I bought a NEW Windows 98 PC! Nixsys

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  • čas přidán 15. 06. 2024
  • Buying Pawn Shop Tech: • I got SCAMMED by Pawn ...
    The "Refurbished" Steam Deck: • I bought the CHEAPEST ...
    Nixsys: nixsys.com
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    Chapter Titles:
    0:00 What is NIXSYS?
    1:21 Building My Windows 98 PC
    2:31 How They Build It
    3:17 Unboxing
    4:58 Inside the PC
    7:37 The 1998 Specs
    8:47 Trying the PC
    10:40 Enter Bob
    12:44 Using Microsoft Bob
    14:32 Windows 98 Gaming
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 872

  • @jediguy634
    @jediguy634 Před 9 měsíci +607

    As someone who works in IT for a auto manufacturing facility, you would be surprised at how many of those older mills, cnc machines, and lasers run off windows 95 / 98. To replace the entire machine would costs millions of dollars and these kinds of PC's are crucial to uptime and costs.

    • @ozpin8329
      @ozpin8329 Před 9 měsíci +37

      I work in sheet metal manufacturing and all of our machines work off a combination of 98/XP

    • @AaravShukla-oo9dj
      @AaravShukla-oo9dj Před 9 měsíci +15

      Question cannot we use a virtual machine for this window xp

    • @sentropez1337
      @sentropez1337 Před 9 měsíci

      @@AaravShukla-oo9dj Depends; the host has to support raw passthrough of whatever port or protocol the guest software is relying on. Might be worth it to try, but I'm guessing there's at least some cases where the guest will freak out because it was expecting to e.g. run a custom PHY carrier over the serial port using a custom device-driver, while the VM software only supports exposing the host's serial port as an established link-layer device to the guest OS, rather than directly exposing the serial port's CPU IO-ports themselves for raw host-ring0 bit-banging.
      Also, sometimes the newer hardware you'd want to use, just doesn't even support the old ports / protocols. It's very hard to buy a motherboard OR pci/pci-e card OR USB adapter these days, that gives you 10-BASE-T Ethernet connectivity; let alone stranger standards like token-ring. Or even if you get a "SuperIO" (serial + parallel port) pci-e card for your modern machine, it might expose those only at a link-layer level _to the host CPU_ (since nothing on a modern Windows is allowed to bang bits into them on the PHY level anyway, for security reasons); so even if you custom-coded your VM software, the right level of support isn't there in the host to be passed through to the guest.
      And that's ignoring even more basic constraints, like needing to plug in some old custom ISA card. Ain't no modern (consumer) motherboard with an ISA slot.

    • @joshuamartins647
      @joshuamartins647 Před 9 měsíci +27

      ​@@AaravShukla-oo9dj Is most people do not know how to work a virtual machine. They're also volatile

    • @stephensalex
      @stephensalex Před 9 měsíci +20

      I work in IT, different industry but yes I completely agree. In 2018 I pulled a 486/66 out of service in our warehouse. It ran some proprietary loss-prevention/inventory software and interfaced with a serial-driven barcode reader.

  • @Daniel_Scott89
    @Daniel_Scott89 Před 9 měsíci +103

    Just FYI, the wide purple/pink port on the back isn’t serial, it’s a parallel port. The greenish port above VGA is a serial port.

    • @trooom350
      @trooom350 Před 8 měsíci +2

      haha i was thinking the same thing. old school but i did build windows 98 boxes back in the day and he did say he started in xp

    • @davel4030
      @davel4030 Před 14 hodinami

      Damnit you beat me to it. Thought I caught something😂 ... My late ass

  • @danterf
    @danterf Před 9 měsíci +157

    So i used to work there. If the owner is still Nicolas he was awesome. I remember building those computers. I did some crazy builds back then. They had some high profile clients too. Nasa ordered some, the government (basically all branches of it), the Smithsonian, Harvard, yale and so on. Good times. I even remember helping move that company to the location Austin picked up at.

    • @AutoYoung
      @AutoYoung Před 9 měsíci +13

      If you didn’t play Oregon Trail between builds you didn’t take full advantage of the greatness you were surrounded by. Lol

    • @danterf
      @danterf Před 9 měsíci +15

      I did, i learned so much there that it helped build my resume in career in tech. As a kid i taught my self on how to install linux, but working there i learned so much more thanks to being a part of their R & D department.

    • @Mikesusendsadasdc
      @Mikesusendsadasdc Před 3 měsíci

      For a second I thought you said it was moved to "Austin" where I live. Austin, Texas. So I was hyped and wanted to see if I could get a tour. But nope. They in Cali :(

  • @RedKobalt
    @RedKobalt Před 9 měsíci +89

    For a while I was in the market for building a "new" old machine, either XP or Vista. I wanted somewhat newer tech so it could handle games from the early 2000's up to 2011-12, but not so new it wouldn't be able to read older discs who's drivers were no longer compatible. I was pretty close to getting one when my grandfather passed. He's the one who really got me into building PCs and the computer I'm currently watching this video on was the last build I ever did with him. Now, this isn't supposed to be a sob story or whatever, just setting up the scene for how I found a delightful little gem in the attic.
    Being really the only person who could go through all his computer stuff and know what was what (Some things still elude me) I found the old yellowing XP machine we had growing up. We played old demo discs on it like the original Far Cry, and full games like Zoo Tycoon. It brought back a bunch of memories of that time, most of which I'd forgotten because I just have really bad memory. I didn't know if it still worked, it'd been sitting up there for the better part of 20 years, but I took it home anyways, opened it up, cleared out the dust and minimal cobwebs, and plugged it in.
    It booted up no problem, beeps and all. I found old photos and music my grandpa had saved and got them all onto a flash drive.
    Now I've been collecting all the games I had as a kid, plus the ones I wish I had (too young to be allowed to play) and have been having a blast. From Flight Simulator 2000 to the original Tomb Raider Trilogy, I've been spending hours just losing myself in the nostalgia.
    I want to upgrade it a bit here and there because the GPU is not the greatest from that time, but for now its been bringing me so much joy. So thank you grandpa for leaving such a wonderful gift, and thank you for this video bringing me hope that I can get an all new updated parts should something go awry, price be dammed. I'm always happy to support those who keep this tech alive.

    • @Techlevel1534.
      @Techlevel1534. Před 9 měsíci +4

      Longest comment. Well done

    • @RedKobalt
      @RedKobalt Před 9 měsíci +5

      @@Techlevel1534. You're welcome, always happy to give people browsing the comments something to do

    • @Patchow
      @Patchow Před 9 měsíci +6

      Nice story. You’ll always have something awesome to remember him.

    • @BrianV
      @BrianV Před 9 měsíci +5

      Very touching story. Some of the oldest memories I have of computers is with my grandparents' computers, playing old games on Windows 95 and Windows 98. When my grandfather passed away earlier this year, I was able to get some of those older games back. And now there is so much nostalgia going back and playing them again.

  • @sentropez1337
    @sentropez1337 Před 9 měsíci +65

    FYI: Motherboards want +12v and -12v because they pass those through on the serial port (because RS-232 uses differential signalling on a balanced circuit; in turn because the initial use-case for RS-232 in 1960 was using the line voltage to power solenoids to physically throw around the typebars of an electromechanical teletype. The oldest TTYs didn't need a power cable, just a serial connection!)

    • @MayaPosch
      @MayaPosch Před 9 měsíci +5

      The ISA slot also provides -12V, which is needed by certain expansion cards, often sound cards and the like (because opamps).

    • @thealien_ali3382
      @thealien_ali3382 Před 9 měsíci

      I will do u

  • @meekpigeon
    @meekpigeon Před 9 měsíci +154

    Man I didn't know I had experienced the glory that was windows 98 before Austin did

    • @AlexPaluzzi
      @AlexPaluzzi Před 9 měsíci +6

      Nothing was better than experiencing going from 3.1 to 95.

    • @Theunicorn2012
      @Theunicorn2012 Před 9 měsíci

      Man I didn't know I had experienced the glory that was windows 98 before Austin did

    • @MikrySoft
      @MikrySoft Před 9 měsíci

      It really surprised me to learn that XP was Austins first Windows. I'm not that much older (1988 vs 1992, at least according to google) and maybe it was caused by computer tech arriving to Poland later, but my first PC was running MS-DOS from two floppy drives. 5.25" floppy drives. It was a PC-XT clone, later replaced by 386SX with two 3.5" floppy drives (still no HDD) and a monochrome (amber) CRT monitor. I don't think our home PC had a HDD before we moved to Windows 3.11 (although most work and games was still done under DOS, as Windows was too heavy for the at most 32MB of RAM might have had). Then jump to Pentium 133 (with Win95, still occasionally running to interface with legacy hardware),
      Next I got my own PC (Athlon 2500+ IIRC?) that lasted until Uni and saw every Windows version until XP (98SE, Me, XP), then I switched to i5 3570k which still works fine to this day (running Win7, then 10) as my main desktop, although I spend most time on a 12th gen laptop now. In the meantime I had a Core2Duo laptop that saw Vista, Win7 and now runs Win10 as a fileserver, and a pair of 4th gen franken-laptops I built out of at least 5 broken laptops.

    • @misteuraxe691
      @misteuraxe691 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@AlexPaluzzii'm old enough to experience dos and apple ii

  • @eTiMaGo
    @eTiMaGo Před 9 měsíci +87

    As a 40-something computer geek, this video brought quite a few fond memories ❤

    • @trappedsol
      @trappedsol Před 9 měsíci +1

      Ive been craving a 386/486dx lately

    • @mannydcbianco
      @mannydcbianco Před 9 měsíci +1

      Oh yes, this. I'm upper 40s and the innards of this computer reeeeally gave me flashbacks to one of the first PCs I built.

    • @AutoYoung
      @AutoYoung Před 9 měsíci

      You said it! Those memories of being a kid and just poking around teaching yourself how to use different programs.

    • @kristiandawe85
      @kristiandawe85 Před 9 měsíci +1

      I still remember the day I got my Compaq computer back in 1998, hearing the windows 98 startup sound was unreal, at the same time I experienced high speed cable internet for the first time, it was pretty epic back in 1998

    • @nateg452
      @nateg452 Před 9 měsíci +3

      if you havent seen him yet, LGR is a great channel all about old computing.

  • @jaymaybeplays5923
    @jaymaybeplays5923 Před 9 měsíci +9

    I work manufacturing and automation it is really incredible to see how much runs on 95/98 systems still. This video certainly brings back memories though, and I think I need to lay down in a darkened room to get over the shcok that everything I used to play with/game on/build systems out of in my teens Austin now calls old.

  • @J.Beetle
    @J.Beetle Před 9 měsíci +8

    Interstate '76 was my favorite game back then. I also loved exploring Encarta Encyclopedia.

    • @MadisonSquareGardendidJFK
      @MadisonSquareGardendidJFK Před 9 měsíci +3

      lol it's 2023 and i still have interstate 76 installed on win 10 and working on my force feed back wheel

  • @JustAJanner
    @JustAJanner Před 9 měsíci +22

    More than allergic to magnets, the static they used to produce I was nicknamed sparky as I used to turn on and off the crt fast to produce static to shock whoever was close to me lol Plus the satisfaction of degaussing the monitor with the screen shake etc 😆

  • @TECHiSuppose
    @TECHiSuppose Před 9 měsíci +26

    Cool to see a mostly new build from that era! I vaguely remember Bob. 😄

  • @TdogGaming_Vods
    @TdogGaming_Vods Před 9 měsíci +10

    god this video was soo freaking Nostalgic! i was born in 1992 and had windows 98 as my first ever PC just took me back, i remember playing tons of minesweeper back then, and what other "games" i had back then, honestly kinda miss Floppy disks a little bit

    • @HanCurunyr
      @HanCurunyr Před 9 měsíci

      From 92 as well, I remember playing Age of Empires 1, my first game that came on CD, that was SO futuristic, in a P1 MMX with 128MB of Ram

  • @lukefilewalker9454
    @lukefilewalker9454 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Love it when you guys play with retro hardware & software. Great Video!

  • @TheSykoRC
    @TheSykoRC Před 9 měsíci +14

    now I feel really old. first computer was a C64, then a 386 PC with windows 3.1, a 486 with windows 3.11, then I got my first own pc with windows 95, then various upgrades on that machine, windows 98 SE, no windows millenium, directly to windows XP. then very long windws XP. and since then windows 10 and 11.

  • @Jshsprngr
    @Jshsprngr Před 9 měsíci +13

    I worked at a distribution center, and they were running old XP machines running almost everything. Always wondered where they’d get replacements.

  • @slyfoxkgar
    @slyfoxkgar Před 9 měsíci +4

    if i knew they was around many years ago, Had a use for some old systems like that. Some lawfirms and many manufacturing placed need NEW old systems like this to run, as you pointed out. amazing!

  • @samybasile
    @samybasile Před 9 měsíci +3

    Our first PC at home was an Intel Pentium MMX, came with Win 95. Had CorelDraw, and played some classics like commandos behind enemy lines, legacy of Kaon and more

  • @pizzalord3n
    @pizzalord3n Před 9 měsíci +5

    Gotta love the older startup chimes. 98 had gusto!

  • @TheMpsson
    @TheMpsson Před 9 měsíci +3

    Man, the nostalgia of the old components brought me back 😅
    We’ve come so far in some instances but in some not.

  • @Alej0731
    @Alej0731 Před 9 měsíci

    The nostalgia 🥲 ‘92 kid here I grew up learning to take apart and put together systems starting with 98… love this

  • @Nevakonaza.
    @Nevakonaza. Před 9 měsíci +2

    Absolutely love the red PCB of that motherboard with the gold accent heat sinks,Looks so good! Im surprised the company that supply those machines still go with a traditional hard drive and not a small SSD or Flash card.

    • @videotape2959
      @videotape2959 Před 8 měsíci

      Possibly because hard drives are more reliable.

  • @Matthew-vm7qi
    @Matthew-vm7qi Před 9 měsíci

    11:48 You explaining floppy disks as though it's some lost knowledge just makes me feel old. I remember when 10 MB was a lot of disk space, and I did entire school presentations from a floppy disk. I had the original X-Wing game on floppies.

  • @Dboyle1209
    @Dboyle1209 Před 9 měsíci +16

    I remember installing Dune 2 (the best game ever!) from 5 floppy disks. It also had DRM in the form of asking you questions where the answer was in the manual. So if you didnt have the manual, you could sometimes not answer the question. If you got it wrong, the game would exit. Crazy stuff!

    • @clark85
      @clark85 Před 9 měsíci

      oh ya I had a game called starflight that did the same thing!

    • @thealien_ali3382
      @thealien_ali3382 Před 9 měsíci

      Am gonna do u

    • @philwolf6721
      @philwolf6721 Před 6 měsíci

      Master of Orion 1 did this also. Fun memories

  • @reza310
    @reza310 Před 9 měsíci +2

    This is super useful in university and research lab institutes. Some of the super expensive devices that are bought years ago do not support new systems , or nobody is willing to risk million dollar device functionality . So acient computers are used for these as well .
    The stability is so important that these computers are not turned off ever

  • @MrGerhardGrobler
    @MrGerhardGrobler Před 9 měsíci

    Great video .
    Our 1st Pc was a 2nd hand Apple 2 E. And you had to Basic everything. The we got a XT 8Mherz IBM clone running DOS 3.1.
    Played a LOT of ELITE on that setup. Reached Archangel and just kept going for many years after that. The 1984 release.
    The real changes came when the 286 was replaced by the 386. Games was tied to the clock speed of the processor. So 286 games became unplayable on the 386. Death Track for one.
    Years later we compared an old Pentium 2 , 233mhrz to a brand new celeron 1.1 gherz. The P2 beat the socks of the celeron.

  • @freshvintage
    @freshvintage Před 9 měsíci

    Austin - when you turned that computer around and I saw those PS2 ports and other colorful ports it was 1999 again and I was unboxing my Compaq Presario as a teenager in my mind - THANK YOU 💯

  • @CricketEngland
    @CricketEngland Před 9 měsíci +3

    11:48 I have the computer game “Fievel Goes west” from 1991 and that still came on 8 IBM compatible floppy discs and took about 2 hours to install

  • @train21
    @train21 Před 9 měsíci +6

    Ah yes, this brings back a bunch of childhood memories of playing StarCraft. It’s awesome seeing you including it into the video.

  • @cadenchurchill4296
    @cadenchurchill4296 Před 9 měsíci +1

    5:29 Love the “Sparkle Power ✨” power supply 😂

  • @james.b.mcgill
    @james.b.mcgill Před 9 měsíci +2

    My first computer it's from late 1997/early 1998 and it came with Windows 95 version B. It had the USB support and DVD playback built-in. It came with an Nvidia Riva 128 card with a mpeg2 add-in card for DVD playback. Later on I would upgrade it with an ATI video card for gaming , and to accelerate DVD playback without needing an additional add-in card. At the time, only ATI cards had the extensions to accelerate video, which my system needed for smooth standard definition video playback.

  • @carlaustin1093
    @carlaustin1093 Před 9 měsíci

    internet has been around a bit longer then that Austin. You could cruise the net all the way back from windows 3.1! I've never used windows 3.0 which shows my age a little. Hell yeah for some MS BOB though! This is turning into a young kids reaction video for me. Love you guys!

  • @Matthew_Lang
    @Matthew_Lang Před 9 měsíci

    Ah, I miss Star Craft! Thank you for including that in the video. Kinda makes me wish I didn't get rid of my old Packard Bell machine. Anyway, carry on.

  • @quietusplus1221
    @quietusplus1221 Před 9 měsíci +51

    Retro PC building isn't necessarily cheap nowadays (unless you find that diamond in the rough). This service seems to source components, test them and offer warranty. Which isn't exactly easy, hence the price point.
    Then again, I have no experience with them, and it could be bollocks.
    (sidenote: Having Austin explain these "old" technologies is painful. A 31 year old tech CZcamsr should have experience with this. But it's all new to him)

    • @2BitWizard
      @2BitWizard Před 9 měsíci +1

      It is surprisingly cheap as long as you don't need or want a 3D graphics accelerator like a 3DFX Voodoo I/II/III card. The other expensive component is an appropriate SoundBlaster card with both Windows and DOS support. The rest of the PC can generally be bought or built under $100-150.
      The PC showcased here lacks both of these expensive components and a similarly specced build could be bought for $100-150 second hand without having to look too long. The real advantage is the fact that these parts are new and therefore statistically less prone to failure.
      I recently found a Voodoo II and a soundcard in a thrift shop and went down the rabbit hole of getting a Windows 98 machine to put them in. I ended up spending $70 on a full machine to just slot my two components into.

    • @NeptuneSega
      @NeptuneSega Před 9 měsíci +3

      He is a bro dude CZcamsr that does tech occasionally. Why are you even disappointed? Also, you don't have to know old tech to be a "techy" or whatever you want to call it, I bet you can't operate let program in punch cards like in the early days on those "basic" computers. So what's your point

    • @Theunicorn2012
      @Theunicorn2012 Před 9 měsíci

      Retro PC building isn't necessarily cheap nowadays (unless you find that diamond in the rough). This service seems to source components, test them and offer warranty. Which isn't exactly easy, hence the price point.
      Then again, I have no experience with them, and it could be bollocks
      (sidenote: Having Austin explain these "old" technologies is painful. A 31 year old tech CZcamsr should have experience with this. But it's all new to him)

    • @2BitWizard
      @2BitWizard Před 9 měsíci

      @@zackburkhart8693 For commercial purposes the new parts are definitely worth it, but that's not what I was trying to contest at all. I was trying to shed some light on the cost of retro PC building for home use. Informing that most of it is still dirt cheap, except for a few parts.

  • @truthteller8274
    @truthteller8274 Před 9 měsíci

    WIN98 was my 4th or 5th computer upgrade (apple IIe, MS DOS 486sx25, Win 3.11, win 95, then win98)... It's hilarious to see you excited about something that wasn't even the first thing I used, and I aint that friggin old...

  • @antraxbeta23
    @antraxbeta23 Před 9 měsíci +1

    There is a need for these PC's, i had it happen twice where old factory machines need a old OS and hardware , like this one CNC machine where it needed a specific cpu and speed for the program to run correctly , and factories will pay big money to keep old equipment running.

  • @SolitaryCore-mj2mr
    @SolitaryCore-mj2mr Před 8 měsíci

    Austin starts StarCraft 1 and shows us a bit if the first Zerg Mission warms my heart
    Zerg was the first campaign I played as well, the whole idea of a swarm mind race was mind-blowing to me, until I learned about the Warhammer 40k universe I thought that Zerg was the coolest idea of a alien race based on Gingers design

  • @kbhasi
    @kbhasi Před 9 měsíci

    I know Linus Tech Tips also did a video about the company, so I found it interesting to see Austin do one too. I still find it cool to see a small company helping support other companies who can't afford to upgrade their old hardware and need older Windowz (or even MS-DOS) releases and compatible hardware to run their software correctly because it may be hard to virtualise or emulate the hardware and it may be hard to find something like an old Advantech or VIA industrial PC mainboard or even something like a Compaq DeskPro or HP Brio or AST Bravo or Dell OptiPlex or IBM NetVista… I'm sure you get the idea.
    (10:52) Windows 3.1x and 95 supported up to Internet Explorer 5, Windows NT 4, 98, 2000, and ME supported up to Internet Explorer 8, Windows XP supported up to IE 8, Windows Vista supported up to IE 10, and Windows 7 supported up to Edge 109 (actually Chromium 109 in general, including Chrome 109), if I recall correctly.

  • @PhilMarsden27
    @PhilMarsden27 Před 7 měsíci +1

    I was a IT manager at the department of chemistry at the university of Cambridge. One day I was chatting with the departmental X-ray crystalographer. Lê was lamenting that one of his extremely expensive spectrometers had been offline for 6 months due to a dead controller pc. And was stressing over the backlog he had.
    So I told him I’d take a look, it was a windows 95 box with a ISA controller card, he said the manufacturers only option was to replace the entire machine and PC. At the cost of some 200k+.
    So I cloned the hard drive and went and searched through our e-waste storage and pulled out a few similar era workstations.
    After some trial and error hoping for a comparable HAL and an old dell workstation (that the department literally had hundreds of)worked
    Dropped in the USA card and plugged it in and it worked.
    Left him with a stack of identical working machines as backups and a running spectrometer.
    I don’t think I brought a coffee for the rest of that year!

  • @RetroTechChris
    @RetroTechChris Před 9 měsíci +2

    Really enjoyed the video. It was tons of fun watching you explore a Windows '98 PC for the first time! If you ever have any questions, feel free to reach out!!

  • @Drew-yw6ez
    @Drew-yw6ez Před 9 měsíci +2

    Bob was so underrated for what it was I used to play with it like it was a game when I was 5-6 and it was a really powerful teaching tool for kids or people who couldn't computer back before a tutorial was so easily accessed (admittedly it is useless for anyone who knows what their doing in anyway)

  • @michaeljaystaufferjoyce7235
    @michaeljaystaufferjoyce7235 Před 9 měsíci +2

    the 1st system I built was a AMD k6-2 266mghz, 16megs ram, CD-R 4xread 2x write, DVD read only drive, Floppy, with 2x 3DFX Voodoo 2 Diamond Monster 12meg in SLI. I miss that system. Was so cool, my 1st system I built. Miss those days.

  • @mattnordsell9760
    @mattnordsell9760 Před 9 měsíci

    Growing up, we had started with DOS 6.22, the first Windows we had was Windows 95, we also had 3.11, Windows 98 SE. After we had Windows XP for a long time. I have had almost all of the versions of Windows for consumers since Windows 3.11. You mentioned about the ISOs by asking if they are legal, on the Internet Archieve, you are able to get all the ISO files as they have been uploaded on there.

  • @Eduardo99922
    @Eduardo99922 Před 9 měsíci

    Thank you for this video. I still love Windows 98 SE.

  • @LondenTower
    @LondenTower Před 9 měsíci +1

    10:10 Well, that's true yes.
    But, if the CRT monitor is from around the 90s, it probably would've had a degauss option on the OSD, which would fix that issue. (On some CRT's it even made a satisfying sound and a wacky effect on the screen)

  • @alextirrellRI
    @alextirrellRI Před 9 měsíci +1

    Tip for the video crew -- if you match your shutter to the CRT's refresh it won't have a rolling image.

  • @treythewave5692
    @treythewave5692 Před 9 měsíci +5

    You know what i Wonder if you can go live on that pc 98 that will be good thing to test it ps the graphics are insane

  • @oblivieon1567
    @oblivieon1567 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Windows 95 originally didn't have USB support but it was added later. I had the disk version and it was on something like 13 disks. That company is super cool and providing really crucial machines, it's awesome to see.

  • @champiion
    @champiion Před 9 měsíci

    Great video . What’s the song that starts at 3:18? I know it just can’t remember from where .

  • @safn1949
    @safn1949 Před 9 měsíci

    That rear IO is very common here in the Philippines, even my 9th gen Intel Lenovo V530 had everything but the pink serial port.

  • @Troncrap
    @Troncrap Před 9 měsíci

    Please more of this!
    Especially with crts!

  • @juhahonkanen9222
    @juhahonkanen9222 Před 9 měsíci

    My first Windows computer was IBM with Win 3.11, but mostly we used DOS for gaming

  • @surferbrg
    @surferbrg Před 5 měsíci

    I'm tempted to get either Windows 98, 95 or MS-Dos one after taking a look at the website. One reason too is I still have a bunch of my old pc games from those eras and would like to revisit or play them. Also been experimenting the emulation method with Dosbox and PCEM but PCEM did have some lag because had trouble paring right ram with cpu/processor. Love the content and I'd like to buy one of there pcs. Also will admit Windows XP was a good one I owned though High School and that one I'd revisit too.

  • @divinedragon88
    @divinedragon88 Před 9 měsíci

    This is one hell of a nostalgia when I first tried playing a computer as well as the others I'm sure.

  • @CaryGordon3k
    @CaryGordon3k Před 9 měsíci

    I have copies of a number of native Win 98 applications, including Cinemania and I think Encarta. I also worked in a store that sold used software out of college (think Gamestop, but DOS, Windows and Mac software) and we had a copy of Microsoft Bob that someone traded in. I may be remembering incorrectly, but I think it shipped with 3.5" disks and a CD, as a number of applications did back then.
    I've always regretted not actually buying it, just as a curiosity.

  • @danieltrejo937
    @danieltrejo937 Před 9 měsíci +1

    12:55 😂😂😂 had me fucking dying there with Scooby-Doo voice 🤣🤣🤣

  • @alexbourg4165
    @alexbourg4165 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Speaking of fast boot times, I can still remember to this day that my Windows ME system booted super quick; from completely off to fully ready for work in 13 seconds!

  • @mikerenningersr7664
    @mikerenningersr7664 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I was a contractor for Microsoft on the windows 98 rollout team. Scuzz the rat was my favorite assistant with Microsoft Bob

  • @chuckles576
    @chuckles576 Před 9 měsíci +2

    This was great! This reminded me of the PC I had with a Pentium 2 and a Voodoo Banshee. I played both StarCraft and Diablo when they were first released...I was in high school. Now I feel old, lol.

  • @mlthmp
    @mlthmp Před 3 měsíci

    I remember in the mid 90's going to our local thrift store for spare parts. They'd have boxes of old video cards and IDE controllers. Of course now it's nearly impossible to find anything like that anymore.

  • @Babbages
    @Babbages Před 9 měsíci

    10:12 that's what the degauss button or setting was for on monitors hit or run that thing like 50 times and it would get rid of magnet smear 90% of the time.

  • @barowt
    @barowt Před 9 měsíci

    I grew up with DOS and Windows 3.11.. my first hand me down computer was an Apple 2e..
    New old PCs are awesome!
    No one remembers AGP 😢😢.

  • @chrisbaker8533
    @chrisbaker8533 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Nit pick, the port(purplish) you pointed to austin is a parallel port(aka printer port) not serial.
    The serial is the bluish green one.

  • @cadenchurchill4296
    @cadenchurchill4296 Před 9 měsíci

    This really brings me back, first version of Windows I’ve ever used!

  • @RiskLight920
    @RiskLight920 Před 9 měsíci

    That pc is really top tier for a windows 98 machine i remember our family computer in which i played starcraft and counter strike only has like 128mb of ram and around 10 gb of storage. I wish Austin tried to browse the internet using that machine.

  • @MrKingvenom77
    @MrKingvenom77 Před 7 měsíci +1

    This is awesome. Brings back lots of memories.

  • @jdorffer
    @jdorffer Před 9 měsíci

    This was an amazing find, very cool

  • @EcksGamer
    @EcksGamer Před 9 měsíci +1

    Windows 95 also had internet explore because i grew up with Windows 95 as my first PC using a Pentium II 450MHz with a 4mb ATI GPU.

  • @thanasisanagnopoulos9265
    @thanasisanagnopoulos9265 Před 9 měsíci

    My first Pc was an AMD 486 Dx4 @133Mhz with ms dos and windows 3.11 and i loved it

  • @ravencorb1354
    @ravencorb1354 Před 9 měsíci

    Really fun video Austin, nice little nostalgia trip.
    Definitely consider doing more types of PC (tech in general) nostalgia videos. Really cool

  • @boico123
    @boico123 Před 9 měsíci

    This is fun video still dream of my pc back to the day 😂😂

  • @WhitfieldProductionsTV
    @WhitfieldProductionsTV Před 9 měsíci

    company I worked for at one time, used thermoformers that ran win98/win2k, the controllers would not work with anything newer and getting hardware for such is a pain, these guys are life safers.

  • @zloki83
    @zloki83 Před 9 měsíci

    You could get that fancy Window 98 on floppies to install. It only took around 38 of them. 38 which you had to manually swap out each time.

  • @nukfauxsho
    @nukfauxsho Před 9 měsíci

    I used to make big money during high school and college working on old win3.11-win98se machines for use in plotters, CNC and industrial applications.

  • @techportal6304
    @techportal6304 Před 9 měsíci

    My first Pc was P2 running windows 98 i loved it and played mame games all day. I miss my childhood 😢.

  • @tburden09
    @tburden09 Před 9 měsíci

    Ah Windows 98 such nostalgia :) I was 9 when our school got it's first Windows 98 machines and we got introduced to the internet.

  • @zipper4253
    @zipper4253 Před 9 měsíci +1

    61...first computer was a ibm 386 dx...windows 3.1...upgraded modem to a 14.4 baud...internet on floppy with the Mosaic browser...fun times...

  • @fuzzyface4515
    @fuzzyface4515 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I think I died a little at 5:28 "We do have a power supply. So this is a 300 watt power supply, but even this power supply is not a standard off the shelf component. It has a -12 volt rail. Which is not something that any modern power supply has."
    Most modern power supplies do in fact have a spec for their -12volt. All of which were at 0.3A
    As another bonus, Comic Sans was supposedly created for Microsoft Bob, but wasn't finished in time for it's launch and wasn't actually included?

  • @bigblackearl6852
    @bigblackearl6852 Před 9 měsíci +1

    I remember we had a windows 98 machine when I was a kid but wasn’t allowed on it but my grandma had one too we used to play games on floppy disks we later upgraded to xp and I remember being on that one all the time especially the old realarcade and wild tangent days

  • @jasonescudero3185
    @jasonescudero3185 Před 9 měsíci

    4:50... that pink one is actually a parallel port (the serial port is the green one above the vga port)...

  • @davel4030
    @davel4030 Před 14 hodinami

    I grew up with 3.11, 95, and then 98 (we got a new version every few years) and you didn't miss much other than a bunch of blue screens.
    NT/2k/XP were a breath of fresh air.

  • @TotallyAHumanNotADog
    @TotallyAHumanNotADog Před 9 měsíci

    Our first family PC was Windows 95 and although I would occasionally use it to play games on, I wasnt really interested in PCs until Windows 98. By that point, I was a little older (7 lol) and had more patience to really learn how to use it. My dad taught me how to install and uninstall games and it was a wrap after that.

  • @mr.leanguine6214
    @mr.leanguine6214 Před 9 měsíci +4

    I wonder how hard it is to update a computer system on a corporate scale opposed to buying new old hardware. I’m currently in business management courses for college so hearing the business side of the video was very interesting to me.

    • @dogecode386
      @dogecode386 Před 9 měsíci

      Some old devices and machinery require old versions of Windows to run their proprietary software since for one reason or another the legacy software won’t run on a newer version. Without any updated software, upgrading would mean replacing all of the otherwise still working old equipment with newer versions as well, which would be much, much more expensive than just buying one of these computers.

  • @elite_shadower_6057
    @elite_shadower_6057 Před 7 měsíci

    The custom built industrial computers are exactly what they say they are. They are made to run automated processes, like for instance there is and operator in a control room with this industrial computer that is connected to 1 or more machines that the operator can manage, think of it as a automation system like the newer bulher machines

  • @Merrifieldsam
    @Merrifieldsam Před 9 měsíci +1

    Lol Austin is definitely even younger than i thought. I grew up with whatever OS was on that ancient desktop my grandfather gave me. It wasn't even Windows! I think it was just DOS without any GUI of its own... God damnit I'm old!!

  • @Tufa1982
    @Tufa1982 Před 9 měsíci

    Between the PCI and PCI express, there was an AGP slot for video cards back than😢

  • @mmartti2k116
    @mmartti2k116 Před 4 měsíci

    In company i work for, we have old cnc machines running win 95/98,2000 and xp. But we do use CF cards and USB flash to transfer .nc files to lathes (also have seen like two floppy disks still used like once a year) so no need to have anything this legacy :D Our work computers itself does run 10 and few older running 7. We do have some XP computers around but have not seen those used in years. We got some brand new lathes running windows 7 and 10 but yeah most manufacturers and companies seems to stay on stable and working hardware and systems.

  • @brahtrumpwonbigly7309
    @brahtrumpwonbigly7309 Před 9 měsíci

    I grew up with windows 95. I was using windows xp up until last year, because it ran the software for an aerospace cmm I operated and programmed on.

  • @xx1nfected416
    @xx1nfected416 Před 9 měsíci

    do full windows xp in 2023.. i know you have already did a video on windows xp gaming pc years ago. i'll be happy if you do another one with old pc components like this one

  • @d6u4
    @d6u4 Před 9 měsíci

    I still have my copy of NHL 98, which contains the greatest video intro to any sports game.

  • @bryans8656
    @bryans8656 Před 9 měsíci

    I installed a DVD drive in my first PC build, a Windows 95 desktop. The drive came in a Sound Blaster kit the included desktop speakers which may have been terrible by today's standards but were amazing back then. My first gaming computer was a Windows 98 box that was very similar, parts wise, to the one you got.

    • @windows10user1
      @windows10user1 Před 8 měsíci +2

      my first pc build had 1 5.25 floppy drive, 500MB HDD, and another 3.5 floppy drive, no CD-ROM. it ran DOS 5.00.

  • @lonxx9473
    @lonxx9473 Před 9 měsíci

    I worked for a wood company which used an old win98 computer for a kind of CNC. When the pc died, I bought a new pc running windows 10, put a pcie card with parallel and serial ports, and run Windows 98 onto VMware with pass-through for ports and it works well since

  • @Teksers
    @Teksers Před 9 měsíci

    I'm 33 now so 2 years older than Austin and I had Windows 95 and 98. Also they included the PS2 mouse and keyboard due to driver availability. For Win95 and 98 you had to install drivers for everything.

  • @neogaming285
    @neogaming285 Před 9 měsíci +6

    I'm actually very curious as to how powerful a windows 7 PC can be, like with the parts of that era, how powerful can you make it. I wonder the same with windows XP etc.

    • @jimmymyers
      @jimmymyers Před 9 měsíci

      F1 2016 supported Windows 7 and the recommended GPU for thay game was a GTX 460 (a 2010 GPU) so I'd imagine early/mid 2010's is your cut off there.

    • @chrisbaker8533
      @chrisbaker8533 Před 9 měsíci

      Really depends on when in the life cycle you're going to be picking from.
      Launch day or later in the cycle.
      Just as a quick example, nvidia still supports 7 on 30 series. Latest driver came out last year, but the latest security update just came out 2 months ago.

  • @michaelwood9866
    @michaelwood9866 Před 9 měsíci +1

    good thing i have all of those parts.......i have win98 se up to win10 pcs for various things.

  • @yussafmalik7712
    @yussafmalik7712 Před 9 měsíci

    I used windows 3.11 and Microsoft DOS on first pc when I was just 7 or 8. I'm so old!!

  • @ninjapwnsatlyfe
    @ninjapwnsatlyfe Před 7 měsíci

    We use a lot of legacy software and hardware. A lot of which requires older operating systems/drivers. I could see this being very useful in some realm

  • @chubbysumo2230
    @chubbysumo2230 Před 9 měsíci +1

    If anyone is curious, this type of business is specifically aimed at keeping old industrial systems working. This way companies can purchase new Modern Hardware, with old processors and old Technologies. This way they can keep their Old Mills and old machines functioning, because the software needed to run those machines only works on this older operating system. This also explains why the prices are so high. When you have an industrial Mill that can make you half a million dollars, a couple thousand dollars on a control PC is not a huge expense.

  • @In4It789cat
    @In4It789cat Před 9 měsíci +2

    I miss the older versions of Windows so much. I can’t do anything at all with the newer versions. I grew to hate them with a passion because I can’t figure out how to move around or do a damn thing. They’ve made it way too complicated for my dumb brain.

  • @honkhonkler7732
    @honkhonkler7732 Před 3 měsíci

    I bought a new ATI Rage XL the other day for $9. They made a ton of them for servers long after the Rage Pro chipset was obsolete for 3D gaming.

  • @ricenoodles632
    @ricenoodles632 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Takes me back to the good ol days of playing Sega PC games back in around 2000