7 Users on 1 PC! - but is it legal?

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • How did a company in the mid 2000s figure out how to cut the cost of computing six times over, and why haven't any of us heard of it? How did they work around Microsoft's legal limitations? Can it run Crysis?
    I found this product for $4.95 at the local junk store and, as usual, it caused me to discover an entire universe of capabilities I'd always wanted but believed were impossible. As a result, I spent three weeks figuring out how to demo it in a way that would communicate the scale of the whole thing, hence the extreme length of this video.
    One style comment I would like to make: I realize that during a couple sequences you can't make out the details on the monitor unless you're on a full desktop screen. I could not find a graceful way to solve this problem, and I felt that my narration was sufficient to fill the gap.
    Chapters:
    00:00 The Plateau
    05:05 The Problem
    09:45 The Solution
    14:17 The Demo (Apps)
    20:36 The Demo (Games)
    25:11 The Jank
    33:35 The Hardware
    40:19 The Software / The Theory
    45:10 The Cheaters
    49:50 The Demo (Prestige)
    1:02:48 The Conclusion
    1:06:29 The Genre
    1:08:44 The Outro
    Regarding NComputing:
    I am such a doofus that it took me until the last hour to realize that this video could be construed as an ad, since this company still exists. I had kind of a moral crisis, because I detest the idea that someone might think I was shilling.
    Eventually I realized I didn't need to feel bad about it, because by all rights the problem shouldn't still exist. I don't think you should buy NComputing's product - I think Microsoft should be nationalized and we should build this feature into every PC.
    Microsoft has proven that they could do this and simply choose not to, even if you want to pay them for it. Linux has even less excuse - why is this feature not just a mode you can enable while installing Ubuntu? Instead you have to follow reams and reams of baffling instructions, assuming you even learn that this option exists (in 25 years, I never did), and I promise it's going to be extremely fragile after you get it working.
    If our world is going to be so stupid and broken that this company still has a reason to exist, then I guess I can't blame myself. It's not my fault that third parties are still the only game in town for a simple and bizarrely-unserved need.
    Support me on Patreon: / cathoderaydude
    Tip me: ko-fi.com/cathoderaydude
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 3,5K

  • @HoratioHopkins
    @HoratioHopkins Před 2 lety +3012

    There was an issue in the server 2003 terminal services audio stack where if you were running a bunch of concurrent audio streams it would get confused on where it was directing the audio and send little snippets of audio to the wrong seat. The terminal services environment I was running had upwards of 60 concurrent thin clients connected and there was always a few people listening to streaming audio, and one guy who REALLY liked watching porn at work. So almost every day when people were using them while listening to music there would be these tiny blips of audio of women moaning cutting in. Got fixed with 2008, I assume by properly threading the audio processing rather than whatever the hell they were doing in 2003.

    • @CathodeRayDude
      @CathodeRayDude  Před 2 lety +978

      pinned. Breathtakingly hilarious.

    • @uiopuiop3472
      @uiopuiop3472 Před 2 lety +210

      it people have best/worst job

    • @johndododoe1411
      @johndododoe1411 Před 2 lety +80

      It's not threading in the computer sense, just containing the entire runtime audio status in a process or driver that's confined to a "session" (which for processes is a process grouping that can be shown as a task manager column, for drivers is the virtual address range from 0xA0000000 to 0xBFFFFFFF being shared among all processes in that terminal but no others, and for in-memory named objects is an NT native name space directory like \Sessions\3).

    • @LaskyLabs
      @LaskyLabs Před 2 lety +123

      The windows shared audio stack has always been notoriously shit.
      That's why any sound card worth a damn has an ASIO driver and just skips the stack all together.
      Mac OS's Core Audio is so much better than the Windows Sound Stack will ever be.

    • @greendryerlint
      @greendryerlint Před 2 lety +59

      I would have to say that Microsoft Teams' handling of audio devices is reminiscent of this.

  • @youngsong2553
    @youngsong2553 Před 2 lety +1820

    Hello from founder of NComputing. Awesome video to remind me the days we made this model. X300 and its successor models (X350, X550) had sold to school computer labs in US and many developing countries at the same time (over 3 million seats!!!). Many countries' Dept of Education had selected this platform to save the budget and give more internet access to kids. All these models are no longer installable to latest computer since X-series used standard PCI slot (today's computer has PCI Express slot not old PCI slot). NComputing is producing newer model, MX100s (using standard ethernet plug) which leverages NComputing's SoC ARM chip (Numo Chip) instead of FPGA. (we made our own SoC). Or really cool new product that uses Raspberry Pi board called RX-series. Back in the day, NComputing and Microsoft had agreed and promoted this platform to use with Microsoft Server OS only to be compliant with EULA, but we saw consumer techie users attempted to use with Desktop OS which worked well too. We don't recommend to use such a way though. NComputing is now 19 years old, we keep providing thin client computing including hardware and also software such as LeafOS (you can freely download and use it for your old PC to repurpose), VERDE VDI (affordable enterprise VDI like Citrix, VMware) so on. My last advice is .... please do not buy X300, X350, X550 model in the market if you see, these are already 12-15 years old one, and you can not install to old or new PC no matter. (also don't try counterfeit or clones Chinese products). AGAIN, THANK YOU for our 5 million devices users since 2003. We commit to keep developing disruptive end user computing solution in cloud era. Please try "RX420(RDP)" and "LeafOS".

    • @jaymzx0
      @jaymzx0 Před 2 lety +94

      This looks like it was a great product and thanks for commenting. I hope this post moves closer to the top.
      Was he correct about the theory of operation?

    • @Hchris101
      @Hchris101 Před rokem +24

      Computers are cool

    • @scotshabalam2432
      @scotshabalam2432 Před rokem

      Be careful around Microsoft it's not the same company it was 10 years ago it's run by people obsessed with stock prices going up and everything else doesn't matter.

    • @andrewchristian9386
      @andrewchristian9386 Před rokem +104

      I ran a couple of computer labs in a very poor school district here in Texas about twelve years ago using an off the shelf gaming computer (because I could order it with extra memory) and an ncomputing setup.
      It was about the only way we could do it (my yearly budget before grants or begging for additonal funds was only about 4k for the district). It wasnt perfect but it got more students online.

    • @fss1704
      @fss1704 Před rokem +1

      yeah we've betwin software to do that.

  • @redmicrouser7954
    @redmicrouser7954 Před 2 lety +78

    This gentleman has a very excellent delivery system: Clear speach, intelligent smooth transition dialog, pleasant voice and enthusiasm. First class integrated graphics.

    • @SavageThrone
      @SavageThrone Před 7 měsíci +6

      He does otherwise quarter of a million viewers would not be watching a video that does a deep dive on a device that has zero impact in your computing today. I mean it's pointless, not like you were thinking about going and getting one of these devices. I guess there is some nostalgia if you are old enough to remember this era in computing so that has some charm to it, but I think it's his delivery that keeps people tuned in, it sounds like he is a gifted individual. I am sure just like in anything you practice you can improve speech delivery and keeping an audience engaged is something you can get better with practice, but no doubt for some people int's a gift that they are born with, something that happens naturally and in my opinion this gentleman is one of those gifted individuals who can keep you engaged and listening about something that is completely pointless today. If I were this guy, I would have 5 girlfriends, a wife and I would audition for some type of news casting role or hosting a tv show, I would even recommend he makes some CZcams videos.

    • @redmicrouser7954
      @redmicrouser7954 Před 7 měsíci

      Thank-you for your thoughts. Truly, I am old enough to remember before micros were invented, where we had to hard code on mainframes. Best wishes, Cordially microuser@@SavageThrone

  • @sayohikawa3196
    @sayohikawa3196 Před rokem +210

    I'm from an country in development and we had these. They used to run 6 machines from one tower with windows XP. By the time i was graduating they updgraded the systems to 4 machines per tower with windows 7. I remember we used to make fake desktop shortcuts that would run a shutdown command that would turn off the tower. Good times. Thanks for remind me of this.
    I remember when i told my parents about it they tried to get one for our house since we only had 1 pc for a bunch of kids.

    • @heyhoe168
      @heyhoe168 Před 10 měsíci +14

      I wish I had this at home. We could not afford 2 PC, but I was not aware this tech existed.

    • @elonage5929
      @elonage5929 Před 7 měsíci +2

      from with country you are??

    • @Suzuki_Hiakura
      @Suzuki_Hiakura Před 8 dny

      In america, I was in a similar situation. We had an old tower with an old GPU, and were able to run some games. Cannot remember the computer specs, just that it was better than my 2015 laptop I got a year after we got the desktop, which had a 1.6ghz dual core, 4gb ram, and a hdd. Was able to play a cracked version of Subnautica v2828, which had about 11-21 fps... these ncomputing things could have helped us, as the one desktop could be used for schoolwork, and we had 6 kids needing it at times... would have saved a bunch of money we didnt have, instead of buying laptops every other year.

  • @LGR
    @LGR Před 2 lety +1918

    Another fantastic deep dive into obscurity! The amount of time this obviously took to make is, well. I get anxious just thinking about it. Superb work. Loved the analogy of Pentium 4 freight engines being used to sharpen pencils.
    This reinvigorates my plans to dive into the Buddy B-210 system a viewer sent in a while back, which promises to do the same thing - only using a 100MHz Pentium 1 with 32MB RAM on Windows 95. Ha. Granted it's only two virtual desktops, but still.

    • @CathodeRayDude
      @CathodeRayDude  Před 2 lety +149

      Thanks man! In re that buddy - my money says it's a single board computer, w95 is a bit too sophisticated for any funky TSR context switching nonsense I feel, but I'd be very interested to see if I'm right.

    • @SpyAlelo
      @SpyAlelo Před 2 lety +71

      @@CathodeRayDude Oh hey! I can't tell you about the Buddy B-210, but the B-200 was basically a Cirrus Logic graphics chip ISA card with some software to make all the magic happen. I can tell you for sure there wasn't a computer in there, but to this date I am not sure how they managed to make it all work.
      I can tell you that it was very finicky and delicate, at least with their early drivers/software.

    • @CathodeRayDude
      @CathodeRayDude  Před 2 lety +66

      @@SpyAlelo outstanding! That sounds fascinating then. Maybe after @LGR is done with it, if the modus operandi isn't apparent I can take a stab at working it frontwards to back.

    • @SpyAlelo
      @SpyAlelo Před 2 lety +32

      @@CathodeRayDude That would be great! That was a very long time ago, but if you have questions or hit a blocker reach out to me. I'll share what I remember.

    • @davedubreuil
      @davedubreuil Před 2 lety +6

      I came to the comment to mention what I remembered as the “Buddy PC” but LGR said it first and has even got one. I look forward to seeing you put it to the test. My memory is that it pretty much worked but with annoying glitches.

  • @mspeter97
    @mspeter97 Před 2 lety +106

    That commentary about how if you only do one task you can keep the same old PC for decades is why I actually went to university with a 1999 iBook to take notes in classes.... in 2017

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Před 2 lety +26

      Back in 02 I took a 486 laptop to college for my typing, programming, and web publishing courses!
      The instructor laughed at me, I was like hey, it does everything I need for class! The class laughed too. It was almost 2" thick (Dell xpi)

    • @derkeksinator17
      @derkeksinator17 Před 2 lety +11

      yep, used an X20 (2002) in 2016 as well, now I have an X220 (2012) I still use almost daily. I just got an L412 (2010) from the trash bin at work as a workbench PC. It's just for looking up datasheets, some programming, interfacing with measuring equipment and some graphing/data handling. For these applications you really don't need a lot of power, hell every USB device, that I'm currently using it with, would work with a USB 1.1 port as well.

    • @onometre
      @onometre Před 2 lety +8

      I was using an early P3 based celeron laptop in the early 2010s. I even took it online some.

    • @davidmcgill1000
      @davidmcgill1000 Před 2 lety +8

      With a laptop it's lifetime is pretty much tied to the battery. When that dies, you're unlikely to find new old stock that isn't also dead.

    • @coolelectronics1759
      @coolelectronics1759 Před 2 lety +1

      the clamshell?
      No way! Those things were so cool

  • @Joshinken
    @Joshinken Před rokem +26

    The way you usually can get the code from an fpga is that its actually not stored on the fpga, its stored on an SPI flash chip in 99% of cases. You can’t just read the code universally because every fpga manufacturer and series has a different bitstream, but there are quite a few bitstreams that have been reverse engineered and have been made open-source, with software able to turn the bitstream into verilog in order to verify that the stream has been copied correctly

  • @jeffreykoerber6595
    @jeffreykoerber6595 Před rokem +79

    I work at a University and we used the NComputing X300 in one of our labs for a while as part of a “green computing” initiative. Students needed to use USB drives, so we had USB extension cables and assigned a USB port to each station as you described. However, it would sometimes crash when people inserted their USB drives. It wasn’t fun to see four stations go down while people were using them during finals, but I guess we were pushing the limits.

  • @zebragrrl
    @zebragrrl Před 2 lety +452

    I've never seen your channel, and I can't recall having seen any of your videos before.. but for some reason CZcams suggested this video for me. I'm positively captivated by the entire video. Awesome subject, beautifully presented, with amazing detail and research. You've earned a subscriber, on the basis of this single video, on an esoteric piece of tech I never have, and never will own. Keep up the awesome!

    • @ktarakcioglu
      @ktarakcioglu Před 2 lety +8

      Same here.

    • @nickb7906
      @nickb7906 Před 2 lety +2

      Definitely, same here never heard of this gentleman (I'M assuming he's a MAN)....Issss that oooook? "Society's issue not mine (NOT A DIG AT HIM!)or channel but I find older tech nostalgia video's fascinating (I grew up in the super late 80's/90's got my 1st IBM clone a Fancy Dancy Packard Bell for Christmas of 92 with a 48MHZ Intel CPU and a 400 Megabyte Hard-Drive and tore it down 2 days after I got it BOY.....was my father PISSED OFF but put it back perfectly and led me down the road of computers/ IT something that year started doing basic Hard-Drive replacements Ram upgrades proprietary ISA Slot cards Power supply etc.. He'd even have to Fib and say he or his 20 year old son was doing it not that his untrained learned on the fly 7-8 year old son....lolthat I've done all my life after & currently working in computer / IT fields my father always says that was the cheapest trade school education he's ever seen but strange/unknown working odd Technologies that can be put together to solve odd business problems in oddly wonderful crazy ways LOVE A CHALLENGE ! I'LL BE GOING DOWN A RABBIT HOLE THIS EVENING! KEEP IT UP!

    • @tylerb1734
      @tylerb1734 Před 2 lety +3

      Same here. Praise the algorithm. Lol

    • @andywilson5828
      @andywilson5828 Před 2 lety

      Same 😆

    • @FoxMacLeod2501
      @FoxMacLeod2501 Před 2 lety +1

      Yep, that's the whole idea of the "suggestions" feature; other stuff we enjoy, that also happens to keep us watching the 'Tube.
      I, too, am happy that CZcams figured that since I like Technology Connections, Video Game Historian (I'm guessing here), and I don't know, maybe the visual style of Prophet of Zod? Therefore, I would probably like Cathode Ray Dude... Whatever the algorithmic impetus, it's right on, and I do, indeed!

  • @mrflamewars
    @mrflamewars Před 2 lety +96

    I got a free copy of Office 97 once because the teacher at Tennessee Technology Center tried to copy the Office disc onto a CD-RW to install on all the class computers and protect the original but the drives in a lot of the first generation pentium machines couldn't read the -RW disc. She threw it away and I fished it out of the trash and took it home and it worked fine on our home PC :)

    • @moconnell663
      @moconnell663 Před 2 lety +35

      Someone donated an Office 97 upgrade version disc to my school, and I vividly remember installing MS Works 5.0 on every single PC and then using the upgrade disk to install Office 97 on each of them. Good times.

    • @SimonQuigley
      @SimonQuigley Před 2 lety +19

      @@kreuner11 one of the teachers at my school used scandisk to make sure that any disks kids brought from home didn't have viruses on them..

    • @streetroller1000
      @streetroller1000 Před 2 lety +12

      It's been quite a while, but I remember being able to get past Office 97's license screen with just filling it with ones ( "1111111111" ). I think I figured that out one day because I couldn't find it, got frustrated, and randomly tried it. I might be misremembering, but I do remember ambivalently feeling like both a genius and an idiot.

  • @ClaudRodr
    @ClaudRodr Před rokem +5

    Cool video! I was the founder/CEO of a company that ended up acquired by 2X/Parallels, that created a 'Citrix' like product (basically, remote sessions for users using multi-session OSs like Windows Server 2003. 2008 and so on back in the day). You are correct that even according to Microsoft, at the time, they did accept this as 'legal' if you had all the XP licenses for every person connecting to this (I heard this from them directly and even had emails confirming it). Also note that with Windows XP SP2 BETA, multi-user RDP was possible. It was later removed from the final SP2 build and that is how many people implemented multi-user RDP on XP, by simply using the required files off the BETA SP2. Really awesome video here, bringing so many great memories about the early days of remote desktop.

  • @DeviantOllam
    @DeviantOllam Před 2 lety +43

    After watching the crazy Sony Style camcorder laptop video, I was hooked. This video is the next one I'm watching but far from the last!

  • @-DeScruff
    @-DeScruff Před 2 lety +313

    About the Plateau: Ive been saying for many years putting an SSD into an old machine often completely revives it, in terms of usability for some people.
    The processing power might actually be there, but its the storage medium speeds that are holding things back. I know my father still uses his 2011 Thinkpad, I used the same model for years, with only the main reason for upgrading was that my mother wanted a laptop for when she doesn't feel like sitting at her desk, and I wanted something more light weight. I didn't need that much of a processor speed upgrade, since I use my desktop for most things.

    • @chrism6952
      @chrism6952 Před 2 lety +11

      New SSD (only cost me 35 bucks) plus maxing out the RAM made a huge difference on this laptop a few years ago. I went from 4gigs to 16. The difference was almost as big as when I switched from Win7 to Linux. 4 gigs of RAM in windows and it used to crash and need restarted all the time. 4 gigs of RAM in linux and it would just periodically get stuck for a bit and start working again. Now with 16 gigs it never gets stuck.

    • @godsinbox
      @godsinbox Před 2 lety +20

      Many years. 12 years for me. Laptops are utterly useless with spinning platters. No innovation = profits

    • @rockytom5889
      @rockytom5889 Před 2 lety +22

      @@godsinbox
      Tbh mechanical drives are actually a terrible design idea in portable devices, cause anything mechanical in nature hates vibrations, and portable things by their very nature are exposed to a lot of vibrations. Imo the beat thing for laptops would be to have an eeprom to hold the system files, and an ssd to hold data. That way you don't need to wait for the disk to initiate to be able to boot the base system.

    • @peppigue
      @peppigue Před 2 lety +6

      Funny you mention thinkpad specifically. I just ordered a new $380 HP laptop yesterday, but almost went for a ten year old TP for $120. I may still get that one too, put in some extra ram and an ssd.

    • @rockytom5889
      @rockytom5889 Před 2 lety +3

      @@peppigue
      Look and see if you can flash coreboot or libreboot on it too, I know thinkpads are well supported.

  • @elmaverikf
    @elmaverikf Před 2 lety +178

    In Brazil ncomputing made a huge success, here the models didn´t have host card, and worked using common network, and yes, in the begining used modified files of rdp to work, and a lot of windows updates break it, and you have to wait the new version ofncomputing "driver". Here microsoft get to sue companies that used, alleging piracy and because that.. sales droped, and ncomputing changed the sales pich changed to use servers and rdc licences, or xenserver. sorry for my bad english.

    • @Mrcaffinebean
      @Mrcaffinebean Před 2 lety +11

      Makes perfect sense if N Computing had their customers sign a disclaimer that said “we have the licenses to do this”.
      They reduced their liability enough that Microsoft didn’t bother suing them.
      Your English is way better that my Portuguese that’s for sure!

    • @aaleeksii
      @aaleeksii Před 2 lety +6

      Well that makes sense. I just could not believe that Microsoft was standing by and did nothing about this. Shame it was a bit scummier approach than what CRD thought of. I guess they made more money by suing individual companies that used this product than by suing the company that made it, lol

  • @talkashie
    @talkashie Před 2 lety +62

    I grew up in an incredibly poor town in Texas and we had these in our computer lab. This was around 2010 and I was in high school. We had Pentium 4 machines (yes, in 2010) split out to 4 or 5 stations each.

    • @georgen9755
      @georgen9755 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Was working for an engineering college in 2010

    • @9852323
      @9852323 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Pentium 4 machines were still in wide use in 2010 that’s completely normal. People still use core 2 duo with windows 10/11 on them to this day.

    • @thegeforce6625
      @thegeforce6625 Před měsícem

      @@9852323agreed, I was given a Pentium 4 desktop by the IT guy of my mums job that was upgrading at the time.

  • @Jonathan_O
    @Jonathan_O Před 2 lety +19

    I saw this product at CES in 2007. I immediately came home and ordered it just to demo it. Just as you said it works perfect for basic tasks. We tried to suggest it to a few clients but nobody was interested or could understand it. And I’m just sitting on a shelf for years. But definitely an interesting product. Glad to see you made a video about it.

  • @khatharrmalkavian3306
    @khatharrmalkavian3306 Před 2 lety +408

    "In the last 20 years I've been hard pressed to figure out what Microsoft is adding in each release, other than a much worse UI."
    That's the modern business plan for everyone, isn't it? I think it's called "software as a service".

    • @angeleocorrodead
      @angeleocorrodead Před 2 lety +3

      You didn't understand. User interface, not way of distribution.

    • @UNSCPILOT
      @UNSCPILOT Před 2 lety +16

      Meanwhile I'm laughing while using GNU / FOSS software that gets better and more useable over time, I'm actually learning to use Garuda Dragonized Linux on my laptop before installing it on my desktop too.
      The constant bloat and increasingly locked down useableility is annoying enough with W10, and now Windows 11 is looking a *Lot* like Windows 8 mark 2 trying to be a tablet OS again and I hated that more than enough the first time.
      So yeah, a weird little Linux / Windows tangent, love the video, what a wacky little hardware/software setup for setting up a computer lab

    • @raycharles1752
      @raycharles1752 Před 2 lety +9

      @@UNSCPILOT I have the exact opposite experience regarding FOSS software. It seems to me that in the late 90's early 2000's, you would find a free alternative for everything you wanted. Nowadays, almost all of these so called free software have some sort of pricing and licensing scheme behind them if you want to use the fully featured version.
      dont get me wrong, i dont mind devs wanting to get paid, but i dont feel like this "FOSS" community really still exists.

    • @shawnsorbom8907
      @shawnsorbom8907 Před 2 lety +15

      @@raycharles1752 I have to wonder what programs you're using. The bread-and-butter of the Linux World productivity software has been totally free for a long time, and looks like it always will be. I'm talking about LibreOffice and gimp. Sure, if you want to use enterprise software, you will be paying accordingly, but I've never seen any of the standard desktop applications adopting a freemium model.

    • @SweetTodd
      @SweetTodd Před 2 lety +9

      Wait till they add micro transactions to Michealsoft Orifice.

  • @rpavlik1
    @rpavlik1 Před 2 lety +133

    Fun fact: terminal services/remote desktop is still being used for a variety of unexpected things. For instance, extreme sandboxing of web browsers (run the browser tab in a very limited account and remote it into the main session), and WSL graphics (runs a Wayland server in Linux that exposes itself as a very fancy RDC server). (Source: interestingly, the WSLg blog post)

    • @jacobhinchliffe6659
      @jacobhinchliffe6659 Před 2 lety +5

      Someones been keeping up with the news

    • @rpavlik1
      @rpavlik1 Před 2 lety +3

      @@jacobhinchliffe6659 I mean, I also work with somebody who helped on the WSLg project... I don't regularly read the Windows blog 😁

  • @stuartcastle2814
    @stuartcastle2814 Před 2 lety +31

    A few years ago, where I worked, we had a video editing lab with standard definition broadcast quality capture cards (DPS Perception). They supported Premiere, but also offered their own video editing system which some of our users preferred. This software only ran on machines with Perception capture cards, but required a dongle as well, because, of course a £5,000 video capture card isn't enough of a dongle.

  • @woohoo2491
    @woohoo2491 Před 2 lety +11

    Oh shit, I think my old elementary school used to use these (2006-2009 ish). They were strung out on a row in our library. I remember there being like 8-10 of these. Always wondered how they could "get a computer to be so small" as a kid. Thanks for the memories.

    • @MegaZeta
      @MegaZeta Před 3 dny

      It does sound like the company put work in to get visibility among institutes of learning. One of those old Linux forums CRD put up in this video posts mentions a publicity coup where they set up a whole school with a few machines. Especially at the time, I imagine this excited many school-lab-responsible types greatly.

  • @mrflamewars
    @mrflamewars Před 2 lety +51

    A Sandy Bridge machine upgraded to 16GB of RAM and an SSD *is* The Plateau. It helps having some sort of discrete GPU but it's not totally necessary.

    • @mos6581com
      @mos6581com Před 2 lety +11

      I'm running a 3570K with 16GB of RAM and a 1050TI. I won't need to replace the thing for years to come. I program, run many VM's and occasionally game. And since I'm a happy Linux user it won't ever be artificially obsoleted.

    • @fabiosemino2214
      @fabiosemino2214 Před 2 lety +5

      True even 8gb ram is enough for most tasks, having still a great experience, that's the SATA SSDs starting from 2016 that become the game changers

    • @mrflamewars
      @mrflamewars Před 2 lety +4

      @@fabiosemino2214 If Limited SSD Write Endurance wasn't a thing I'd totally agree with you. It's best to have the maximum ram your machine will take / you can reasonably afford to keep from ruining the SSD with eleventy trillion pagefile writes.

    • @drboom2
      @drboom2 Před 2 lety +8

      I replaced my 3770k machine not because I needed to (was super snappy till the day I decommissioned it), but purely because I wanted to. Sandy/Ivy Bridge will likely survive the heat death of the universe.

    • @fabiosemino2214
      @fabiosemino2214 Před 2 lety +1

      @@mrflamewars indeed, or if your use case allows it using Linux works well, my parents small power rig basically is turned on 24/7 and its Samsung 840 it's basically almost a quarter of it's project writes life with about 6 to 12 gb ram during it's lifespan

  • @maximilianmorse9697
    @maximilianmorse9697 Před 2 lety +206

    My old public school had (and probably still has) these in each classroom, I always wondered how they were putting 4 virtual machines on a Core 2 Duo.

    • @olddrunkninja
      @olddrunkninja Před 2 lety +54

      Yep, I was a tech aide for the IT dept at my high school at the time these released and we basically used them as a cheaper way to replace a buncha badly aging Pentium III machines in our main computer lab. They actually worked quite well, though we had to lock away the main PCs on each row after some kids quickly discovered they could sabotage 4 of their peers work by force power cycling their own PC lol

    • @jpsalis
      @jpsalis Před 2 lety +9

      @@olddrunkninja that was something I was curious about. Since the host PC is basically controlling every session, you can't really make that into a student device without some jenky lockout i'd imagine.

    • @WilliamHollinger2019
      @WilliamHollinger2019 Před 2 lety +7

      My trade school had this setup 20 users on a server using the Ncomputering termals and there was one setup reserved that was for the IT personal. He was surprized that I tried to use task manger and figure what that pc specs are and all the 20 user were using internet. The video playback is tearing bad.

    • @camthesaxman3387
      @camthesaxman3387 Před 2 lety +5

      core 2 duo is no slouch.

    • @uploadJ
      @uploadJ Před 2 lety +1

      @@camthesaxman3387 re: "core 2 duo is no slouch."
      True that. BIG improvement over the Pentium series .... stilling running C2D here on a 2008 Dell Optiplex ... and Win Xp to boot! Using Mypal browser 'cuz nothing else works tho ...

  • @charleyedwards2121
    @charleyedwards2121 Před 2 lety +10

    there are VERY few channels that i will rewatch videos, but i have to say yours are always just as good the second (or third) time around!
    Thank you for all your AMAZING work man!

  • @perryheun3047
    @perryheun3047 Před 2 lety +10

    It started with your video on the Ryobi soldering iron (which I'm actually considering getting). Now, I have watched just about every one of your videos -- and some twice over. Great production quality, great content, and great channel!

  • @SenorBolsa
    @SenorBolsa Před 2 lety +128

    I have a feeling Microsoft saw how this was actually being used and took the same kind of stance we've seen adobe take. The exposure to windows over macintosh was more important than the lost license sales to schools and institutions that probably would have pirated windows anyhow.

    • @StarbornPhoenix
      @StarbornPhoenix Před 2 lety +32

      Yea, going after a company catering mostly to poor institutions or developing countries would have probably gained them no extra license sales, less exposure to windows, extra legal work and potentially bad PR. Imagine some news outlet getting wind of this and running a headline along the lines of "Microsoft is preventing schools from making affordable computer labs!". As the video says, it's all about the money, and there probably wasn't any in shutting down NComputing. Now, if they were going after the big business market, it would have been a very different story.

    • @moconnell663
      @moconnell663 Před 2 lety +19

      I remember being in Catholic school in 2001. The computer lab consisted of 35 PCs, all with the same copy of Windows 98, and I'm pretty sure we 'borrowed' that license key from someone else.

    • @PeterGrant
      @PeterGrant Před 2 lety +9

      @@StarbornPhoenix Plus if schools buy a site licence from Microsoft, it comes as a schools agreement which is normally based on how many staff/students they have, not how many machines they run. So it doesn't matter to Microsoft if it was 1 machine to a student or 1 machine between 7, they got paid the same and the exposure to their software was higher. This may have been a factor in N Computing not advertising to home or business markets, but focusing on schools.

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 2 lety +7

      @@PeterGrant Plenty of businesses used enterprise licenses to run hundreds of computers on a single license, as you got a roll of stickers with it, linked back to the original, and so long as you used the same supplier for your IT, you got the license essentially free.
      Same now with Win10/11 enterprise, you have a virtual XP machine you can use, which has a separate license for it, generated by the enterprise machine for it. Done because so many things will only run on XP, so wrapping it in a more secure supported OS is better, though even that embedded XP copy does get it's own updates, as MS still provides extended support to paying customers, like the DOD.

    • @mateusfelipecota
      @mateusfelipecota Před 2 lety +10

      I'm from a 3rd world country and I remembered that I talked once with the IT head of my city and he told me that when windows 7 was released they called the him to talk about upgrading all the city computers(public school computer labs and more) from XP to 7 but because it was a few hundred of computers they didn't had then budget and the salesman tried to sell with EOL of windows XP and more, in the end of the talk the MSFT rep asked what they would do when XP went EOL, he said that he doesn't know but probably use alternative solutions.
      Because there was a lot of machines on computer labs at public schools, after a few weeks they got free licenses upgrade for every machine.

  • @mikesk356
    @mikesk356 Před 2 lety +283

    I’d love a follow-up video where you push this to it’s limit. Something like a first-gen Core i7 with matching motherboard, that has 2 PCI slots and running on a SATA SSD.

    • @MaxUgly
      @MaxUgly Před 2 lety +25

      I second this notion. You could go even further and run it on modern hardware with a PICe to 2x PCI extender, like the "Sintech PCI-E Express X1 to Dual PCI Riser Extender Card." In which case the bottleneck will end up being 4GB of RAM I would guess..

    • @Vinpupx1
      @Vinpupx1 Před 2 lety +13

      It is interesting to see this being used on such limited machines. Cranking the CPU and mobo to what this could theoretically support would be pretty neat, though probably not enough for a full video.

    • @vintageyamahasquid
      @vintageyamahasquid Před 2 lety +6

      This is exactly what I want to see!

    • @simeonjohnston5941
      @simeonjohnston5941 Před 2 lety +6

      If you REALLY want to push it maybe a dual cpu workstation. All the cores…

    • @jozefaz
      @jozefaz Před 2 lety +2

      See my main comment :)

  • @d2tw4all
    @d2tw4all Před 2 lety +5

    I experimented with ncomputing tech back in that era and we deployed thousands of their l300 units in our warehouses (they call them zero clients). They are still deployed to this day and work great. As I see you’ve realized, ncomputing is still around and innovating. They are heavy into the vdi space. Glad you found their x300, I have one somewhere as well as an exemplar of all their other client tech from that time.

  • @TheOceanLoader
    @TheOceanLoader Před 2 lety +5

    Awesome video. I lived through these days of the PC and you're exactly right. Thanks for a trip down memory lane. You've got a great presentation style. Subscribed after this video - my first from your channel.

  • @ClaytonLivsey
    @ClaytonLivsey Před 2 lety +56

    Astounding. No virtualization, no docker, no kubernetes, efficient hardware usage in 2004. Are there any solutions like that today? Instead of relying on server farms you can split your computational power

    • @thesledgehammerblog
      @thesledgehammerblog Před 2 lety +5

      Now any reasonably modern PC could do all of this with virtual machines pretty easily. You would just need some way to allocate input devices and displays to specific VMs and you could probably do it with of the shelf hardware.

    • @akimbofurry2179
      @akimbofurry2179 Před 2 lety +5

      @@thesledgehammerblog overhead on that us obscien

    • @fss1704
      @fss1704 Před rokem +1

      winconnect does the job.

    • @Kythyria
      @Kythyria Před rokem +2

      @@akimbofurry2179 Only because Windows is chonky. In the general case it was a viable tactic in *1972*.

    • @jroysdon
      @jroysdon Před 10 měsíci

      My work desktop runs Ubuntu and KVM to host 2 Windows 10 VMs. I RDP to those Win10 VMs from my laptop, no matter where I'm at (remote, in the data center, or sitting at my desk). We have a "budget" VDI for contractors to remote into that has the same setup, but with 3 Windows 10 VMs. I could easily run 5 Windows 10 VMs on this same mid-tier desktop system.

  • @mattelder1971
    @mattelder1971 Před 2 lety +70

    XP (while in beta) did briefly allow for multiple users to be using a single computer (one locally and one remotely) with separate desktops, but the released version didn't allow that. You could for a while, replace one of the files in the released version with the file from the beta and regain the functionality. I'm guessing that this company made use of a hacked version of that.

    • @ale6242
      @ale6242 Před 2 lety +18

      Exactly. its a simple change in the Terminal services to allow this to work on pretty much any version of windows.

    • @fss1704
      @fss1704 Před rokem

      still alive, i'm using it.

  • @OriginalRitz
    @OriginalRitz Před 2 lety +14

    Amazing video, man. Super fascinating and you're so good at explaining stuff. Loving your channel. You're up there with LGR and Techmoan and Technology Connections!

  • @turtledruid464
    @turtledruid464 Před 2 lety +11

    Such an interesting video. I remember going into the computer lab in 2007 and every chair had its own Dell Inspiron tower. We used them for typing practice and learning MS Word/PP. I feel like we totally could've used something like this.

  • @kevinlaity5931
    @kevinlaity5931 Před 2 lety +53

    What's incredible is that they took the insane risk that Microsoft would just patch whatever they did out at any time. Since XP isn't supposed to allow remoting in, they had to be exploiting a bug. And by that time updating your operating system via the internet was definitely a thing.

    • @duessmbu10
      @duessmbu10 Před rokem +10

      Just watched this video , there was a hack you could do in xp (yes i was systems admin) now if i remember , it was a long time ago , but you swopped one file(from a server install) which turned it into a fully RDP server(and installed the MMC for RDS) , this is from memory ,so might not be right but i do remember doing this for some hack years ago

    • @fss1704
      @fss1704 Před rokem +6

      @@duessmbu10 that's called the termsvr.dll patch, still exist today, in fact i'm using it every day.

    • @AROAH
      @AROAH Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@fss1704 I used to use it to remote into users' machines without them knowing, when I was on Help Desk.

  • @user-tq7bq3qf3k
    @user-tq7bq3qf3k Před 2 lety +148

    Took a 3 years computer/electronic course in 2010, then on a field trip we went to a university where they were making a lot of studies with several components, like new CPU cooldown systems, etc, etc, a professor there started asking us which course we were taking, which profession we would love to follow, and when she knew what we were studying she immediately told us that we had no future, because the future wasn't refurbishing, but throw out and buy new, pretty sad as that actually got stuck in my head and the next years seeing how the industry was going through the route she said, made me just step back from this area completely.
    I'm glad that currently the industry is being pushed to a refurbish mindset instead of a throw out buy new.

    • @texasrox2010
      @texasrox2010 Před 2 lety +25

      The push towards refurbish is probably due to resource problems and costs getting too high to keep consumers interested.

    • @TheSimoc
      @TheSimoc Před 2 lety +19

      Saddest thing nowadays is that it is the software industry that is making everything they can to keep the throw out and buy new model hanging on. Software vendors - most painfully with the proprietary software for a proprietary services where end user has no alternatives - keep pushing forced updates with completely unnecessary requirements for HW resources and new OS versions which are also more and more bloated, and in worst cases, such as with mobile devices, HW-proprietary. Vast majority of today's software is a pile of crap with more and more bloat, less and less useful functionality, and more and more horrible UIs.

    • @shibolinemress8913
      @shibolinemress8913 Před 2 lety +2

      That's great for the environment!

    • @glytchd
      @glytchd Před 2 lety +13

      @@TheSimoc I'm reminded of how Halo 2 was 'Vista Only'. even tho its a Dx9 Game. ..WTF? Yeah, it was an Artificial limit imposed by the Installer. Razor1911 seen to THAT with their nice 'boot-loader' - I had Halo 2 running on WinXP-sp2 back in what, 2006? Just goes to show what power we keep voting away. 80s corporate-law nonsense & the Dark Age of Information.

    • @PMARC14
      @PMARC14 Před 2 lety +6

      Damn that professor is a complete suckered, though kind of right about our ridiculous culture on excessive consumerism. Fixing the old, upgrading the current is the way to go if we want too keep living on this planet. And it's fun and cheap sometimes.

  • @sirrobot4489
    @sirrobot4489 Před 2 lety +4

    Blown away by the awesome content. Thank you for putting in this incredible effort.

  • @curiousmichael
    @curiousmichael Před rokem +6

    This hardware+software is incredible. I'd never heard of it before now, and this video is thoroughly delightful - thanks!

  • @CarletonTorpin
    @CarletonTorpin Před 2 lety +119

    Each of your videos improves on itself, every time. This feels like a full on lecture that I would happily attend at a computing seminar but it's even better, because I got to attend it from home, in 4K 60!

    • @goeland4585
      @goeland4585 Před 2 lety +4

      Is your life not in 4k 60 ? Probably from a PAL region

  • @JohnDlugosz
    @JohnDlugosz Před 2 lety +72

    I've noticed many years ago, when I found my uncle was still using the computer I helped him buy years previous, that old computers are still just fine *if* you use the period software as well.
    If you're not being forced into updates and an ever more bloated system partition, the computer can just keep doing what it's been doing.

    • @TheSimoc
      @TheSimoc Před 2 lety +1

      Yes. Unfortunately many very same or at least functionally same kind of services on the web, and not to mentioned proprietary-application ones, have replaced their websites, supported apps, and protocols into new ones which do not work on old omputers anymore, and almost always are unnecessarily more bloated and less useful than their former versions.

    • @reez1728
      @reez1728 Před 2 lety +4

      Except you become very vulnerable to viruses and exploits especially if you connect to the internet in any form.

    • @3vIl3aGl3
      @3vIl3aGl3 Před 2 lety +1

      About two years ago I helped out a friends uncle, they had gotten a new Laptop and wanted me to help set it up and transfer over all of the photos from the old PC. The old PC was still running Windows XP and was never connected to the Internet. They had Internet and wifi with the ISP router but the PC was not connected, only their smartphones were.
      So I first wanted to look at the old PC and start the file transfer (in hindsight this was the best idea of that whole endeavor, that thing hat USB 2 only) onto a USB device. So we turned the PC on and it took forever (this was a budget machine from the discounter, probably from when XP was still new), the thing here was, I was getting restless, not to say distressed, while for him this was normal (at this point the laptop was still unopened in the box, as to be able to return it, should I say it's utter garbage). Meanwhile I was used to the OS and all daily used programs being loaded instantly from an SSD but he was totally calm, for him this PC was still the fastest a PC was...he used it the same as the day he'd gotten it. Needless to say he was blown away by the laptop.

    • @SweetTodd
      @SweetTodd Před 2 lety

      That's wholesome.

    • @captainastral
      @captainastral Před 2 lety

      I still have a Dell laptop running XP that I keep only because there is one program that cannot run on later models. I only need it once or twice a year.

  • @rammerjammer146
    @rammerjammer146 Před 2 lety +1

    Third random video I've seen in my feed of yours, third one that is an hour plus long. Watched each one all the way through. Keep it up sir! I enjoy your content and subscribed!

  • @Gaetano.94
    @Gaetano.94 Před 2 lety +2

    Dude this is the first time watching you. Great job! I'm amazed by your quality in speech and articulation. Definitely earned my sub!

  • @tayzonday
    @tayzonday Před 2 lety +209

    Yeah, my 1.2 ghz Athlon-A lasted from May 2000 to January 2007 - almost seven years. It eventually sucked for gaming with my ATI Radeon and could not keep up with Doom 3 / Half Life 2.

    • @MelloinFakeTaxi
      @MelloinFakeTaxi Před 2 lety +13

      Hey it's chocolate rain man

    • @SB-qm5wg
      @SB-qm5wg Před 2 lety +7

      Athlon X2 here :p Cheers

    • @WhiteNight0204
      @WhiteNight0204 Před 2 lety +17

      You're the last person I would expect under this video lmao

    • @amirpourghoureiyan1637
      @amirpourghoureiyan1637 Před 2 lety +12

      Even Tay was on the AMD train lol

    • @eqprog
      @eqprog Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah, I eventually realized that whenever your pc starts feeling slow for games it’s usually better to just get a good graphics card instead of updating the whole pc. I was able to keep a late 2006 model Mac Pro from 2007 to 2016 by updating the graphics card around 2014 or so. (To be fair this was a pretty good machine back in the day and I did install a different graphics card in it shortly after getting the machine)

  • @bkslsh
    @bkslsh Před 2 lety +12

    The "DRM" with the serial numbers is likely some early, "locker lock" security - You wouldn't want just anyone hooking up a terminal to your computer and having access to your hardware.

  • @BrainSlugs83
    @BrainSlugs83 Před rokem +7

    One of the smaller chips on the card is probably a Serial EEPROM that contains the code for the FPGA.
    Additionally the multi-desktop stuff was *almost* native in Windows at that point. -- You could definitely do this over RDP in 2007. (i.e. multiple users having separate isolated Windows sessions on the same box without CALs -- up to two users at once IIRC. -- There was a registry key you could set if you needed more than two users IIRC.)
    As for legal issues with Windows -- as long as you own the license, it was fine -- MS audited orgs all the time back in the day -- and we only ever had to provide a count of the licenses owned versus what was required; they didn't even differentiate between versions -- need another license for '95? -- they'll sell you a license for XP and call it good -- So, saying "the end user is required to own a license" was fine, that's how it was enforced. No reason for MS to go after the hardware manufacturer.
    There is an additional licensing issue though -- in that you are sharing the same programs -- like two users using one copy of Word or Photoshop, etc. -- but that's even a more obscure issue. -- Again though -- the audit process was probably similar for Adobe as it was for MS -- if you wanted to be "legal" you just bought more licenses -- doesn't matter what the computer is doing, if in an audit you can prove you own X numbers of the software and you're using X numbers, then you passed the audit. -- Though Adobe and Macromedia usually gave the software away to schools and students for free (and/or heavily discounted) anyway -- gotta get 'em hooked while they're young and all that.
    Multi-point server stuck around after 2016 -- IIRC it became a SAS offering in 2019~ish? -- Basically it's cloud based now, because you can cram a lot more compute into a data center, and it's just cheaper and easier for customers to deploy.

  • @lewisfilby2394
    @lewisfilby2394 Před 2 lety +3

    I've been binging your content today, I love these long-form in-depth videos on these things, I find it endlessly fascinating as its the hardware I grew up on. I see we really didn't need two computers at home back then. Just a couple moniors and keyboards and me and my sister could've done our homework ect at the same time. this could've saved families lots of money really. cool channel, I like your content - its exactly the kind of thing that interests me.

  • @ale6242
    @ale6242 Před 2 lety +67

    Yeah, so referencing the whole licencing debacle. I'm like 99% sure Microsoft would basically have just asked the owners of this device if audited, to buy each "client" a licence and called it a day. at the end of the day, they make money only on the software licenses, not hardware. I work for IT in a medium sized company that has been audited by Microsoft, and as long as you have as many licences as are really being "used" they pretty much just give you a pass against weird use cases like this. if you don't have the licences, you have a grace period to obtain said licenses in order to be compliant.
    You're totally right btw about terminal services, what you said makes 100% complete sense. and for "Lab" use I have hacked the Terminal Services to allow regular windows to log in multiple clients via mstsc. they are almost certainly doing that too.

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 2 lety +9

      I did that audit, and turns out we actually had more Windows 98 packs than machines, because a few of the ones installed had been upgraded to use as servers, so had a NT license on them instead. I was building them assembly line, so the first drive was simply cloned onto the rest, with the installer halted at the first reboot, which is where it asks for the key. All the install files were stored in a directory, along with the installer (thanks MS for putting all the cabinets in one place along with setup.exe) so the clones simply had the key entered after starting for the first time, and carried on from there. All the drivers for the various parts, motherboard, processor, network card, display, keyboard, mouse, were all in that directory as well, so just a case of pressing enter a half dozen times after that to get a desktop. Unopened pack went in the case, just in case it was needed at some time.
      When somebody asked for a disk I would simply give them one from the pile, but not the COA, as you can remove the disk and COA without actually opening the shrink pack.
      Later on XP upgrades were done using hardware changes, to get the cheap copy, so there were a lot of new printer cables bought, along with a few new keyboards and mice, to trigger the hardware change thing. Good number of those cables went to the recycler still in the bag, never used.

    • @ravenof1985
      @ravenof1985 Před 2 lety +4

      ​@@SeanBZA
      waaay back in the day i remember getting caught by the "your hardware has changed you need a new key" thing on XP a few times, usually calling the hotline would resolve it without buying anything
      XP's licensing was always a bit mental, there were so many caveats with OEM keys / retail discs etc etc, thankfully Nlite strips it out for retro gaming purposes, install from Nlite version of XP, stick random XP COA to machine and off you go.
      Win 7 / 8 / 10 are really pleasant by comparison, installing win10 but only have a win7 COA?, windows installer doesnt care!

    • @cleverlyblonde
      @cleverlyblonde Před 2 lety +2

      Also remember that Edu sector often has other prices and options. I work with Office 365 and the edu prices are either free or way lower than business licenses.

    • @vylbird8014
      @vylbird8014 Před 2 lety +4

      Also, schools. MS would have been more lax about schools, for entirely selfish reasons. Firstly because of the bad PR that comes from taking legal action against a sector seen as working to the public good - about the only that would hurt their reputation more than suing a school would be suing a hospital. And secondly because schools are training up future Windows and Office users - if the school can't afford Windows, they might be desperate enough to even try linux, as terrible as that was back then. MS would rather people just pirate windows than see that happen.

  • @SpyAlelo
    @SpyAlelo Před 2 lety +40

    In 1996, I was only 16 years old and on my first job I was deploying computer labs for elementary schools using the Buddy B-200 by a company called Austin and using software by Applica. It was only for one more user (no audio), but it did have the multiuser experience in a Windows 95 environment.
    Pretty amazing stuff, and not only for 3rd world countries. Computers were very expensive on those days so this made a lot of sense.
    Why fit a lab with 20 computers when you can do it with 10?

  • @seanmartinflix
    @seanmartinflix Před 10 měsíci

    I just want to say. That I very much appreciate your channel. .I just found you the other day and I wish I would have found you sooner. Great stuff.

  • @glenclark777
    @glenclark777 Před 6 měsíci

    I just have to comment here. I only recently came across your site and this is the second video I've watched. I was amazed how much effort you put in. A lot of info and i watched till the end. I found it really interesting.

  • @windowsagent981
    @windowsagent981 Před 2 lety +24

    I'm a lot younger, and was in elementary in 2010s. I can still remember the school using ncomputing. It was pretty cool, as you could send messages from computer to computer and do all sorts of things. I remember windows 8.1 coming out, and the teacher constantly telling us to not upgrade to it and to remain on 8, as 8.1 didn't really work for some reason.

  • @kasamikona
    @kasamikona Před 2 lety +163

    Those FPGAs (at least that old) have no internal non-volatile storage of their own, so the configuration data is almost always loaded from a little flash chip next to it on power-up. That flash chip would be easy to dump, but best I can tell there's nothing you can do with that. Unless you're insanely skilled and have a LOT of time, or you're the chip manufacturer. That's because it's basically going into one huge shift register inside the chip that configures all the stuff in there, and there's no public or easily-discoverable info on how the bit stream maps to the internal layout. Also often the whole thing is encrypted. You'd be way better off just reverse-engineering the functionality from the outside.

    • @CathodeRayDude
      @CathodeRayDude  Před 2 lety +38

      That's kind of what I figured. You know, I didn't look up the chip that I called a ram chip, now that I think about it, I wonder if it's possible that this thing just RAMDACs directly out of system memory, and that chip is actually a PROM.

    • @kasamikona
      @kasamikona Před 2 lety +41

      ​@@CathodeRayDude Nah that's a RAM chip for sure, Samsung K4S something. FPGAs do have some memory cells that can be used for small RAM or cache but typically a design with any kind of complexity will want some larger external RAM to operate. That doesn't necessarily mean it's acting as video RAM, but it probably is in this case.
      The flash chip, if there is one, would be a small 8-pin chip or something like that. I don't actually see one though, so maybe it's actually being configured over PCI by the driver! Does it take a few extra seconds to become active after booting?

    • @CathodeRayDude
      @CathodeRayDude  Před 2 lety +28

      @@kasamikona yup, it doesn't output anything unless the "bus enumerator" driver is installed, so perhaps they rolled in the firmware push to that. That makes more sense compared to what I remembered about how fpgas worked at this time

    • @kasamikona
      @kasamikona Před 2 lety +30

      @@CathodeRayDude That's a rather neat way of doing that to be honest, keeping costs down. The CPLD programming is non-volatile so it can happily sit there waiting for that configuration data to blast at the FPGA (around 1.2Mbit max for this chip by the way), no onboard flash needed. Also a "firmware update" could come for free just by updating the driver.

    • @stevenclark2188
      @stevenclark2188 Před 2 lety +7

      There are some Flash-based FPGA where you can leave the bitstream installed in the chip (I think the Spartan 3f variant for example) but I think they were more expensive and maybe slower?

  • @antanasv2642
    @antanasv2642 Před rokem +5

    My mind is blown by your effort to reverse engineer the thing, and by the crew who made it work. Must have had some people straight from microsoft to pull it off. The OS integration seems deep and beautifully made. Really well made, nevermind the limitations

  • @junkheadINC
    @junkheadINC Před rokem

    Love your videos. Been watching for a good while now. It's niche and your doing well. Congrats to you !

  • @Vulpovile
    @Vulpovile Před 2 lety +80

    Honestly, The Web is pointlessly complicated at this point. Sites from 2005 are more usable than most made last month.

    • @boyadh
      @boyadh Před 2 lety +13

      as a web developer, i apologize. every site has 20 gb of javascript libraries loaded for no reason and i hate it, too

    • @PiddeBas
      @PiddeBas Před rokem

      @@boyadh So don't load them

    • @PurpleFlush
      @PurpleFlush Před rokem

      @@boyadh damn 20gigs 🙀

    • @makinmoviesandstuff
      @makinmoviesandstuff Před rokem +1

      Yea but, that’s because who we build the web for has grown immensely since 2005 and due to this things have gotten way more complicated . Back in the day you just needed to make an English website that worked passably on an 800x600 desktop. Now, when you make a website you need to make sure it works for 1920x1080 Desktop and mobile and everywhere in between and this is just a simple example. A lot of features that were relatively simple back in 2005 (or stuff you didn’t even need to think about back then) have gotten a lot more complicated. Accessibility, security, internalization all have gotten way more complicated since 2005.

    • @centho8354
      @centho8354 Před rokem +2

      @@boyadh Don't forget to add the whole bootstrap lib for just 2 icons

  • @whatsup3d
    @whatsup3d Před 2 lety +102

    In the 1980's we were running as many as 32 terminals on 386 machines running Xenix or Unix using smart serial cards to offload the I/O load. (I used to design them)

    • @JerryVanSouth
      @JerryVanSouth Před 2 lety +10

      thats what I thought too. An AS/400 e.g. was able to lift the workload of a whole company and he is fxxxking around with games in a 2 user environment...

    • @ilsennodipoi
      @ilsennodipoi Před 2 lety +3

      But could it teach people to use windows? This is apparently a valuable and rare skill that cannot be picked up should the need arise.

    • @johnpenguin9188
      @johnpenguin9188 Před 2 lety +4

      Just think of how many terminals a modern eight core laptop could support… or a threadripper 🤣
      The hard part would be finding the users who wanted to use your terminal…

    • @paulstubbs7678
      @paulstubbs7678 Před 2 lety +10

      When I was starting out at a telco (Telstra Aus) I remember seeing quite a few Olivetti box's that ran unix and talked to a pile of serial terminals. Back then setting up an office with multiple terminals meant running heaps of RS232 serial cables back to a 'server', everything was text based. I actually think more work got done back then, as the users couldn't stuff around with the computer, it was setup to do what it did and that was that.
      When we went to PC's, we then had to employ a pile of extra support (IT) people to go around finding lost icons and resetting screen resolutions etc, that users would stuff about with and break their workflows.
      One twit discovered laplink and would clone one machine to another because he thought the other looked better, of course he broke several machines, as the hardware did not match - wrong driver issues deluxe.

    • @Valery0p5
      @Valery0p5 Před 2 lety +1

      @@paulstubbs7678 Olivetti in Australia... As an Italian that's really nice to hear :D

  • @NOTWARHOL
    @NOTWARHOL Před 2 lety +1

    Absolutely incredible dive you've provided for the world with this video. One can only wonder what else awaits rediscovery

  • @alexanderhartin1677
    @alexanderhartin1677 Před rokem

    First time I’ve seen your channel. Fascinating tech, excellent breakdown. Great job. I just subscribed. Looking forward to checking out the rest of your catalog.

  • @LonSeidman
    @LonSeidman Před 2 lety +169

    Excellent work! This hour flew by!

    • @gblargg
      @gblargg Před 2 lety +2

      Seconded. It was like an archeology dig where you're wondering what secret explains things.

    • @r21187
      @r21187 Před 2 lety +1

      i am half way and i come to read coments and i am like "wtf is this a hour long?" and hell i have not seen the time fly LoL

    • @ezevaillard7740
      @ezevaillard7740 Před 2 lety

      it took me three sittings, i have little person demanding attention, but well worth it.

    • @MouthJaw
      @MouthJaw Před 2 lety

      Yes

    • @deViant14
      @deViant14 Před 2 lety +2

      It's like some other universe that you didn't know was part of this universe

  • @GrandeAmbermybeloved
    @GrandeAmbermybeloved Před 2 lety +66

    Honestly dude, this was one of the most interesting PC videos on CZcams in at least two years for me! Kick ass, dude, I hope you are putting out more of this.

  • @TheInfiniteEnd
    @TheInfiniteEnd Před 2 lety +1

    I want to like this twice. This was a fantastic dive into something rare and unique that I didn't actually know! Thank you!

  • @skuzlebut82
    @skuzlebut82 Před 2 lety

    Who are you and why have I never heard of you before? Subscribed!
    And you have your video divided in to chapters! Friggin awesome, man!

  • @elmm81
    @elmm81 Před 2 lety +33

    Actually it was possible to fit some 3D capabilities to a single FPGA even in 2005 - I did my master degree on this topic. Also in 2005 there were custom FPGA based 3D graphic solutions - for example to render voxel based graphics (for example results of MRI scans) but they used more then a single FPGA chip. From practical point of view - it would be too expensive at that time eliminating any sense of such device.

  • @PabloBD
    @PabloBD Před 2 lety +27

    one could argue that the computer is running just one user session at a time, like the user switching allows, but switching very very fast, like every other cpu cycle, hence not breaking the EULA

    • @rollinkendal8130
      @rollinkendal8130 Před 2 lety +1

      For single core, but what about multicore?

    • @PabloBD
      @PabloBD Před 2 lety +2

      @@rollinkendal8130 true now, but back then the pentium 4 had only 1 core, and 2 threads, with luck!!

    • @PraktikoolSinik
      @PraktikoolSinik Před 2 lety

      Clever arguments are lost on dumb judges.

  • @charliegarnish
    @charliegarnish Před 7 měsíci

    This was really cool been meaning to watch this for ages as it’s been on my feed but was very good. Thanks!

  • @jkeelsnc
    @jkeelsnc Před 2 lety +4

    This product is cool. The LG monitor with the built in ps/2 and rj45 and associated circuitry is really slick. Pretty neat stuff.

  • @slackstation
    @slackstation Před 2 lety +45

    This is amazing. Nothing like a knowledgable nerd with the energy to make something high effort. Thank you for this. I've been in computing for over 20 years and didn't know this existed. Thanks for going so deep, thanks for being such a great communicator, thanks for making something so accessible and explaining it so well.

    • @mostlyguesses8385
      @mostlyguesses8385 Před 2 lety

      CRT Nerd confirmed what I thought, all post 2020 computing is fake need and us watching vids and writing is met by 2000 machines. This always bugged me, if video watching or opening webpages is main use why waste money on newer tech, it clearly is fake need and as shown one can but newer computer and have 20 share it at once it's so overpowered ... It is like GM only selling buses and no simple cars so everyone has to buy a bus, corps skipping the cheap model..

  • @denismilic1878
    @denismilic1878 Před 2 lety +20

    I'm watching this on Phenom FX 8530, 16GB RAM from 2013, later added GPU GT-1030 for 4K decoding and NVME SSD for storage. It's unbelievable how good this PC works for its age.

    • @TremereTT
      @TremereTT Před 2 lety +2

      Switched from HD to SSD .... suddenly my 10 year old (Gaming Laptop) is cool again, despite Windows 10.

    • @Renee_R343
      @Renee_R343 Před 2 lety

      Yeah, I'm running an I5-4690k and AMD R9 RX280, both from 2014 and I don't see a need for a newer hardware for at least the next 5 years. As I only play single player games a few times a year, I'd only consider upgrading the GPU for a few generations up if GTA6 ever releases lol
      Otherwise it's totally adequate for everything on the web.

    • @ahmettay2382
      @ahmettay2382 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Renee_R343 here with fx8350 and r9 280x too, all the same thoughts

    • @formerpodcaster9292
      @formerpodcaster9292 Před rokem

      i'm watching this on a 2008 Thinkpad 400, Core 2 Duo, 4GB RAM, but also I miss my Phenom II, I don't have it anymore but that thing lasted me several years. Outside of cutting edge gaming it took a long time to feel old.

  • @TrueNorth1970
    @TrueNorth1970 Před 2 lety

    Wow. really great indepth stuff. Loved it! hats off and all the best from Norway! :)

  • @rudolphtheodore3474
    @rudolphtheodore3474 Před 6 měsíci

    Wow! Yes you have put a lot into your video and I enjoy it to the very end.
    Thanks for the hard work!

  • @scottbutler5
    @scottbutler5 Před 2 lety +33

    I actually used this at my old job for employee training, two used P4 2.4GHz systems plus two of these kits gave us 8 workstations for the training room. The only problem we ever had with it was when someone would unplug everything (because somehow the presence of computer equipment was deeply offensive to anyone who wasn't doing a computer-based training class). Once we solved that by bolting everything to the wall it was as reliable as any other computer.

    • @godsinbox
      @godsinbox Před 2 lety +5

      It's all about the pentiums baby

  • @raytaylornz
    @raytaylornz Před 2 lety +26

    Heres some comments as I watch the video....
    License
    - The stations are very dumb. They could be copied by other companies so the license was for the software. I think it worked out to be about $150 per station device, for a $20 manufacturing cost. It was all in the software.
    You could buy the cards separate from the station units.
    [remove redundant stuff you explained about terminal services]
    You could hack windows xp pro by re-writing a DLL to increase the license count and have multiple users logged in at the same time like terminal services on a windows server OS. You just didnt have the security stuff that windows server offered.
    NComputing simply created a bunch of virtual hardware and then hacked around the TS license limit by replacing some dlls. Not sure if it was legal or they reverse engineered etc. They then piped each session to the virtual hardware on the pci card. I am not sure how legal this was.
    The PCI card then sent the video/keyboard/audio out the cat5 cable to the station device.
    Most of the stuff you mention such as the USB redirection, video graphic settings etc you could also configure in microsoft terminal services / RDP too. The RDP protocol also wouldnt do the on-the-fly resolution changing at the time.
    The stations are dumb to the point where they dont do any processing inside them. They are just a converter from some RJ45 cable to the breakout of the various devices. I am almost certain that everything is done in software piggybacking on the terminal services component of windows and the PCI card is just an encoder/decoder that converts the device input/output data into 3x cat5 cables- like some sort of multiplexer. Then the station is just the decoder or reverse of that.
    Everything else would be done in software. You can tell by running a video encode on a pentium 4 without hyperthreading and notice how laggy the other stations can become when doing things like surfing the internet in IE6
    Interesting thing - the new zealand inland revenue website used to be quite processor intensive on IE6 when on a terminal server and so if one user went there it would become laggy for other users on both a terminal server and ncomputing stations. We sold these to a few accountants offices but gave up when one user would start watching youtube and other users couldnt work smoothly with their accounting software.
    When selling this to schools, we would have to sell the school multiple copies of windows so they could keep the extra copies on hand if they were ever audited. This is probably why I think your pricing quotes are a bit too cheap. We used to have to consider licensing audits whenever we sold these to be extra safe rather than sorry.
    Limited bandwidth in a cat5 cable for analog video is what I think was the main factor that the only really usable resolution was 1024x768
    Windows XP had terrible support for multicore processors. We used to always sell them with a pentium 4 with hyperthreading.

    Did you notice how terrible the sound came through the stations? definitley sounded like compressed wave or 22khz - not CD quality 44.1khz

    Sim city slowing down - I think its definitley a graphics thing.
    The RDP protocol was designed to be incredibly bandwidth efficient. Its not like a compressed mpeg video. It can take parts of the screen, break it down, cache images in the client.
    SO say your minimising and maximizing an accounting program. When you restore the program the second time, it can take parts of the screen and say "this area is the same as before, just show that again" rather than resending another copy of the image. But it goes further and looks at the elements that make up the application interface and layer them so it might say draw a bunch of images to some parts of the screen Eg. (title bar with blue color fade for the win2k theme).
    Then inside in the middle it might decide to draw a grey box, and then send some text across it and it gets all this info from deep within the windows environment as windows itself is creating the content on screen.
    You can imagine this is much more bandwidth efficient than just sending frames of pictures. And it makes using word 97 though an RDP session via a 56k dialup modem incredibly easy and usable.
    But its also very processor intensive as it needs to decide what parts of the screen it will send as images, what parts to send as text or drawing commands. Vectoring is probably a better way to describe it.
    In adobe you can create an image by inserting a jpeg photo object which might be stored as a raster, put a circle next to it which is just stored as a circle command (draw circle from point A to B) rather than storing all the bitmap raster data of the circle. (explaing for others, not CRD)
    So sim city presents an interesting conundrum. Its going to be almost a full screen image because its hard to break down into parts as it wont be using many large areas of solid colors and plain windows fonts.
    Which it has to capture in software, create a png (or whatever optionally lossless image compression the rdp protocol uses) and send that for every frame.
    This is why video through RDP was almost impossible at the time - 3 frames a second though now they have optimised in recent versions of windows server and it can break down the frame and send a video stream object with vector objects and images around it to make up the full screen.
    Many games however can be broken down into smaller images that often repeat, and only the parts of the screen that move are sent as frame updates. But sim city has a lot of animation spread out across the screen, even when the user is idle - not just in focused areas, so its harder to break down into smaller objects for frame updates.
    It then has to process each of these frames and look for optimization opportunities which it probably wont find much.
    So what I am saying is the frame analysis is what slows it down, not necessarily the processing done by the application itself.
    You will probably notice the graphics becomes laggy with applications where lots of the screen is changing between frames, and it works much better with applications where much of the screen is static.

    Think about word for example. Using an RDP session over a slow network or laggy internet connection - click the file menu. It might slightly lag as the terminal services engine decides the icons are each going to be sent as images, while the rest might be a grey box with some text on top to make up the total part of the screen that the file menu now occupies.
    The second time you click the file menu, it just says "Oh after computing all that again the result is the same as what i sent you previously so just show xyz again".
    It still had to do all the initial computation to work out the result can be just a cached image command.
    Then the only other updates are the cursor as you move around the screen - nothing really bandwidth intensive.

    Terminal services was the reason I became a network tech. I love the technology. Hence why I jumped on this the moment it became available and started selling it to schools.

    • @rasz
      @rasz Před 2 lety +3

      About the RDP - how would you explain then showing up as 3x graphic cards without software installed?

    • @henryfordyce9154
      @henryfordyce9154 Před 2 lety

      Just read this comment if you don't want to watch an hour long video. Neat topic, neat analysis, desperately needs a tldr.

  • @MCOrigging
    @MCOrigging Před 2 lety +3

    I recently set up gpu-p in hyper-v for multi user gaming, so seeing this setup with pentium 4s was incredibly interesting. Thanks for putting in the effort!

  • @matth.imaging8952
    @matth.imaging8952 Před 2 lety +1

    Brings back memories of the late 1980s, when DOS was still king and the 386 / 486 computers were the top op the hill. Built some multi-user systems on a 386 or 486 PC using Concurrent DOS 386. Via serial ports, you could attach either a terminal or even better, turn an old and obsolete 8088 PC into a terminal running a dedicated program called PCTERM.
    On the console you could run 4 programs concurrently, from the terminals you could run 2 per terminal. All software actually ran on the central computer, as was the storage. Concurrent DOS 386 relied on the Virtual 8086 mode of the i386 to achieve all this. It was a alternative to the much more expensive solution from Novell netware.

  • @vinniec5286
    @vinniec5286 Před 2 lety +12

    You did an excellent job! I don't like long videos, but as an old IT guy I was captivated in the first 10 minutes. Around 2010 I came across a tiny little dll file that turned my Windows XP Pro machine into an XP terminal server for up to 10 concurrent users. You had to have other machines already, but if you did not have the money for a terminal server, this would do the trick. To me, it sounds like x300 boxes are essentially the reverse of a KVM switch. If I remember correctly, when XP was first in beta testing they said something about supporting 9 monitors (think Brady Bunch), so it makes sense to me how they were able to get 7 desktop sessions. Very cool though!

    • @MDchan
      @MDchan Před 2 lety +2

      Hi Vinnie! I am curious what was that dll file? Can you share it, or type it's name? I would like to look into that file.

  • @TailRecursion
    @TailRecursion Před 2 lety +38

    My best guess regarding Quake only running two instances at a time is that they're probably queueing up waiting for an available CPU thread before starting. Would be interesting to see if you could run more than two on a CPU with more than 2 threads.

    • @SeeJayPlayGames
      @SeeJayPlayGames Před 2 lety +12

      Quake (and sequels) pretty much required a dedicated server for fairness to attached clients. If you ran a "listen server," as it was called when running client and server on the same PC, that PC was the only one that had a good time. In 1998 or so, my buddy and I set up an NT Pentium (later Linux with dual Celerons) box for just that purpose (Quake 2) and hosted it on the dial-up ISP that we worked at (with the permission of the higher-ups, of course - it was kind of a claim to fame, actually). It hosted 8 clients with ease. It probably could have done more but we liked the gaming dynamics of 8 players better than say, 16.

  • @Emancipatriot
    @Emancipatriot Před rokem

    Sometimes when I watch your essays, I wish that I WASNT into tech and retro tech. Because I’d like to test my theory that I’d still enjoy your videos if I knew nothing of what you spoke. You have a way with your words, very easy for anybody to follow along with. I’m sure I’m not the only person that clicks one of your videos, realized about 10 minutes in that I watched that video already 6 months ago. But even still I just stay! Keep up the good work. Speaking to people is your calling

  • @odinalfather6494
    @odinalfather6494 Před 2 lety

    Nice video, I really enjoyed it ! Thanks for you effort ! Literally didn't even notice an hour passing :D

  • @7GtwNYkHYs
    @7GtwNYkHYs Před 2 lety +27

    That is super impressive technology, especially the 6 concurrent users running apps at the same time with a single core non hyperthreaded machine.

  • @volvo09
    @volvo09 Před 2 lety +64

    Great example of the internet being responsible for our constant upgrading.
    I love the basic UI and functionality of older versions of windows, but the power and tech requirements of the modern internet / browser experience forces you to upgrade. Even XP is forced off the net by not having a new enough browser available.
    Back around 02 I remember still being able to kind of function on the internet with IE 5? Or 5.5? On windows 3.1, but many new pages wouldn't work. Similar to the winXP example now.

    • @kFY514
      @kFY514 Před 2 lety

      You can squeeze a couple more years from old hardware by just installing Linux.
      But having a lighter OS and a modern browser can only get you so far. Modern web is getting increasingly bloated and even basic (from a "social" standpoint, not necessarily from the computational one) sites like CZcams or Facebook can really struggle on underpowered hardware.

    • @cll1out
      @cll1out Před 2 lety +7

      I wish I could have Windows 2000 back .... secure for its time (NT based) no wasted resources on eye candy, nothing comes with it so bring only the software you need.

    • @mrb692
      @mrb692 Před 2 lety +5

      XP is so riddled with security holes, the modern internet being too powerful for it is probably a good thing

    • @mskiptr
      @mskiptr Před 2 lety +2

      Well, you can get pretty far with first adblockers and then JS blockers.
      (and ditching windows bcs any secure version will lag as hell)

    • @SeanBZA
      @SeanBZA Před 2 lety +3

      @Green Mamba Games Yes my first Linux box was a 90MHZ Slot 1 Pentium, with 128M of RAM, deemed too slow to run XP, but fairly screamed with RH4.0.

  • @TeoHarlan
    @TeoHarlan Před 2 lety

    super interesting video! such a unique niche topic. I'd love to see a video comparing the different offerings!

  • @quinndirks5653
    @quinndirks5653 Před rokem

    CRD! I love your jokes man, one of the many reasons I'm subscribed and also why I keep watching!!!! :) :)

  • @chippzy
    @chippzy Před 2 lety +66

    I'd like to see this pushed to its limits using the latest motherboards that still have PCI. Considering it has Linux support there is a lot of potential for cool stuff

    • @Palmtop_User
      @Palmtop_User Před 2 lety +2

      I do know firsthand that theres 10th gen intel with pci, i wouldnt doubt that theres 12th gen and whatever contemporary ryzen were on

    • @kodeytheneko
      @kodeytheneko Před 2 lety +7

      Linux is already really easy to do multi user on, though?

    • @prla5400
      @prla5400 Před 2 lety +1

      No real support for Linux, as it says in the video. I guess if I didn't miss anything

    • @AgeofReason
      @AgeofReason Před 2 lety +2

      @@prla5400 enword you don't need real support from the company, it comes from that the kernel likely already knows how to use the hardware off the rip. Why you jumping in with nothing to say samjeer?

    • @maleiaty
      @maleiaty Před 2 lety +2

      Oh man yea, it would be a dream to see how well this performed on a 3rd gen Ryzen with an NVMe SSD, hahah. Would be hauling

  • @jacobburfield4622
    @jacobburfield4622 Před 2 lety +18

    legitimately one of the coolest things ive seen all year, i kinda really want to get one and get a openTTD lan party going

  • @captainpumpkinhead1512
    @captainpumpkinhead1512 Před 6 měsíci

    Subscribed immediately, holy crap this is high quality content!

  • @rahsomali
    @rahsomali Před 7 měsíci +1

    so weird I watched the whole video instead of typical CZcams click and skip. I learn something. and the fact the CEO responded in the comment is wild.. subbed

  • @FirstWizardZorander
    @FirstWizardZorander Před 2 lety +6

    STELLAR video as always! This is a benchmark for how deep dive technology videos on CZcams should be done! Also, I love how simultaneously clean and bonkers this solution is, especially the software side of things

  • @CBaggers
    @CBaggers Před 2 lety +4

    Both the device and this video were wildly impressive. Thanks so much for making this!

  • @usernameforyoutube2661

    New to the channel. Love the stuff. These videos are loonnng. But it's appreciated.

  • @Slurkz
    @Slurkz Před 2 lety

    Never thought this subject would turn out so darn interesting, I couldn’t stop warching! Thanks, CR dude! 💜

  • @Just.A.T-Rex
    @Just.A.T-Rex Před 2 lety +6

    And holy cow has the production skyrocketed!!!! Proud of how far this channel has come and how far you are gonna go.

  • @happytorrentt4500
    @happytorrentt4500 Před 2 lety +4

    The dedication to the effects and editing is amazing, like how the words are obstructed by the TV at 55:11. Love it lol

    • @brianfriedl7464
      @brianfriedl7464 Před 2 lety

      The wall is painted for chroma key/greenscreen effects. Its how he did the various flags as well. Pretty smart!

  • @murmur3966
    @murmur3966 Před 2 lety +4

    Hello Hello From Canada!! I am soooooo impressed by this video. The amount of hardware that you put together, with all the research you would have done is mind boggling. You showed us so many details I feel like I did after college programs, full of knowledge but not too much. You showed all the weird quirks, that showed the company was onto a really interesting little product. Did you keep track of all the hours you put into bringing us this incredible video? It was like a mini documentary and presented just as good as some the knowledge network produced. I liked, subscribed and when I get back to work I am going to support your future work. I hope you are able to showcase the other devices you mentioned.
    I know you probably have heard this before, but I think there is something that you hit on and didn't have resources to follow a possibility. Microsoft has had so many different modifications to the licence agreements over the years, that it makes my head hurt. We believe there is always some "line, sub paragraph, section, Etc. Etc." that we think is preventing us from doing something. With all the does, and don'ts with licence agreements, do you think microsoft can not protect Win?? from everything and the creators of these little cards, with boxes found the loophole? Since they have been making and distributing them for so many iterations, maybe thee little boxes are an "almost exception", that Microsoft doesn't want to televise or bring attention to their existence. If they are an "almost exception" somehow, can you imagine how many homes would have a computer in each kids room, or in every room? Do you think Microsoft paid them not to bring it out to the courts and public, because they might not be able to crush the little company?
    Sorry for going on so much. Keep up the awesome content and I can not wait to dive into your channel, to get caught up to your other followers.

  • @CraftMine1000
    @CraftMine1000 Před 11 měsíci

    I keep coming back and rewatching this video every once a while, good video

  • @rjhelms
    @rjhelms Před 2 lety +6

    When my local public library brought in public computers for Internet access, in 2006 or 2007, they had four terminals at each PC. I never learned what tech they used, but the breakout boxes from this system look *very* familiar.

  • @tylerk6206
    @tylerk6206 Před 2 lety +19

    man this was a fascinating piece of hardware. Also really loved the discussion on "the Plateau." Make me wonder what the world would have looked like if the Plateau had been embraced, and the global mission was to make hardware last as long as feasibly possible (We'd still have many homes with PCs from the late 90s bopping around I'd be willing to bet)

  • @9072997
    @9072997 Před 2 lety

    I volunteered at one of the schools you are talking about. We had a few Pentium 2s knocking around as late as 2007, and you're right. We had Office 2000, but its basically the same. This company sent us (unsolicited) a 3-user demo kit. Even this setup was cost prohibitive, but it was neet.

  • @martincoburn6522
    @martincoburn6522 Před 2 lety

    Great work, really informative stuff!

  • @jdisdetermined
    @jdisdetermined Před 2 lety +34

    Oh man this was so good. With my admittedly limited experience with video production and editing, even I was able to appreciate how much time and effort went into this. The raw facts and info. is staggering without feeling arbitrary or the runtime feeling bloated. I was locked in from start to finish. Left a like, thank you for the free hour of entertainment and education. 👍✌️

  • @rfmerrill
    @rfmerrill Před 2 lety +40

    27:29 anti-counterfeiting. Ghost shifts and cloning were a problem even back then, and one way to combat it was (and still is) to have the software refuse to operate if it can't authenticate the hardware.
    There are more elaborate ways to do this but something as simple as an obscured rule for what makes a valid serial number can often be enough to stop a shady manufacturer from outright cloning your product--as often they don't even bother putting unique serial numbers on their counterfeit units.

    • @RobotronSage
      @RobotronSage Před 2 lety +2

      Thank god for open source amirite

    • @My1xT
      @My1xT Před 2 lety

      Couldn't they just read out the sn from the hardware when connected maybe?

  • @dvroegop
    @dvroegop Před rokem

    Darn. I got so distracted reading the book you wrote and the calculations you made about the money you earned (and laughed at the miscalculation) that I had to move back in time a couple of times....
    Thanks for the informative but mostly entertaining video!

  • @BSFJeebus
    @BSFJeebus Před 2 lety +7

    I remember in XP, 7 users was the limit of fast user switching, that must play into the device limit.

    • @jeebus6263
      @jeebus6263 Před 2 lety

      Xp and 7 are Windows NT...

    • @BSFJeebus
      @BSFJeebus Před 2 lety

      @@jeebus6263 Yes, I'm aware, I literally trained on them, not sure what your point is, maybe if I clarify my statement, in Windows XP, the number of users limited to created accounts for fast user switching was a total of 7

    • @jeebus6263
      @jeebus6263 Před 2 lety +1

      @@BSFJeebus i RDP all the time, i didn't know there was any 7 user limit. I know in taskmgr there's typically at least a system username running.

    • @jeebus6263
      @jeebus6263 Před 2 lety

      @@BSFJeebus i guess my point was that WinNT was selected (NT4) specifically for features like multi-user support.

    • @BSFJeebus
      @BSFJeebus Před 2 lety

      @@jeebus6263 so I did find out Fast User Switching gets disabled when XP joins a domain, which makes sense since it was based on RDP, the only reason his example made think of it was because I'd seen a similar set up and remembered when I was setting up users for XP Home, I found that 7 user limit, still really neat the way some companies found to exploit it