Packard Bell Corner Computer: One of 1995's Strangest PCs

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  • čas přidán 12. 11. 2020
  • A look back at the bizarre Packard Bell Corner Computer, one of the weirdest computer designs of the 90s. Pentium CPU at 200MHz, 64MB RAM, Windows 95, and floppy disk and CD-ROM drives jutting out of each corner. An infrared remote control mouse thing came with it, too!
    ● Special thanks to Billy of Nostalgia Mall:
    / thenostalgiamall
    ● LGR links:
    / lazygamereviews
    / lazygamereviews
    / lazygamereviews
    ● Music courtesy of:
    www.epidemicsound.com
    #LGR #PackardBell #Bizarre
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 2,5K

  • @MrPeteykins
    @MrPeteykins Před 3 lety +890

    "The idea was sound; the execution was Packard Bell" perfectly sums this up, LOL.

    • @CaptainApathetic
      @CaptainApathetic Před 3 lety +42

      It seems like the name "Packard" is bad luck. HP is one of the worst PC manufacturers today, their laptops are mostly junk

    • @TacosAreWizard
      @TacosAreWizard Před 3 lety +12

      @@CaptainApathetic
      They work pretty good for me, especially for gaming.

    • @AdamIsUrqed
      @AdamIsUrqed Před 3 lety +23

      I dunno. I bought an HP with an AMD A8 with 8 gigs RAM (shared video) back in 2011 in celebration of my son's birth. Still going strong, even after coffee was spilled ALL over it. Just disassembled and cleaned to fix. Then again, that was 8 years ago, and build quality is in constant flux in the computer world.

    • @thaiboypsp3000
      @thaiboypsp3000 Před 3 lety +10

      CaptainApathetic I means don’t think HP is that bad. They’re not the premier brand but hey, it works.

    • @Nukle0n
      @Nukle0n Před 3 lety +14

      @@CaptainApathetic Their laptops are fine. Compared to someone like MSI or Toshiba (RIP) who made absolute shit.

  • @yellowcrescent
    @yellowcrescent Před 3 lety +801

    oh man. this is triggering "fond" memories as a kid in middle/high school. going to some lady's house to fix her computer, and there's a Packard Bell in the back corner of some dank room-- desktop completely covered in icons and permanently burned in to the blurry 14" CRT, the color scheme is changed to dark cyan and pink with cat noises for all of the notification sounds, an expired version of McAfee antivirus and Norton both running, Internet Explorer with 20 toolbars... oh god...

    • @NorthStarBlue1
      @NorthStarBlue1 Před 3 lety +108

      Oh man, does that ever sound familiar! I think all of us who were the neighborhood "computer kid" back in the day has a horror story similar to that. That and being asked to fix a printer that got nuked by a power surge.

    • @jhunter7912
      @jhunter7912 Před 3 lety +37

      Those were the days 97 to 2005

    • @colombianguy8194
      @colombianguy8194 Před 3 lety +60

      This is very similar in an international level: I'm from Colombia, and of course i was the computer guy in the neighborhood. Not so many families had a computer back then, for a poor/middle class, mid 90's Colombian family that was a BIG investment. So, I was the only kid who had the power to delete viruses, crap software and make everything back to normal when the neighbors "creative hands" were to work lol!

    • @davetate1155
      @davetate1155 Před 3 lety +31

      I had a very similar experience, helping a lady who bred dogs build a website, she was a teachers assistant at my school, nice lady, she paid me $100, that would of been about 1997.

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones Před 3 lety +10

      There are worse fates than death....

  • @michaelduffek2866
    @michaelduffek2866 Před 3 lety +419

    Clint: removes the gray monitor circle stand
    Me: exe.exe has stopped working

    • @Cristofre
      @Cristofre Před 3 lety +104

      I was so disappointed. Some of the magic went out of the computer at that point.

  • @donwebber7034
    @donwebber7034 Před 3 lety +79

    I worked for Packard Bell in R&D in 1995. There where many stupid decisions made by marketing where they never consulted us first. Like the Pizza cabinet , and weird color palette snap on wavy trim pieces.

    • @jetcheneau5811
      @jetcheneau5811 Před rokem +5

      it's funny how we're nostalgic for em now, everyone i know who had to use one back then Hated them

    • @MegaZeta
      @MegaZeta Před 7 měsíci +7

      @@jetcheneau5811Nostalgia is partially defined by inaccurate or incomplete memory (and sometimes by no real memory at all behind it). This will help you understand a great deal of people's opinions on the Internet.

  • @theenhancer
    @theenhancer Před 3 lety +370

    "The mouse is like fondling a potato chip."
    Sold.

    • @danielberrett2179
      @danielberrett2179 Před 3 lety +6

      My Favorite line of the video

    • @nslouka90
      @nslouka90 Před 3 lety +15

      Ruffled for her pleasure

    • @conyo985
      @conyo985 Před 3 lety +2

      I wish it tasted and smelled like a potato chip.

    • @kewoshk
      @kewoshk Před 3 lety +1

      I came across this comment just at that part lol

    • @philbertchow5425
      @philbertchow5425 Před 2 lety

      Ain’t nothing wrong with fondling chips.

  • @Jossandoval
    @Jossandoval Před 3 lety +187

    8:07 Ah, a lot of people talk about nostalgic disk sounds, but for me is the degaussing of a good 90s CRT that bring back the memories. That small feeling of fear at touching the monitor, the tiny shocking sensation of static electricity, and the degaussing sound that you can swear just gave hiccups to the fridge.

    • @sHuRuLuNi
      @sHuRuLuNi Před 3 lety +2

      Mmmmmm ....

    • @crestofhonor2349
      @crestofhonor2349 Před 3 lety +10

      I don’t have nostalgia for that because my family was actively using a CRT up until 2019 despite having a LG 4K tv in another room. I still have the CRTs but they’re now in my basement

    • @ahandsomefridge
      @ahandsomefridge Před 3 lety +8

      plonggggg

    • @FuglyFatt
      @FuglyFatt Před 3 lety +13

      And the x-ray of my upper body on the wall opposite of my PC desk after de-gaussing a 21 inch Viewsonic CRT

    • @quackman
      @quackman Před 3 lety +15

      I loooooooooved Degaussing. Every monitor made its own unique sounds and visuals. And one of the best parts is you had to wait for whatever to build up after at least 10+ minutes or so. the longer you wait, the sweeter the degauss!

  • @Keranu
    @Keranu Před 3 lety +226

    Two things I love about LGR: his expressive first-person hand gestures, and when his voice goes into Mr. Burns mode.

    • @louistournas120
      @louistournas120 Před 3 lety +38

      Mr Burns? I thought it was Duke Nukem.

    • @GSungaila
      @GSungaila Před 3 lety +8

      Duke Nukem

    • @Keranu
      @Keranu Před 3 lety +19

      @@louistournas120 Noo noo no, it's not the Duke Nukem voice he often does. Maybe he's trying to go Duke Nukem but the voice registers differently. There's definitely times he sounds more like Mr Burns than Duke.

    • @ericherrera5018
      @ericherrera5018 Před 3 lety +14

      I’d sound like mr.burns too if i was in the presence of a $2,300 computer

  • @phoenixsixxrising
    @phoenixsixxrising Před 3 lety +103

    Packard Bell: This is interesting, what was your thought process here?
    Systems Engineer: Cocaine's a helluva drug

  • @broddajanes6910
    @broddajanes6910 Před 3 lety +238

    It reminds me of that corner computer in the Black Mesa lobby.
    'Get away from there, Freeman! I'm expecting a really important message!'

    • @NathanPa-xo3zj
      @NathanPa-xo3zj Před 3 lety +21

      Terrible he lost all files man

    • @PowerUpT
      @PowerUpT Před 3 lety +10

      *Presses button*

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 Před 3 lety +2

      I like how that quote makes freeman sound like a cluts

    • @totallynotyosuke8660
      @totallynotyosuke8660 Před 3 lety +6

      i just started playing half life for the first time. always feels weird playing games that came out before you were born

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 Před 3 lety +5

      @@totallynotyosuke8660 I'm surprised you care about these old computers any.

  • @thcollegestudent
    @thcollegestudent Před 3 lety +277

    "Computers used to come installed with bloat"
    Haha, glad those days are over!
    Now if you'll excuse me I have to go uninstall candy crush and Skype from my windows 10 install.

    • @danem2215
      @danem2215 Před 3 lety +62

      Still can't get over Microsoft bundled 10 with so much pay to pay shit. Even Solitaire. Such garbage

    • @naneek2
      @naneek2 Před 3 lety +31

      Why won't windows 10 work? it never ever does what you expect it to based on every previous version of windows.
      And why are they trying to neuter the functionality of windows by relegating basic functions and settings to "apps"?

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Před 3 lety +16

      @@naneek2 noone knows. Control panel worked perfectly fine...

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Před 3 lety +13

      I'm still wondering why there hasn't been a sea of lawsuits against Microsoft yet for installing proprietary third-party software on windows PCs without the user's knowledge and consent nor a way for the user to opt out of it.
      At least in the EU there should be massive lawsuits, as this violates the GDPR in every way possible!
      Also, last time I booted my mom's laptop, immediately when it got to the desktop it showed a giant banner advertising the new chromium-based Edge browser, begging me the set is as default. Wasn't that exactly how Microsoft got a Million dollar antitrust fine in the nineties?

    • @wordart_guian
      @wordart_guian Před 3 lety +12

      @@danem2215 the thing with solitaire is it OUGHT to be bundled, but they have made it too freemium-ey for solitaire. I've reinstalled the vista one personally.

  • @a_perfect_human_being
    @a_perfect_human_being Před 3 lety +9

    This is a weird comment, but I just gotta commend LGR on his audio quality. Between almost all of the videos, the levels and volume are nearly uniform and impressively consistent.
    Only reason I noticed is because when I developed massive tinnitus a few years back, I needed to fill my sleeping environment with a lot of ambient sounds.
    These videos are perfect because, as everyone knows, Clint’s got a very smooth and calming voice. His videos are calming and entertaining, and, with no negativity meant whatsoever, have helped me fall asleep for the first few years of hellish ringing.

  • @MichaelRichardson-bw5xh
    @MichaelRichardson-bw5xh Před 3 lety +62

    Ah the memories. I was selling Packard Bell computers around when this came out. What a weird and wonderful time for desktops.

  • @jmvsic
    @jmvsic Před 3 lety +25

    I very vividly recall the one and only time I was able to use one of these. It was 1996. I was a just about to be a freshman in high school and our neighbors paid me 250$ for the month of July to water their plants and feed the cat while they went on vacation. The husband had just installed The Day of the Tentacle before they left, and I spent the next few weeks playing that game while sitting in the corner of their kitchen... which is exactly where they decided to put it.
    Good times.

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones Před 3 lety +1

      Still one of my favorite games. Amazing writing and the art style still holds up.

  • @Mineav
    @Mineav Před 3 lety +165

    So you could accidentally reset the PC by pressing what you think is the eject button on the fake CD tray outlay on the left side? Cool.

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 Před 3 lety +13

      I was thinking like they knew it would freeze a lot so make the reset button easy

    • @Flashy7
      @Flashy7 Před 3 lety +7

      you will only do it for a few times until you either learn not to do that or throw the computer out :D

    • @TheMichigami
      @TheMichigami Před 3 lety +6

      yup, and this was the days before "hold the button down so the computer can make sure you want to do the thing even though the thing might be stupid" for both the reset and the power button, so when you bumped it, or little fingers poking all the things they shouldn't found the buttons, or even the cat headbutting the case because you're spending more time on solitaire than cat time, SURPRISE!

  • @hkoizumi3134
    @hkoizumi3134 Před 3 lety +64

    Back in the 90s when you turn on you PC to hear that startup, it always made me wonder "what new things will I discover today?" Anyone had that feeling before? Everything we take for granted today was brand new back then. God I missed those days.

    • @omgnoi
      @omgnoi Před 2 lety +7

      I miss how the 90s felt full of possibilities

    • @marccaselle8108
      @marccaselle8108 Před rokem +2

      Me as well, I miss when exploring what windows 95 could do felt like an adventure.

    • @countvronsky4025
      @countvronsky4025 Před rokem +4

      "What new Twitter nonsense will I discover today?"

  • @glaucorocha1281
    @glaucorocha1281 Před 3 lety +28

    One thing I really love about Clint is how he's so enthusiastic about the sheer/raw cheesiness of '90s design choices, especially for user interfaces, because that's literally me. I mean, look at this Packard Bell Nav thing: it's like basing your user interface aesthetics on a visit you took to your grandparents' house. And that's EXACTLY what I love about it, plus the cluelessness of designers back in the day.

  • @joj.
    @joj. Před 3 lety +123

    6:54 - "Packard Bell: Clint grew up typing on us. He Still Does."

    • @lee4hmz
      @lee4hmz Před 3 lety +3

      At least this one is rubber-dome; the Packard Bell I had back in 1993 had the foam-and-foil BTC keyboard, and that was no fun at all to type on.

  • @JohnDoe-le7ml
    @JohnDoe-le7ml Před 3 lety +100

    1:50 is this the "Heart Shaped Box" that Kurt Cobain was talking about?
    Hey! Wait! I got a new complaint!
    This thing doesn't fit in the corner like it was supposed to.

    • @Whipster-Old
      @Whipster-Old Před 3 lety +1

      No. You could use it to store hearts though. HEARTS OF YOUR ENEMIES.

    • @benn454
      @benn454 Před 3 lety +8

      I bet the inside smells like teen spirit.

    • @raywt3237
      @raywt3237 Před 3 lety +3

      Only a negative creep would buy this monstrosity

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Whipster-Old hearts is pre-installed

    • @Doobie3010
      @Doobie3010 Před 3 lety

      So it’s a broken-heart,shaped box?

  • @RoseTintedSpectrum
    @RoseTintedSpectrum Před 3 lety +92

    I spent so many hours reorganising my virtual house in Packard Bell Explorer, only to then just go back to using Windows because it was better.

    • @Texeyevideo
      @Texeyevideo Před 3 lety +1

      My first was a PB, my brother talked me into taking it back and getting an Acer.

    • @chinchilla505
      @chinchilla505 Před 3 lety +5

      Someone's needs to create the Packard ball "home" in real life

    • @pozloadescobar
      @pozloadescobar Před 3 lety +5

      I love the Packard Bell Explorer. It harkens back to when computing was new and exciting and confounding. Windows was actually good back then

    • @tsm688
      @tsm688 Před 2 lety +7

      @@pozloadescobar When you didn't need 8 fucking gigabytes to sit there and do nothing... only 16 megabytes to sit there and do nothing LOL

    • @pozloadescobar
      @pozloadescobar Před 2 lety +3

      @@tsm688 You are right on the money! My generation grew up spoiled with all that extra RAM. Our newbie engineers often write memory leaks just because they've never felt any serious memory constraints

  • @SpiderCollector000
    @SpiderCollector000 Před 3 lety +22

    Packard Bells were one of the largest sources of work, when I got into IT as a 16 year old teen. Many of them unfortunately had hardware issues, but they were priced in a very competitive fashion and you could get them cheaper than the majority of the others that were out there.

    • @nthgth
      @nthgth Před rokem +1

      Cheap, but broke a lot. So basically the Kia (esp at the time) of PCs. Or maybe the Yugo.

    • @jetcheneau5811
      @jetcheneau5811 Před rokem

      @@nthgth The thing is, unlike a cheap piece of shit PC made today, you Can fix a Packard Bell with minimal difficulty if you're willing to sit down and read.

  • @TheInternetHelpdeskPlays
    @TheInternetHelpdeskPlays Před 3 lety +183

    It'd go perfectly with that "ergonomic" split keyboard thing Microsoft did in the 90s.

    • @ozguroyus
      @ozguroyus Před 3 lety +1

      Yeeessss

    • @TheXev
      @TheXev Před 3 lety +28

      The Microsoft "Natural" keyboard is still one of my all time favorite keyboards. If they were made with modern gaming switches, I guarantee I'd own one. Those things were super comfy to type on once you got used to them.

    • @tech6hutch
      @tech6hutch Před 3 lety +23

      They’re still making keyboards with that shape, y’know

    • @robowenmikels
      @robowenmikels Před 3 lety +3

      Any 90s set up could benefit from the addition of 1 of those because they are awesome keyboards. I still have 2 of them (I don't use them anymore though).

    • @thesteelrodent1796
      @thesteelrodent1796 Před 2 lety +2

      MS weren't/aren't the only ones to make those keyboards. There are still companies that make them, as well as keyboards that come apart in the middle

  • @TheGreatCodeholio
    @TheGreatCodeholio Před 3 lety +70

    17:00 Everything had a sound effect in the 1990s. Having a sound card was still kind of new and novel up until the mid 1990s. Besides, how can you call it a multimedia PC if it isn't making dorky sound effects for everything to prove it :)

    • @wordart_guian
      @wordart_guian Před 3 lety +6

      I particularly love the microsoft money sound effect

    • @louistournas120
      @louistournas120 Před 3 lety +2

      It's important to have a color monitor, sound card, CD or DVD drive, USB ports and speakers, 3D video card. I love my multimedia PC!

    • @kbhasi
      @kbhasi Před 3 lety +1

      I'm already thinking of the background music that played in the first-time setup for Windows XP and the installer for some versions of MSN Internet Access.

  • @TsunamiSephi
    @TsunamiSephi Před 15 dny +1

    Are you me??!!
    Thank you so much for doing a review on a Packard Bell! Mine wasn’t the corner model, but looked exactly like this computer otherwise, and had the exact same software. I grew up playing Duke3d, Transport Tycoon, Nascar Racing, XCom, etc..
    I remember getting LEGO Island for Christmas only to find out my Packard Bell didn’t have the right graphics chip. I could never get it to run, and I still haven’t played Lego Island to this day, despite fawning over it for a year as a kid before it came out.

  • @WalcomS7
    @WalcomS7 Před 3 lety +265

    Holy crap, whatever that Spiderman Cartoon Maker program is based off of; I had one exactly like that as a kid without said Spiderman stuff. I cannot imagine how much time I spent making animations and stuff, you could record voice overs and everything. The immediate nostalgia when you started drawing with the Rainbow Pen and that bubbling sound effect was unreal. I was waiting for it to pop up in your video, glad it finally did in a sense.

    • @nothingissacrosanct
      @nothingissacrosanct Před 3 lety +4

      maybe windows movie maker is the other one you're thinking of?

    • @kbhasi
      @kbhasi Před 3 lety +1

      Maybe you were thinking of Microsoft 3D Movie Maker, or some other similar product from Knowledge Adventure?

    • @no.no.4680
      @no.no.4680 Před 3 lety +1

      Knowledge Adventure had those sound effects on Jumpstart, I think. Possibly all of their games with a painting minigame.

    • @MNT1416
      @MNT1416 Před 3 lety +7

      Was it Kid Pix Deluxe? That’s what I thought of when he started painting lol

    • @stephenkamenar
      @stephenkamenar Před 3 lety

      i strongly remember the rainbow pen sound effect too. but idk why

  • @P3HOBBIT01
    @P3HOBBIT01 Před 3 lety +48

    I had that exact computer when I was 13. I was able to convince my Dad when they started offering free VCRs with the purchase (I think because it was "Multimedia"... I was 13, I only cared I was getting it. It lasted me about 3 years before I ran out of ways to upgrade it, and I finally built a proper PC... so this was my first and last pre-built /tear

  • @RandallFrequentFlyerFlagg
    @RandallFrequentFlyerFlagg Před 3 lety +43

    3:27 Oh no, the QA seal was broken. I hope that didn’t void the warranty.

    • @Doobie3010
      @Doobie3010 Před 3 lety

      Truly a ‘seal of quality’.

  • @MsWaverly
    @MsWaverly Před 3 lety +20

    I had this! what a miraculous rememberance into childhood. The sound of our printer will never leave my soul. Thank you LGR!

  • @Yomom12388
    @Yomom12388 Před 3 lety +28

    The whole idea of trying to run games only a slight few years newer and having the hardware basically shit the bed brings up some interesting thoughts. Sure, it was super cool back in the day when you could go buy a new video card and slap it in and immediately double your performance. That being said, if you were the kind of person who wants to stay on the cutting edge, you better have been prepared to buy computer hardware like every couple months. Things moved so quickly and were not at all cheap. These days you can usually wait a few years between upgrades, all the while never really having to worry that you won’t be able to run something. Even when you do upgrade the improvement you see isn’t nearly as drastic as it was when I was a kid.
    So on one hand I like being able to keep hardware longer and therefore spend a lot less while not really sacrificing much at all. On the other hand it was so damn cool back in the day when you got some shiny new stuff that made your games run 3x as fast at a higher resolution, but everything was so expensive and tech moved so fast that your new gear was probably obsolete by the time you got in the PC and booted it up. Tough call for me.

    • @fridaycaliforniaa236
      @fridaycaliforniaa236 Před 3 lety +3

      I agree so much with this

    • @MOS6582
      @MOS6582 Před 2 lety +1

      Great observation. You could put your name on it. It’d become Lastname’s Dilemma then you could drop anonymous references to it around social media and start a thing.

    • @kantraa
      @kantraa Před rokem

      @@MOS6582 "The Obsolution Dilenma"
      "A dilenma mainly PC enthusiasts had in the 90s. A consequence of technology moving so fast that by the time you bought a new PC part, put it in your computer and booted it up, it would already become obsolete."

    • @Sashazur
      @Sashazur Před rokem +1

      “My new computer's got the clocks, it rocks
      But it was obsolete before I opened the box
      You say you've had your desktop for over a week?
      Throw that junk away, man, it's an antique!
      Your laptop is a month old? Well that's great
      If you could use a nice, heavy paperweight”
      - Weird Al Yankovic

  • @theothertonydutch
    @theothertonydutch Před 3 lety +43

    I had a friend whose dad was a pastor and he referred to Packard Bell as Packard Hell.

    • @Dosgamert
      @Dosgamert Před 3 lety

      Haven't we all xD

    • @richardestes6499
      @richardestes6499 Před 3 lety

      I think those of us that came in contact with them in their heyday that had one die expressed identical sentiment.

  • @troyquigg4411
    @troyquigg4411 Před 3 lety +29

    Here is some fun factoid. I worked at PB in the early 90s (Chatsworth & West Lake). I was given that mouse design to test. As part of my testing, I let it fall off my desk (drop test), which of course broke it. Little did I know was that the mouse was a prototype engineering sample (ie, only a few existed) until I took the broken one back to the engineers and they gave me an earful for destroying it. LOL!

    • @johnnyblaze9217
      @johnnyblaze9217 Před 3 lety +4

      Hahaha it sure is a shitty mouse i'll say that

    • @LRM12o8
      @LRM12o8 Před 3 lety +8

      Lmao, stupid engineers! You should've given them shit for a) building a crappy mouse that doesn't even survive a single drop and b) not telling you that it isn't ready for durability testing just yet XD

  • @e11aguru
    @e11aguru Před 3 lety +38

    If BOSE made computers in the 90s that's what it would look like.

    • @JAD-dz3kt
      @JAD-dz3kt Před 3 lety +1

      It's placed in the corner because 90% of your computing is reflected from the walls.

  • @nickjones9867
    @nickjones9867 Před 3 lety +4

    I just love how Clints voice seamlessly goes from somewhat nerdy computer entheusiast complete with the laugh of somone having a blast to Cool AF Duke-esque at the drop of a hat.

  • @BillJobs01
    @BillJobs01 Před 3 lety +30

    19:13
    "The year is 2318"
    " ᶦᵗ'ˢ ᵗʳᵘᵉ "

  • @thesledgehammerblog
    @thesledgehammerblog Před 3 lety +31

    I was working in Windows 95 tech support back in 1996 (just barely out of high school), and Packard Bells like this thing were the bane of my existence. Especially if something like that combination soundcard/faxmodem monstrosity was acting up you could pretty much kiss your SLAs for the day goodbye. And if they had a Winmodem, well that was pretty much "Abandon all hope ye who enter here" territory.

    • @jeffjackelen744
      @jeffjackelen744 Před 2 lety

      SLA?

    • @ajblack2410
      @ajblack2410 Před 2 lety +2

      Service level agreement

    • @JeffreyPiatt
      @JeffreyPiatt Před rokem

      IBM invented that combo sound card fax modem ironically for there PS/2 and Eduquest systems. They sucked so hard that IBM ended up dumping them on the Eduquest line to clear the stock.

  • @sedrosken831
    @sedrosken831 Před 3 lety +5

    Man, all those crunchy hard drive noises take me back more than I thought they would. My SD adapter is worlds faster, bigger capacity and more convenient, but I can’t help but feel like I’m missing something all these years later. I can still hear my 486 “thinking” because of the bus whine coming through my speakers, so at least there’s that.

  • @quarterburnt
    @quarterburnt Před 3 lety +6

    20:27 This was exactly me. I never played a PC game before so walking around in a (pseudo) 3D sci-fi environment with full voice and sound effects was crazy. And it was the full game, not some demo. All I need is Babylon 5 on the TV in the background and my 90's nostalgia would be complete.

  • @cbw56
    @cbw56 Před 3 lety +46

    Billy Coore is such a genuinely amazing person. First connected with him in 2010 and realized I wasn't the only Packard Bell fanatic in the world.
    Great video, Clint!

  • @AaronDislikes
    @AaronDislikes Před 3 lety +93

    I remember playing with display models of this computer both at the mall and at staples as kid. It is crazy how forgotten and rare it has become.

    • @joshfatal
      @joshfatal Před 3 lety +1

      I remember lining up canyon.mid on a number of machines all at once

    • @Gatorade69
      @Gatorade69 Před 3 lety +1

      I would always go into paint and draw stupid pictures and change them to the desktop wallpaper.

  • @radeakins
    @radeakins Před 3 lety +7

    I remember my local college having dozens of these in 95 for a good while after. They had them in the computer library back when going to the library/college to use the internet was a family evening out. A few years later, these were packed into computer labs for beginners computer courses.

  • @romefox
    @romefox Před 3 lety +70

    They really.... cornered the market with this one.
    Sorry.
    Ill see myself out

  • @srh76able
    @srh76able Před 3 lety +26

    The centre corrugated piece reminds me of a good old Aussie water tank.

  • @zzstoner
    @zzstoner Před 3 lety +50

    I always like the captions, especially when focusing on sound bites... [types of typing being typed] and [CRT degaussing]

  • @TsunamiSephi
    @TsunamiSephi Před 15 dny +1

    SPIDERMAN CARTOON MAKER 🤯
    OMG this rocks. Thank you for the nostalgia trip

  • @jonathanwolf9336
    @jonathanwolf9336 Před 3 lety +13

    When you fired up journeyman, that took me back to 1996 when my parents got the first family computer.

    • @Jeffmetal42
      @Jeffmetal42 Před 3 lety

      same, I remember playing Journeyman and the Spiderman Cartoon Maker. I spent a ridiculous amount of time making crappy cartoons.

    • @jonathanwolf9336
      @jonathanwolf9336 Před 3 lety

      @@Jeffmetal42 totally forgot about that spiderman cartoon maker. That was amazing for its time though.

  • @jasonblalock4429
    @jasonblalock4429 Před 3 lety +48

    "Click to start Prodigy." Man, I'd love to see LGR do a video on Prodigy someday. It always tends to be forgotten when people talk about dial-up private networks from that time, the middle child overlooked between Compuserve and AOL.

    • @glenncaughey5044
      @glenncaughey5044 Před 3 lety +1

      What? No geos?

    • @Wilus0
      @Wilus0 Před 3 lety +6

      CHANGE MY PITCH UP, SMACK MY BITCH UP

    • @laowhy86
      @laowhy86 Před 3 lety +4

      Juno

    • @falconpaladinsc2
      @falconpaladinsc2 Před 3 lety +6

      @@laowhy86 Juno had FREE e-mail! No ISP required. Ad-supported, and yep, you could also sign up for their ISP eventually, if I remember right.

    • @Charlesb88
      @Charlesb88 Před 3 lety +4

      How about a video on GEnie, the dial-up online service from General Electronic Information Services that served as a cheaper CompuServe competitor starting in 1985 before AOL and Prodigy were even a thing. GEnie was initially a text-only service like CompuServe and thus could be used on any platform with a modem and terminal program (PC, Mac, C64, Tandy CoCo 3, etc, etc.). It stuck around until 1999, when it closed for good due to the Y2K problem (and a dwindling user base due to the rise of the internet. A couple other online service worth doing a video on are: Apple eWorld - This was Apple’s attempt to get into the dial-up online service market and was Mac only and the Microsoft Network (later renamed MSN Internet Access then Microsoft Dial-up) , which started out as propriety dial-up online service that required special software from Microsoft to access and I believe was Windows 95 only at first (i.e. No Mac or Win 3.1 compatibility). Whit the rise of the public internet/Public ISP’s, Microsoft switched the Microsoft Network towards to standard dial-up service renaming it Microsoft Internet Access then Microsoft Dial-up which still exists today though with only a small user base I imagine.
      For anyone reading this too young to know what what a dial-up Online Service was, well here’s an explanation: Before the internet was easily publicly accessible (early internet access was for University/Educational, Governmental, and some corperate use only) but this all change as laws/regs governing the network change allowing public ISP’s to spring up around 1995. Before then there was something know as an dial-up Online Service Provider you could access via a dial-up modem. These where basically wall gardens where you could access various services on proprietary networks. At first they where simply text-based services (examples: CompuServe and GEnie) but later gained GUI front ends and graphical based services, thought some Online Service providers like AOL started with GUI interfaces from the get-go. The types of services they offered include message boards, shareware/freeware software downloads, information access including reference sources like dictionaries, encyclopedias, etc., chat services, online shopping, technical support from major hardware and software companies who had a presence on these networks, and in-network email services (Some like CompuServe offered limited email sending between other online service providers eventually gaining full internet email access).
      Gradually, starting around 1995, online services started to offer internet services such web access, FTP (File Transfer Protocol) access, and full email access causing them to gradually discontinue their proprietary services in favor web-based alternatives or TCP-IP based alternatives that used their own stand-a-alone software like AOL’s AIM instant messaging software or a stand-alone email client. Many of the them eventually lost too many custermers to standard dial-up ISP’s that they closed shop entirely or switched to being just a standard Dial-up ISP.shutting down their proprietary servers and services. AOL is one that continued it proprietary services as a whole longer then others towards then end most had shuttered or moved to the web. They still exists but only as an eMail provider and Dial-up ISP for the few who still use it (and yes, some people still use dial-up ISP’s in 2020 for various reasons such as cost or being rural users without easy broadband access). They were partly a victim of the rise in broadband internet in the late 90’s of which they as a dial-up online service/Dial-up ISP couldn’t compete with since not just anyone can offer broadband internet service unlike dial-up which operates over standard POTS/copper telephone lines. Given that AOL was unable to offer little in the way of desirable proprietary services by the 2000’s you couldn’t get via a standard TCP-IP connection, there was little incentive for AOL users to get a broadband connection and then pay for AOL on top of that so most dropped AOL unless they were sticking with dial-up and AOL made the one remaining AOL service that some former AOL customers turned broadband user had kept AOL for (email) free to use for everyone much like Gmail, Yahoo mail, etc.

  • @Popk1ller
    @Popk1ller Před 3 lety +31

    sad they missed the opportunity to use the Packard Bell Logo in the middle as power Button

  • @Sim_Flix
    @Sim_Flix Před 3 lety +6

    This was the first PC my family ever bought!!! My my, the memories! I remember it struggling like hell to play The Sims 1 and Rollercoaster Tycoon.

  • @CanDriveSoon
    @CanDriveSoon Před 3 lety +3

    I grew up with a non-corner Packard Bell in the 90s. Man what trip down memory lane it was hearing and seeing it all again! Never got too far with Journeyman but had lots of fun with the other games, playing with the sound rack and MIDI files.

  • @SlavicCelery
    @SlavicCelery Před 3 lety +46

    Hearing old computer boots is a sound that's perfection in it's horrible way.

    • @Doobie3010
      @Doobie3010 Před 3 lety +1

      Bet someone modded an SSD sound effect with that! You just know someone has to have,

    • @josephcote6120
      @josephcote6120 Před 3 lety +1

      Kind of goes with the modem handshaking sound. Nostalgic, but you kinda don't want to hear it too much.

    • @SlavicCelery
      @SlavicCelery Před 3 lety

      @@josephcote6120 Similarly, hearing the old modem dial tones is fantastic. I don't want to hear it every time I get on the internet.

    • @Doobie3010
      @Doobie3010 Před 3 lety

      @@josephcote6120 Quite,like chalk across a board.Nostalgia should only take in so much! I think the ‘Amiga Forever’ software had a disk-drive sound option,if memory serves.

    • @mgtroyas
      @mgtroyas Před 3 lety +1

      @@Doobie3010 The WinUAE amiga emulator, yes.

  • @4Wilko
    @4Wilko Před 3 lety +27

    Sometimes I listen to jazz music and think, "This isn't as angular as I'd like it to be."

  • @BakedKipling
    @BakedKipling Před 2 lety +5

    You're a legend for these videos, this is time traveling for many of us, soo great to hear and see these old machines in action after all these years

  • @vedde7309
    @vedde7309 Před 3 lety +3

    I'm pretty sure I have you and 8bit guy to thank for getting me into retro computing. As it stands I've got a nice little collection of computer-y goodness from the mid 80s and early 90s!

  • @XMguy
    @XMguy Před 3 lety +12

    My first computer was a “custom” from a computer store in 1996. I was allowed to use it. But I always got jumped for changing anything my mother thought could break it. Which was everything.

  • @PowerUpT
    @PowerUpT Před 3 lety +72

    2:51 "Looks cutting edge"
    More like looks like they cut the edge, right?

    • @Jossandoval
      @Jossandoval Před 3 lety +4

      Damn you, punny human. I now can't unread this!

    • @themanwithnoname4385
      @themanwithnoname4385 Před 3 lety +1

      Boo

    • @Whipster-Old
      @Whipster-Old Před 3 lety +2

      They cut something, but it was not the edge.

    • @RegularCupOfJoe
      @RegularCupOfJoe Před 3 lety +1

      @@Whipster-Old the cheese?

    • @geoffreyreuther5260
      @geoffreyreuther5260 Před 3 lety +3

      Little did the public realize, there was actually a cutting edge on the inside, and it forced many a techs to bleed when they installed RAM.
      Seriously, though. Most PC makers didn't roll the edges of the steel inside their chassis until after 2000, and if something gave way unexpectedly when you were working on, you earned a new scar.

  • @biohazardbeam
    @biohazardbeam Před rokem +6

    You make a modern pc in that case would be awesome

    • @kiwi_clips
      @kiwi_clips Před rokem +1

      Yea that would make a dope sleeper. Would love to modify that case to build my machine in it.

  • @RussianSevereWeatherVideos

    That amazing startup sound, thanks for sharing it with us!

  • @dlinkster
    @dlinkster Před 3 lety +29

    “You may also begin by taking a quick lesson on using the mouse.”
    “I would rather not!” Lol I love this man!

    • @getoffamylan6844
      @getoffamylan6844 Před 3 lety

      Back on the tech support lines we used to call the Navigator "Aggrevator"; it was buggy and obnoxious and yes it was VERY much a selling point.

  • @samss108
    @samss108 Před 3 lety +16

    The virtual home artwork and aesthetics were awesome that mid 90s feel is great

  • @HenrySomeone
    @HenrySomeone Před 3 lety +5

    "putting the computer right by the spatulas..." Ah, so that's where Huang got his ideas from!

  • @matt.604
    @matt.604 Před 3 lety +3

    I bought one of those PB remote controls and receiver to use on my generic PC. With the help of remote software I could map remote buttons to key presses or macros/actions. Worked great with a TV tuner card.

  • @duckwerksofficial
    @duckwerksofficial Před 3 lety +57

    "the idea was sound, the execution was packard bell"

  • @ProtoMario
    @ProtoMario Před 3 lety +696

    It honestly seems like a good idea if the just did something with the cords, my God what were they thinking?

    • @Broken_Yugo
      @Broken_Yugo Před 3 lety +22

      ​@Aidan Slobodian Packaging, you could push the mobo forward and have a cable cabinet but there's no room to do the same for the PSU so it can breathe and allow cables to go that way. You'd be looking at an expensive proprietary PSU or making the whole case several inches larger, both non starters.

    • @patrickelliott2169
      @patrickelliott2169 Před 3 lety +8

      @@Broken_Yugo Hmm. True, I still would have considered making it a tad "taller", then placing an existing "back plate", or something like, "under" the thing, with guides, to allow you to also have venting for air.

    • @andrive
      @andrive Před 3 lety

      Yep

    • @Marc83Aus
      @Marc83Aus Před 3 lety +4

      It needs the space at the back for exhaust anyway.

    • @forkless
      @forkless Před 3 lety +12

      In the category "My God what were they thinking?" also goes their practice of enabling retailers -- to keep a good relation with them, never mind the customer -- re-selling 2nd hand/refurbished product as brand new. I remember having to support customers that were 4th or 5th owners of a "brand spanking new" PB.

  • @kenbee1957
    @kenbee1957 Před 3 lety +5

    "But I think I've just about talked myself into a corner with all these features"
    🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @dollhousemakr
    @dollhousemakr Před rokem +4

    Navigator was one of the best things to play with on our '95.

  • @pacershark452
    @pacershark452 Před 3 lety +58

    LGR: "I think I've about talked myself into a corner"
    I see what you did there😁.

  • @Thekinggamelon
    @Thekinggamelon Před 3 lety +13

    18:59 Oh man! The Journeyman Project! Finally!
    It's not a review, but that's ok, I'm still happy you're finally playing the game of my childhood, thanks man!

    • @RadicalDreamer85
      @RadicalDreamer85 Před 3 lety +2

      I can't wait for him to do a full review of the series, or at least the first game.

    • @jasonblalock4429
      @jasonblalock4429 Před 3 lety +5

      I got so nostalgic hearing that little flute ditty while wandering around the apartment. I never got very far in the game, but it sure was amazing to play at the time, when CD drives were new. It was the very first CD-ROM game I ever saw in action.

    • @blunderingfool
      @blunderingfool Před 3 lety +2

      I only ever had a demo of J3 which came with a copy of Ryvn I think. I should play it some day.

    • @RadicalDreamer85
      @RadicalDreamer85 Před 3 lety +2

      @@jasonblalock4429 It was included in a bundle with the computer my family bought in the mid 90s. The music and atmosphere was magical. Took me forever to actually beat it.

  • @commandotuff
    @commandotuff Před 2 lety

    Thank you so much for doing this type of thing. My whole love for pc's started in 95 and this just takes me back to then. love hearing that startup noise XD.

  • @Yaotzin51
    @Yaotzin51 Před 3 lety

    We can always count on Clint to mute the background music to enjoy all those juicy sounds of 90's computer booting up. Great job once again!

  • @hardlyworgen71
    @hardlyworgen71 Před 3 lety +31

    "The idea was sound. The execution was Packard Bell."
    Perfect.

  • @funghazi
    @funghazi Před 3 lety +22

    Oh man I loved this design, I would have wanted it more if Packard Bell hadn't had such an awful reputation.

    • @mattb154
      @mattb154 Před 3 lety +5

      Perfectly period-appropriate avatar.

  • @QuaaludeCharlie
    @QuaaludeCharlie Před 2 lety +2

    I Remember when Billy got that , Cool he lent it to you LGR , I Love seeing it :) QC

  • @Fingolfin3423
    @Fingolfin3423 Před 3 lety +1

    These videos warm my heart and make me wish I was growing up again with our first home PC.

  • @dunbrine47
    @dunbrine47 Před 3 lety +14

    This reminds me. When we getting the "Strangest Computer Designs of the 2010's "video?

  • @connorburton1009
    @connorburton1009 Před 3 lety +12

    I've been waiting for LGR to talk about Navigator since his video on BOB and I'm glad it finally made an appearance.

  • @kyuubinine
    @kyuubinine Před 3 lety

    I just want to say you are one of the unique man that collect the classic rare computers and games. Thats really cool

  • @framerateuk
    @framerateuk Před 2 lety +2

    Had a P75 version of this for Christmas in 1996. Loved it at the time! I remember the 'Navigator' software that came with it, and it gave me my first experience of 'Decent'.

  • @GodsMemeTV
    @GodsMemeTV Před 3 lety +35

    8:07 - ASMR for the 90s geeks 😂👌👍

  • @spillingvoid1
    @spillingvoid1 Před 3 lety +20

    I remember hoping to find one of these in a dumpster so I could swap my computer bits into it. I also remember being underwhelmed when I finally found a gutted one in a dumpster.

    • @IntegerOfDoom
      @IntegerOfDoom Před 3 lety +3

      @mike h What? We all did. That's how I amassed my collection of vintage units that I lost in the divorce. Still makes me teary eyed.

    • @spillingvoid1
      @spillingvoid1 Před 3 lety

      @mike h In the 90s companies still chucked their computer stuff in the dumpster. Att dumpster I found my first Pentium, a 75 MHz. While dumpster diving was the first time I got my hands on a scsi raid card and over time the hard drives for the raid. It was an easy way to get parts and about the only way for me to get ahold of server type parts. Dumpster diving is what sparked this individual's imagination setting me on the pathway to go from a family of migrant workers to an engineering manager for one of the premier cpu design/manufacturing corporations. You do what you need to do to succeed & follow your dreams.

  • @nftscreenshotter6436
    @nftscreenshotter6436 Před 3 lety +2

    I grew up with Spider-Man Cartoon Maker and Journeyman Project Turbo. There is no amount of words that express how much I love both of those, especially Journeyman. As a kid, I found Journeyman so incredibly eery and creepy, between the sound effects, voice clips, and the flatline noise that plays when you die along with all the many different drawing and descriptions of HOW you died. I played through the game so many times. The exploration, the eye-lense gadget thing, the time travel, the big robot trying to kill you, I love everything about it.
    "Out of my WAY, human....or DIE."

  • @jimgallagher6310
    @jimgallagher6310 Před 3 lety

    This brings back a lot of memories. My first computer was a Packard Bell 75mhz Pentium with 8m of ram and a 14.4 fax modem running Windows 95. Learned to use the computer using the Packard Bell Navigator. Thanks for the great video!!!

  • @Gappasaurus
    @Gappasaurus Před 3 lety +15

    19:41 Guy in Future Toilet: “I said I needed a PLUNGER not a FLANGER!” 😅

  • @tundraportal
    @tundraportal Před 3 lety +12

    Great to see Billy Coore getting recognition!

    • @gamophyte
      @gamophyte Před 3 lety

      I was going to say congrats Billy! Awesome shout-out and collab

  • @JCally83
    @JCally83 Před 3 lety +1

    Ahh the nostalgia of seeing the Packard bell logo along with that Mouse.. takes me back to the 90s playing Strategy PC games with my best mate, great times

  • @nickleibert9853
    @nickleibert9853 Před 3 lety

    THIS BRINGS BACK SO MANY MEMORIES!!! My 1st computer was a Packard Bell 75Mhz Pentium and I totally remember the Packard Bell Navigator. That Packard Bell computer started my love for computers. Man I love this channel :).

  • @SoleaGalilei
    @SoleaGalilei Před 3 lety +10

    Hey let's make a "corner" version of something that is already square and fits in a corner! Brilliant!

  • @joejoe3011
    @joejoe3011 Před 3 lety +8

    SpiderMan Cartoon Maker was a staple of my childhood. A couple of my friends had it and we'd always try to make each other laugh. Pretty sure every cartoon ended with a character farting and blowing up the galaxy

    • @Gatorade69
      @Gatorade69 Před 3 lety +1

      Similar to my friends and I and a game we had called Hollywood.

  • @rocsaltjohn
    @rocsaltjohn Před 3 lety +1

    I appreciate the fade before the ad. It's less intrusuve.

  • @WingBeatZ
    @WingBeatZ Před 3 lety +1

    Omg that startup sounds take me right back.. All the beep boop and crunching!

  • @SheKnives
    @SheKnives Před 3 lety +532

    Really digging the design.

  • @wvecst
    @wvecst Před 3 lety +19

    That old hard drive grind.

    • @pleasedontwatchthese9593
      @pleasedontwatchthese9593 Před 3 lety +2

      I want to make a loud pc build one day. One of those old HDD, an old AMD cpu air cooler with a old AMD gpu. I will fill the case with fans and max them out also.

    • @bgtubber
      @bgtubber Před 3 lety

      @@pleasedontwatchthese9593 😂

    • @glenncaughey5044
      @glenncaughey5044 Před 3 lety

      @@pleasedontwatchthese9593
      IT’S WHISPER QUIET!!! NOTICE HOW GOOD MY SPEAKERS SOUND IN JILL OF THE JUNGLE!!!

  • @chainlightning58
    @chainlightning58 Před 3 lety +1

    My family’s first computer was a Packard Bell from around ‘95. I remember apps like Packard Bell Navigator. Thanks LGR for taking me back 🙂

  • @bacon.cheesecake
    @bacon.cheesecake Před rokem +1

    I am absolutely in love with this design, I want to build a sleeper in one so badly, too bad they're so rare.

  • @petenielsen6683
    @petenielsen6683 Před 3 lety +7

    A couple years after this came out I was working on the assembly line at IEC Electronics - then a New York supplier of motherboards for Packard Bell. We pumped out 3000 mobos per day for the Pentium 2 just from the main plant and that was just the day shift. The night shift did just as many. Now IEC makes parts for the medical field and military and no longer makes parts for PC makers, but the motherboard in the corner PC could have been before PB pulled out of the contract.

    • @colombianguy8194
      @colombianguy8194 Před 3 lety

      Awesome, did the company still have the assembly line in the US?

  • @Zellio2011
    @Zellio2011 Před 3 lety +6

    All they had to do is reverse the design and have that cutout be where the cords go (Or add another cutout) and then it would function perfectly....

  • @rossblomkamp9190
    @rossblomkamp9190 Před 3 lety

    Oh man, I clearly remember being mesmerized by Packard Bell Navigator during the flashy, multi-media rich mid-90's. These corner computers would be on display at our local computer store and were just amazing at the time. I couldn't for the life of me remember the name of the software and tried looking it up a while back for nostalgic effect to no avail. Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Love your videos. Keep up the good work, dude!

  • @Tahngarthor
    @Tahngarthor Před 3 lety +6

    "The idea was sound, the execution was Packard Bell"

  • @zvndmvn
    @zvndmvn Před 3 lety +6

    Blast from the past right here. I didn't have this particular model, but I had the vertical tower equivalent which came with the same software package. I forgot about Packard Bell Navigator! Such fond memories of Spider-Man Cartoon Maker and Journeyman Project Turbo... I also remember a point & click submarine simulator called Silent Steel. Good times!

  • @joshflugel
    @joshflugel Před 3 lety +4

    I was a sucker for these monitors with speakers attached to them

    • @Joshua_N-A
      @Joshua_N-A Před 3 lety

      Now with today's audio technology, is it possible to bring them back?

  • @taotechnique
    @taotechnique Před 3 lety +1

    That design actually makes a ton of sense. In a corner or not, its very nicely laid out

  • @fidelrivera2887
    @fidelrivera2887 Před 3 lety

    I had a Packard Bell in the 90s too. Nothing like this but I do remember seeing that remote at the stores. So nostalgic. The version of Navigator was like a kids version and it was loaded with awesome programs and games... I loved it. Thanks for the video... really takes me back.