MAIL UNBOXING - DTK COMPUTERS

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024
  • Hi everyone, welcome back!
    Here with a great unboxing and video.
    2 DTK Computer systems that were used in some school or business till 2008 I think, incredible for their age.
    DTK was a big business back in the day with international reach since 1981, very interesting and will have to learn more from them.
    Have you encountered with DTK in the past?
    The systems are working good and I have restored the discs and hopefully we'll know what they were used for.
    Hope you enjoy the video and if you want you can leave a like and subscribe.
    Thanks for watching!
    Cheers!
    #restoredwards

Komentáře • 13

  • @alejandrodelta8928
    @alejandrodelta8928 Před 2 měsíci +3

    Oh boy! Those PC-Chips brand motherboards for P II, haven't seen those for a while, good memories come back, I've used to repair those things in the early 2000's. I' also keept a bunch of the original driver CD's that where shipped in the motherboard's bundle for OEM retailers.

    • @restoredwards
      @restoredwards  Před 2 měsíci +1

      I used to have those CDs as well, I remember they were everywhere when this brand was going on like AOL ones haha.

  • @retroboby007
    @retroboby007 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Very interesting systems. Never seen a socket 7 system with onboard video and audio on a riser card. But that 48 score in 3dbench is very low for a Pentium 120.
    I have a DTK computer covered on my channel too. But mine is a midtower socket 370 Celeron Mendocino 533mhz with AGP slot. Very strange that it has the DIN keyboard and AT power supply too.
    I like these cases with the 3 stripes in the front.

    • @restoredwards
      @restoredwards  Před 2 měsíci +1

      Thanks for your comment. I think something is not good with the BIOS configuration or the partition with DOS in the hard drive respecting the benchmark. Would be nice to make a second part video. I will check your channel as well, cheers!

  • @galen__
    @galen__ Před měsícem +1

    I think we had a 386 in the early 90s with a DTK badge on the case, purchased from a budget reseller in metro Melbourne, Australia.

    • @restoredwards
      @restoredwards  Před měsícem +1

      That's nice, they were all over the world.

  • @Qwertypigeon853
    @Qwertypigeon853 Před 2 měsíci +2

    I wonder i they repurposed the com😊uters as thin clients? My Grandma used in the 2000s, it was a P3 and a big keyboard connector (I now know it AT DIN) and you needed an adaptor. It also had a CD drive added and I remember playing games on it but the graphic card was extra bad!

    • @restoredwards
      @restoredwards  Před 2 měsíci +2

      The surely repurposed AT cases and PSUs. And yes, having good graphics in the past was a struggle for most of us!

    • @Qwertypigeon853
      @Qwertypigeon853 Před 2 měsíci +1

      @@restoredwards I think so. I think I remember my Junior school had lots of beige box computers but they were P4

    • @restoredwards
      @restoredwards  Před 2 měsíci

      @@Qwertypigeon853 The cases started to be relevant after 2000 mor or less, but I can't remember to see cases on sale as they are now.

  • @KristianKiri
    @KristianKiri Před 2 měsíci +2

    Pentium 2 era and DIN keyboard connector? what they thinking? :)

    • @restoredwards
      @restoredwards  Před 2 měsíci +2

      That's right! You had to get your PS2 connector mounted. I think they intended this so you don´t have to upgrade the case. It's like a mid period motherboard insisting on AT cases.

    • @alejandrodelta8928
      @alejandrodelta8928 Před 2 měsíci +2

      This brand have done odd things in that era, there was also a similar model with two sockets, one for the cartidge type cpu's and one PGA370 (une usable depending on CPU)... Can't rememder the model right now, and BTW, those algo had a big DIN5 connector... hahaha