Před rokem +1

    As a preteen in the late 90s I got a huge bag of mostly 72pin ram from a bankrupt store, wound up screwing a Mobo to the wall and using it to test ram.
    At some point near the end of the bag I must have killed the cache because it wouldn't test known good sticks as good.

  • @Lion_McLionhead
    @Lion_McLionhead Před rokem

    Lions were such kings with 32MB in 1997. Running XFree86 without swap space, web browsing was just insane. Just a few years earlier, that was the territory of $10,000 workstations.

  • @LotoTheHero
    @LotoTheHero Před rokem +1

    It's amazing how much difference a RAM upgrade made. Almost hard to believe.

  • @mariolover2222
    @mariolover2222 Před rokem +2

    I watched this once... And I'll watch it again

  • @gen_angry
    @gen_angry Před rokem +5

    Additional VRAM is more for higher resolutions I believe, it cant hurt though. I think I sent you some that should work if it takes 40 pin SOJ chips, marked "EliteMT M11B416256A-25J". (Dug out the purchase email real quick, lol)
    If you can find a COAST module that works for that machine, that should help with quake quite a bit.

  • @ryans8597
    @ryans8597 Před rokem +2

    Now realizing that my dad getting an HP with 18mb ram for W95 was a solid choice back in the day.

    • @zgillet
      @zgillet Před rokem

      How'd he do that? Did they sell sticks of 6 MB?

    • @ryans8597
      @ryans8597 Před rokem

      @SiLenT366 maybe two 8s and a 2? Been 25 years so I could be wrong.

  • @shodan2958
    @shodan2958 Před rokem +4

    I did a similar thing with DIMM RAM slots on a 486, the procedure to insert them is annoying but I would be lying if the sound it makes isn't satisfying as hell. Also I remember until the late 00s I recall the standard "Boost your PC performance" procedure was to boost the RAM which now seems to have been superseded by "Get an SSD" for the most part.

    • @cat35467
      @cat35467 Před rokem

      There were no 486 boards with DIMM. Only SIMM 30 and 72 pins.

    • @shodan2958
      @shodan2958 Před rokem

      @@cat35467 Ah of course, thanks, I stand corrected.

  • @ModernClassic
    @ModernClassic Před rokem

    I had a Packard Bell Legend 2000 when I was younger that was similar to this, so I know what you mean about this being the kind of thing average people would have and we'd just figure out ways to make the best of it. I upgraded what I could, starting with the VRAM that PB had to upgrade for free because the included 512KB wouldn't even provide the resolutions advertised on the box. I then upgraded the actual RAM, then I believe the hard drive, and eventually everything until the point when it was a totally new PC. I kinda wish I hadn't done that now, though; I've been looking for another one for a long time and they're just not common. But I definitely remember that struggle of trying to get your bog-standard Best Buy dorm room computer up to the standards required to play decent games, and the satisfaction that came when you managed to upgrade it effectively. I remember that most of us had never seen a real graphics card or CPU upgrade (within the same machine) at that time so when I did both to my computer, I was like "whoa!"

  • @Zerbey
    @Zerbey Před rokem +1

    Ahh those glorious days when 32MB was a ton of RAM, I had a similar setup but could only afford 16MB at the time!

  • @BilisNegra
    @BilisNegra Před rokem +1

    If in doubt about the kind of memory sticks you need, you can travel back in time, contact AST customer service over the phone and maybe David (Murray) will be answering at the other end!

  • @JohnSmith-xq1pz
    @JohnSmith-xq1pz Před rokem +2

    Our first PC was a AST Advantage pro 486sx/25. I really wish we still had it, or find another one to recreate ours

  • @idahofur
    @idahofur Před rokem +1

    So back in the late 90's. I decided to to a little test. Now I can't remember 100% everything but it was windows 95 and I'm sure some Pentium machine. I wanted to know what the difference was. 4 to 8 megs. Big difference. 8 to 16 you could print without noticing any difference. But for just having windows open and doing a few things. No bother at all. One problem is cost. Memory prices would go up and down and when I did that it would be another $300+ for the ram. So if you are already spending $1,200 on a machine with 4 megs of ram. That extra 300.00 was a good chunk of change. Though we did sell tons of machines with 8megs of ram.

  • @simplyhard
    @simplyhard Před rokem

    I wish I had my old AST Advantage. It was a 66mHz 486 dx2 though, but it looked exactly like yours. ❤

  • @fensoxx
    @fensoxx Před rokem +1

    Oh man! I know it’s a blerbs but I was hoping for that quick cut to two days later and that video mem chip being installed. Be very interested in that video!

  • @alexgeorge501
    @alexgeorge501 Před rokem +2

    5:49 "Damn...Those alien bastards are gonna pay for shooting up my ride"

  • @YodaPagoda
    @YodaPagoda Před rokem +1

    Before I installed Windows 95 into my 486 SX 25, I upgraded the RAM to 16 MB…it desperately needed it!

  • @mazzyycat
    @mazzyycat Před rokem +2

    Same with Quake. My friend had a P100 and it definitely wasn't that choppy on the first level. He even played it in a resolution higher than the default.

    • @sjogosPT
      @sjogosPT Před 11 měsíci

      I have a laptop 380ED, 166Mhz. 320x240 is perfect. 640x480 its playable but have low framerate. Based on this, i dont think a pentium 100mhz could play Quake higher than 320x240 fast. At time we were less picky about framerates. Back in the day, i played anything unless it cames to single digit fps, but ofc, today we have higher standards.

  • @Aethelwolf
    @Aethelwolf Před rokem +7

    32 MB of RAM sounded like so much in the day.

    • @lftdblazer
      @lftdblazer Před rokem +1

      And now I wonder how they even ran on so little, but I know it was simpler time lol

  • @frazerx01
    @frazerx01 Před rokem

    Oh man, those RAM slots. All i could always think of while installing RAM into them was "don't bend the pins! don't bend the pins! don't bend....oh nothing happened."

  • @mrb692
    @mrb692 Před rokem

    3:50 Small world, I have that exact same core memory art piece you have next to your monitor! Picked up one of the DGC Nova 16K boards while I was there too

  • @Gilerajohannes
    @Gilerajohannes Před rokem +1

    Back in 1996 my dad had an Olivetti Pcs 44/C cpu was a Intel 486 SX 25 Mhz and 8 Mb ram 512 kb video ram and 240 mb harddrive and 1,44 mb floppy ,no sound card only pc speaker and no cdrom drive, it was running ms dos 6.22 and windows 3.1 ,it was good for dos games and word perfect, it became my first pc later and I installed a sound blaster 16 vibra value card and a cdrom drive 24x speed but it was not fun getting that to work in a Italian stubburn small desktop pc, I had to get the local pc store to get the sound card and cdrom to work it was not playing ball ;) allso same store where I bought the sound card and cdrom drive, but one day I droped it on the floor so somthing on the motherboard went bad somehow so it went to scrap after that.

  • @acepilot87
    @acepilot87 Před rokem

    A brief flashback to the big box o'ram in the IBM PS/2 Motherlode video..."I have tubes of RAM! Tubes!"

  • @Prime92
    @Prime92 Před rokem

    "I found a bag of RAM under the stairs." RAM is always the last place you look.

  • @Kwincy5
    @Kwincy5 Před rokem +1

    You should definitely do a video with you upgrading to 2MB of vram and upgrading the L2 cache.

  • @WooShell
    @WooShell Před rokem

    oh god, I need to play Pod again.. got it back in the days packaged with my Voodoo1 card, and spent hundreds of hours racing my friends. I wish there was any modern sequel to it. Rollcage came quite close, but even that franchise only lived two releases.

  • @plan7a
    @plan7a Před rokem

    LD - Oh, what a RAM-bling Blurb! (LOL). (And a touch of one of the Chistmas Clones at the end? Maybe?)🎄

  • @detfan1982
    @detfan1982 Před rokem

    Good to see a blerb again!

  • @f.k.b.16
    @f.k.b.16 Před rokem +2

    2:45 oh that crunch! (I do not miss it!)

  • @andresbravo2003
    @andresbravo2003 Před rokem

    I have 8GB of ram on my Acer that came preinstalled. So good that it’s one of those days.

  • @commodorechronicles
    @commodorechronicles Před rokem

    Watching this and the original reveal video kills me... I grew up with an AST Advantage Adventure 6066d in this exact form factor. We upgraded our 486DX2/66 version to a 5x86DX4/133. I'd love to find one these myself. One day. 😢

  • @andrewhopkins1010
    @andrewhopkins1010 Před rokem

    My dad had this exact computer in the '90s. It was his first Windows machine.

  • @pupaepedorra
    @pupaepedorra Před rokem +1

    OKOK, you got me here, PLEASE, upgrade this one AS MUCH as you can, "get it all"! XD
    (full ram, osr2.5, 3d accelerator, soundcard and whatever else you can, i will watch the HECK out of that series!) (do not change the motherboard!)

  • @Mech4
    @Mech4 Před rokem

    If you leave your stocking out, SATA Claus might come by to give good boys and girls a stocking full of RAM. However, if you've been naughty, you get a stocking full of thermal paste.

  • @gentuxable
    @gentuxable Před rokem +1

    In the late 90s I was old enough to roam freely in those large supermarkets my parents shopped at. I always saw those Pentium II machines but then 16 MB RAM. I'm always like why?!? They ripped those people out big time.

    • @sjogosPT
      @sjogosPT Před 11 měsíci +2

      My first computer in end of 2000s had 64Mb of ram. And, worse than that, it had an integrated GPU (Nvidia Alladin) that used system RAM as video ram. You could define in BIOS the ram to give to GPU (Default from factory was 16Mb), leaving 48Mb avaiable for Windows millenium. My pentium 3 had the same amount of memory a friend of mine had on its 166Mhz computer, but he had a dedicated 3D gpu. It was bought on supermarket. The trick at time was to put a good CPU and HDD and cheap on everthing else. At time 128Mb were the "normal" for a Windows Millenium machine from late 2000s, and 256 was awsome. Windows ME was slow with so little memory. WIndows Media Player 7 took ages to open. Eventually i got 98SE installed and became faster, but it was until i got more 64Mb ram stick from my cousin that my machine started to move a little. Supermarkets really capped their pcs. At time i din't know much about computers, i only knew i wanted a pentium 3 computer with a 20gb hdd. I learn about computer hardware from that time on.
      Before i got RAM upgrade, i installed XP to check what XP looked like with that little ram. XP on 48Mb of ram is veryyyy slow.

    • @gentuxable
      @gentuxable Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@sjogosPT At the time I had a Pentium MMX 166 MHz but I had 128 MB RAM and it ran Win98 fine and the RAM I got for free because everyone wanted the then new SDRAM-DIMMs not the old 72 pin SIMMs so I had plenty. Yeah of course those manufacturers sold the newest platform where upgrading was expensive, the smart people got a Super Socket 7 and some AMD K6 for example and way more RAM than a fast Pentium 3 but little RAM and integrated graphics. Some i810 based Celeron systems were even worse. And with the first Pentium 4 and Rambus Intel really went way too far and Athlon won. Windows Media Player 7 was a catastrophe and even when I had a Millennium machine i would find out that you could just run mplayer2.exe to get the old media player and set that as default.

  • @eddiehimself
    @eddiehimself Před rokem +2

    Not a lot of people know this, but EDO memory was invented by the Japanese in 1603.

  • @foxyfoxington2651
    @foxyfoxington2651 Před rokem +2

    I just did my first PC build since the early 00s, and I really miss working on these machines. Less glow-y, more beige, and much, much less... Temperamental than modern hardware.

    • @Gatorade69
      @Gatorade69 Před rokem

      Same. Recently built my first PC since 2010 but my first build was in 2001. However you know you can turn off RGB ? I hate RGB and have all mine turned off (except for on the ram because I Don't see any options to turn off ram RGB).

    • @foxyfoxington2651
      @foxyfoxington2651 Před rokem

      @@Gatorade69 No idea. I have the same problem, but with the CPU fan. I have 3 or 4 programs installed to control all of that stuff (1 from the mother board manufacturer, 1 for keyboard, one for graphics card, 1 for GPU, etc, etc). I think it really depends on the component and the manufacturer. I don't think there's any one "standard" app or interface. At least, I couldn't find one.

  • @procta2343
    @procta2343 Před rokem +1

    I remember doing this to a windows 3.11 machine, it had 8mb, and a 75 mhz processor, ran ok, bumped the ram up to 32, and it went like stink. My dad said that's a lot faster! i said its amazing how much more ram can make a difference.

  • @stellamcwick8455
    @stellamcwick8455 Před rokem

    “I found a bag of RAM under the stairs”. Yeah, sure Clint. “RAM”.

  • @jonessii
    @jonessii Před rokem +1

    1:18 lol, found a bag of ram under the stairs, as one normally does.

  • @VintageJunk1e
    @VintageJunk1e Před 3 měsíci

    i love the old 72 pin sim sound lol

  • @tchiak83
    @tchiak83 Před rokem +1

    Call the 8-bit guy and ask him for tech support for your AST computer