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|    CLASSIC_COMPUTER    |    Classic Computers    |    1,530 messages    |
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|    Message 258 of 1,530    |
|    JOHN GUILLORY to ADAM GLAZENER    |
|    Gateway 2000    |
|    31 Aug 14 23:56:30    |
      -> I remember when my dad purchased our first PC back in '92. It was a       Gateway        -> 2000, 486 Mhz, 4mb RAM, 3.5 floppy drive, 5.25 floppy drive, and Windows        -> 3.1. I think he used Prodigy internet service to dial out to internet back        -> then. I was only familiar with my Atari 8-bit system from '85 and up.        -> Then, I started using the Gateway 2000 computer to learn more. He upgraded        -> to a Compaq PC in '99 and gave me the Gateway PC. I upgraded the 5.25        -> floppy drive to a CD drive, the RAM to 16mb, installed 56k modem, and        -> installed Windows 95. It worked well with AOL internet services for a        -> while.       -> -- Adam Glazener                I'm guessing your fairly young... early 20's? My first PC was a       Commodore 64 (not the 64c, the 64!) Around the time I got into Junior       High, my dad bought an AT&T 6300 PC from a guy who worked for Mc       Donalds. A lot of folks had issues with the AT&T 6300, though the more       you learned about it, the more you loved it! Unlike the 8088 based       systems, it had a 16-bit bus. It had this ackward built-in CGA graphics       card that you had to go through an act of congress to disable it! Using       the built in CGA you got standard CGA modes plus a 640x400x2 color mode       I believe. This actually also I am wanting to say allowed you to       technically get a 320x200x4 mode using Tandy drivers, but not the       16-color modes. I think it had a few similaries with the Plantronics.       I did later put a VGA adapter card in the AT&T, but because it went to       the 8-bit adapter card, it wasn't that impressive! (The on-board cga       was on a daughter board via 16-bit bus....) I also later put a       Herculees card in the AT&T, which opened the doors to some neat stuff!       I ocasionally used it for dual monitor support, but being a programmer,       I generally loaded a driver that used the MDA area for EMS memory, or       just wrote my own programs that'd store the data to the screen memory       myself... This actually had even better benefiets to using regular       memory, because while your program was running, you could flip on the       monitor and watch the characters on the screen change and know that the       memory was getting changed! (can't do that with normal ram!) ;-)       Later, I got a job at Circle K. After 3-4 months of saving my money up,       a friend sold his 80286 PC-AT compatible with EGA card. I felt like I       was being selfish and blowing all my money in on toys when I bought the       80286... But later my mom told me all my cousins was amazed that I had       saved as much as I had at the time to be able to just pay cash for the       computer and still have a fair amount in my checking account! Later,       working for myself, I managed to acquire an 80386sx, moved up to an       80386dx-40 (if you know your history of computers, you'll know only one       company made an 80386dx-40, and it wasn't intel!)                                    --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v3.0pr5        * Origin: KF5QEO's Shack (1:396/60)    |
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