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How many computers do you own?

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Reply 80 of 89, by dysamoria

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Amiga 1200, x2 (CF readers instead of HDs) - for retro-gaming/music, but I have no 15KHz monitor and can't justify buying one on eBay
Apple II Plus - Rescued from a sidewalk many years ago; it works, but I have no idea what to do with it
Apple IIgs, x3 (using a ROM3 unit with a ReActiveMicro Drive/Turbo) - for retro-gaming/music
Apple PowerMac G4 Quicksilver - dead PSU, which I cannot afford to replace; hand-me-down from an ex, which I used to use to serve alternate iTunes libraries on my network
Apple iMac 12,2 - obsolete to Apple, but works fine; main computer, and have been waiting for Apple to market a proper desktop machine for ages to replace it... still waiting...
Apple MacBook Pro 5,5 - obsolete to Apple, but works fine; mostly a secondary/backup machine
Atari MEGA ST4 (with an UltraSatan to replace the SCSI SupraDrive) - for retro-gaming/music
Commodore 64, x11(?) - bought one boxed unit for retro-gaming/music (but it wont work with any known good SID chip in it), and also bought a batch of questionable units & parts (some work fine; needs mass storage)
Generic white metal-cased Pentium PC, upgraded with SCSI, from an old workplace; it's a heavy junker with WinXP, BeOS R5, & Haiku beta on it
Tandy 1000 TL/2 - for retro-gaming/music; failing to get an XT-IDE card booting to CF
Tandy 2500 XL/2 - for retro-gaming/music; spent lots time/money on it (3.5" drive, new ROM for Music Quest PC MIDI card, Monotech XT-IDE ROM card, & CF-to-IDE reader to replace dying HD)
Tandy 2500 RSX - for retro-gaming/music(?); has Windows 3.11 on it, but I don't use it for anything right now (should replace hard drive with CF)
Self-Built Lian Li black-cased Asus/Pentium 4 with various I/O - mostly for Amiga Forever/Explorer, as it was replaced by:
Self-Built Antec black full-sized tower EVGA/Intel Core 2 Duo - former main PC, now just for games from 2008 or earlier (this machine's various incarnations has taught me I never EVER want to build a PC again!)
UMAX SuperMac e500 - used to serve diskette-creation needs for the Apple IIgs, also has BeOS R4 on it

28? I used to have several other DOS/Windows computers (and HUGE PILES of parts of PCs), but finally got rid of the least interesting/useful ones, and one Dell PSU died (though I should've kept more parts from everything).

I have too much stuff and no real use for any of it, honestly. The classic stuff was originally bought off eBay when I was made impulsive by an SSRI drug. I told myself it was for the purpose of making a retro music studio setup. I put that on hold almost immediately when I realized not having modern mass storage sucked. A decade later, I spent hundreds of dollars in the last year to rectify the mass storage issue, mostly to "shit or get off the pot" on this stupid project. Most of the software is unpleasant to use. UI design/usability changed for the better over the decades since.

I can play most DOS games on my iMac with DOSBox. I'm not sure I will ever have a decent display (or desk space) for the Amiga(s), so it's not enjoyable to use for music apps or games, though it's been an interesting learning process. Apple IIgs music software is poor (though better than the Tandy software). IIgs versions of Sierra AGI games have better music & sound than the DOS versions, so that's cute... for the ones I can get to actually run from CF without runtime errors. The Atari seems to be working fully now, and I haven't really tried to play many games, yet. Could be used to edit my MT-32, but I don't know why I would bother.

This is a stupid hobby, but the nostalgia of reliving my childhood ... and the semi-nostalgia of trying to relive parts of my childhood that weren't actually IN my OWN childhood (Amiga, Apple IIgs, Atari ST)... has been... interesting. That's all I have to show for the money and time spent? Sigh.

Reply 81 of 89, by kixs

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kixs wrote on 2017-08-23, 20:22:

In process of moving... I think I moved around 60% of my stash and I counted 29 complete computers from 386 to Athlon64. Also around 40 boxes of bare cards/motherboards - some taking only 1 or 2 motherboards and some taking 30+ cards. It will be fun making inventory this fall 😁

Reading my comments from 2017... it's been almost 4 years and still no inventory done 🤣

I think I've tried to do the inventory a few times and my head almost exploded when I started... so I had to stop... Too much stuff and no storage space to properly sort everything...

This past winter I've done some renovation in the attic and now have some custom home made shelves to put extra boxes away. The other half of this half of the attic is still waiting for me to do the same... insulation, flooring, some extra shelves and then... the inventory 😁 Depends on free time, but it could all be done by this summer...

Requests are also possible... /msg kixs

Reply 82 of 89, by AeonG

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My collection is small and mostly focused on testing mid 90's to mid 2000s software, and I'm looking for better storage management techniques before I fill even more into the small room most of them are in.

Dell Dimension 4100 With Windows 98 (Got off of Ebay)
Custom Build with Tyan Trinity 400 board and Pentium III (currently out of commission)
Gateway E-4000 With Windows XP (Got it from a Retro Store in Eldon, Missouri USA)
Emac With OSX 10.4 (Found on Craigslist)
Imac DV With OSX 10.2 (A friend had it in his closet and didn't want it anymore) (currently out of commission until I get an OS 9 install disk)
Lenovo Thinkpad T430 With Lubuntu (originally my daily driver, now just my work machine)
Custom build with Ryzen 2600 and Radeon RX580 and WIndows 10 (My Daily Driver)

It's really a farcry from all the PC's I collected in the 2000s. Gone are the days you could get an old PC at thrift store or a yard sale for $20. Now they fucking auction off anything that looks remotely valuable.

Reply 83 of 89, by dormcat

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Counting only desktop and laptop motherboards as "computers;" excluding smartphones or tablets:

1984; new; Taiwanese Apple ][ clone (probably made by Datatech / DTK) with a very PC-styled look and Model F lookalike 83-key keyboard; recycled circa 1996.
1990; new; DTK 80386DX-20; recycled circa 2000.
1995; new; Dell XPS Pentium 120 replacing DTK 80386DX-20; active as late DOS gaming build.
1996; new; custom Pentium-MMX 166 for my parents; recycled circa 2004.
1999; new; Quantex (Biostar M6TBD) + P2-400; recycled circa 2007.
2003; new; Alienware (Asus A7B8X Deluxe) + Athlon XP 2200+; recycled circa 2012.
2003; new; HP Athlon XP-M 1800+; recycled circa 2012.
2004; new; Asus Terminator 2 (Celeron 2.4 GHz) for my parents (mostly Mom) replacing Pentium-MMX 166; recycled circa 2012.
2007; auctioned; Acer Veriton 5100 (P3-800EB) replacing dead Quantex P2-400; recycled circa 2012 but kept the CPU.
2009; new; MSI U100 (Aton N270) replacing HP Athlon XP-M 1800+; active as WinXP spare testing build.
2010; new; MSI CX500 (Pentium T4500) for Dad; inactive.
2010; new; MSI Wind Box DE200 (Atom 330) for Mom replacing Asus Terminator 2; active as unattended Win7 remote file server when I'm out of town.
Circa 2011; e-waste; MiTAC Am486DX2-50; recycled MB, PSU, and case in 2019 due to PSU problems but kept everything else.
2013; new; Gigabyte T1132 (i5-2467M) replacing MSI U100; recycled 2019 due to power problems (probably bad MOS and/or capacitors) and Gigabyte claimed no spare parts to fix. Should have send it to an independent repair service (sigh).
2016; new; Asus VivoPC K31CD (i5-6400) for Mom replacing MSI Wind Box DE200; active.
2018; auctioned; Asus P5G41T-M LX + C2Q Q8300 for Dad replacing MSI CX500; active.
2018; new; Gigabyte H370 HD3 + i7-8700; active as the modern gaming and photo-editing build.
2019; auctioned; Gigabyte GA-K8VM800M + Sempron 2800+; recycled 2020 due to corrupted BIOS.
2020; e-waste; Asus TXP4 + Pentium-MMX 233; active as early (with cache disabled) to late DOS and earliest Win98SE gaming build.
2020; e-waste; Gigabyte GA-6VXC7-4X-P + P3-600EB; active but replaced the CPU with P3-800EB from that Acer Veriton 5100 above as early- to mid-Win98SE gaming build.
2020; e-waste; Gigabyte GA-K8VM800M + Sempron 3000+; recycled 2020 due to corrupted BIOS. Was glad finding the exact same model so I didn't have to reinstall drivers, only to suffer the exact same fate.
2021; dumpster; MSI K9A2 Platinum + Athlon 64 X2 5000+; inactive.
2021; hand-me-down; Gigabyte GA-P31-ES3G + C2D E7400; active as WinXP gaming build.
2021; auctioned; Asus K8V-MX + Sempron 3000+; active as late Win98SE gaming build.
2021; hand-me-down; Asus P5GDC-V Deluxe + P4-520 2.8 GHz; inactive.
2021; e-waste; Asus A7V133-C + Athlon 1200C; inactive.
2022; dumpster; Gigabyte GA-965P-DQ6 + Core 2 Duo E6300 + Gigabyte GV-R455HM-512I + 2GB DDR2; inactive.
2022; dumpster; eMachines ET1830 (ECS MCP73VT-PM) + Pentium Duo Core E5700 + 2GB DDR2; inactive.
2022; auctioned; Asus VivoPC K31DA (i5-4460) + GTX 650 Ti + 16GB DDR3 for Dad replacing C2Q Q8300 (which became the "living room computer" connected to LCD TV); active.
2022; e-waste; Lenovo ThinkPad X200; active to become an emergency backup Win10 laptop.
2023; e-waste; Asus H61M-K + Celeron G1620 (later replaced with an auctioned i7-3770); inactive for the moment to be a dual boot backup Win10 and ultimate WinXP.
2023; hand-me-down; Asus P5B Deluxe + Core 2 Duo E6300 + 4GB DDR2; inactive right now (just received; to be tested).

Out of 32 computers acquired in over three decades, 12 are still active (OS installed and PSU connected) while 8 are inactive.

Last edited by dormcat on 2023-12-14, 03:10. Edited 4 times in total.

Reply 84 of 89, by gerry

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dormcat wrote on 2021-10-08, 05:05:

Counting only desktop and laptop motherboards as "computers;" excluding smartphones or tablets:

Out of 26 computers acquired in over three decades, 11 are still active (OS installed and PSU connected) while 3 are inactive (reserved as spares).

do you regret parting with any of those?

I have 'too many' and yet still sometimes regret parting with some of them when clearing out!

Reply 85 of 89, by Joseph_Joestar

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Currently, four retro rigs (specs in signature), one laptop (leftover from my last place of work) and one not so modern desktop PC.

Nowadays, I do most of my gaming on retro rigs and consoles so I don't really need a powerful main PC.

PC#1: Pentium MMX 166 / Soyo SY-5BT / S3 Trio64V+ / Voodoo1 / YMF719 / AWE64 Gold / SC-155
PC#2: AthlonXP 2100+ / ECS K7VTA3 / Voodoo3 / Audigy2 / Vortex2
PC#3: Athlon64 3400+ / Asus K8V-MX / 5900XT / Audigy2
PC#4: i5-3570K / MSI Z77A-G43 / GTX 970 / X-Fi

Reply 87 of 89, by dormcat

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gerry wrote on 2021-10-08, 09:47:

do you regret parting with any of those?

Ideally I'd like to keep them all. 😆 That wouldn't be practical, of course.

The Apple ][ clone had its 5.25" floppy dead, so in its last couple of years I could only practice BASIC with its ROM. Fixing or replacing its floppy drive might be well over the value of remaining parts.

The 80386DX-20 had a very rare feature: SIPP memory modules, making it difficult to upgrade with standard SIMM (might need adapters). Back in the early days of Internet, online resources of knowledge, opinions, and transaction platforms for retro computing were scarce, and everyone were pursuing newer computer models and standards. Just compare the two decades of computing: 1991-2001 and 2011-2021; the former was revolutionary every 3 months, while the latter have little difference even three years apart. They have little practical value today and can only be kept as collector's items.

OTOH the two systems that were functioning and could be used today were the Alienware Athlone XP 2200+ (on Asus A7N8X Deluxe) and Asus Terminator T2-P (with Celeron 2.4 GHz; I didn't and wouldn't choose it but I was away in US so my Mom asked a friend of mine to get that one for her). They were struggling under WinXP using mechanical PATA HDD, and that T2 had an awful case + noisy fan + weak PSU combination. Replacing it with a standard m-ATX case and PSU, add an AGP graphics card, a SATA HDD or even SSD, would make it a nice Win98SE retro platform.

Reply 88 of 89, by gerry

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dormcat wrote on 2021-10-09, 02:05:

The Apple ][ clone had its 5.25" floppy dead, so in its last couple of years I could only practice BASIC with its ROM. Fixing or replacing its floppy drive might be well over the value of remaining parts.

that's the thing - there is a point where something breaks and where it just becomes unrealistic to try and fix it, and then whether we want to or not, it's gone

Just compare the two decades of computing: 1991-2001 and 2011-2021; the former was revolutionary every 3 months, while the latter have little difference even three years apart. They have little practical value today and can only be kept as collector's items.

very true, pace of change has ironically slowed down in the world of PCs (not at all in computing generally, but for PCs, yes)

Reply 89 of 89, by Ahrle

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Åskblad wrote on 2017-10-28, 15:58:
Holy crap :exclamation: People should see this when they think I'm a maniac. […]
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King_Corduroy wrote:

I was wondering recently how many computers I had exactly after someone asked me so I went ahead and counted them up and here's a list of everything I have:

So yeah 43 is my current count, probably soon to go down now that I know it's gotten to this level. So what is you current total?

Holy crap 😲 People should see this when they think I'm a maniac.

1992 Toshiba T4400SX-25 - good condition, unsure of function due to missing PSU
1994 Compaq LTE 5000 - average condition, works
1995 Tulip Universa 1000 All in One - junk condition, needs CRT repair
1996 Toshiba Libretto 100CT - average condition, in parts but works
1996 Dell Dimension XPS P166s - mint condition, works
1997 Toshiba Libretto 100CT - good condition, in parts but works
1997 Compaq LTE 5400 - mint condition, works
2010 i7-930 custom build - average condition, main PC
2013 MSI GT70 - bad condition, main laptop

Nine in total... feels about enough in a 30 m2 (320 ft2) apartment.

^^ My previous account. How times change.

Spoiler

1992 Toshiba T4400SX-25
Sold in 2019. Never got it working due to weird power connector.

1994 Compaq LTE 5000
Still in collection.

1995 Tulip Universa 1000
Sold. Busted CRT got me on this incredibly rare beast.

2x 1996 Toshiba Libretto 100CT
Still in collection, in parts. Too much junk in the way to work on them.

1996 Dell Dimension XPS P166s
Still in collection. Upgraded to P200MMX but will probably restore it for originality.

1997 Compaq LTE 5400
Still in collection. Probably my fav vintage computer, paid a fortune to get it imported.

2010 i7-930 custom build
Sits unused and GPU-less.

2013 MSI GT70
Sold.

Current count 45 computers and 3 servers

Spoiler

1984 IBM 5150
Purchased late 2018. Worked beautifully. Complete with 5151 monitor, 5152 dot matrix printer, a bunch of folders with paperwork and floppies.

1987 Macintosh SE
Got a massive donation in 2019, including this. Powered on early 2020 and working without issues.

1989 Macintosh IIcx
Not tested yet.

1991 Macintosh Quadra 700
Not tried either.

1992 486DX desktop
Included in an earlier donation, probably 2018. Period correct with ISA graphics, SB32 and 270MB HDD.

1992 Amiga 1200
Powered on once but missing startup diskette. Previous owner recapped and upgraded power brick with ATX components.

1992 Sun SparcStation 10
Donation from gf's brother. Owned for 2-3 years, not plugged in yet. Collected a free monitor for it, too.

1994 Compaq LTE Elite 4/50CX
Beautiful and works great, except FDD belt's broken.

1995 Compaq LTE 5000
Works great. Looking super dated with its tiny screen.

1995 PowerMac 7500/100
Worked great when it was started 4-5 years ago.

1996 Compaq LTE 5300 x2
Both working great. Mid-models disfavored by 5000 and 5400.

1996 Toshiba Libretto 100CT x2
Disassembled to bits since 7-8 years, don't expect getting back together but who knows?

1996 Compaq LTE 5400
Top-of-the-range in beautiful non-yellowed condition. Cracked plastic around hinges, nothing else wrong.

1996 Dell Dimension XPS P166s
Freebie w/ $20 desk, complete w/ keyboard, monitor, software, and even $1900 reciept. Integrated AWE32!

1997 Compaq Armada 1590DT
Long forgotten, deeply buried in the lockup. Excellent condition and worked perfect.

1997 PowerMac 8600/200
Unsure if tested yet.

1998 Compaq Armada 1700
Put away since donated to me and forgotten about. Pristine condition and definitely not tried yet.

1998 Pentium II custom desktop minitower
Came in $50 yard sale w/ Armada E700, NOS looking Philips 14" monitor, an Inspiron 1300 (sold) and some keyboards. Case is trash but has an AWE64 inside.

1998 IBM PC300PL
Previous main retro system, upgraded from PII/450 to PIII/750. Sadly developed all sorts of weird errors after last year's V2 installation.

1998 Custom Aladdin V K6-II/400
Built with loose parts to compete with the system below.

1998 Custom MVP3 K6-II/450
Built to compete with the above as two top-end SS7 platforms.

1999 IBM Aptiva 2158
$5 barn find at a weird farmer. Great condition, but busted HDD (replaced). Included speakers already sold for $15 and other yellowed gadgets.

1999 Compaq Presario 5722
Smuggled out from attic when new landlord decided to throw everything loose away (I offered my help ofc 😉). Must've sat there 10+ years, great condition w/ OEM screen and even boxed keyboard.

2000 Compaq Armada E500
Pristine condition laptop w/ dock, not tested yet.

2000 Compaq Armada 100S
Previous main retro laptop. K6-II/550 and 32GB CF. Resistanceless hinges and sub-average overall condition.

2000 Custom PIII/1000
Tested for 10 min & worked OK.

2001 Dell Inspiron 8100
$15 purchase from bad images and 3 weeks of patience. Not even knowing what I got (expecting a worthless Celeron M), it turned out to be a great condition, high-res PIII-M/1133 desktop replacement. Owner thought it was worthless and should be salvaged for gold.

2001 Compaq Armada E700
In the "wonder box" including custom PII. Defective HDD and DVD unit. Was about to rid it, but actually forgot and put it away for 3 years.

2003 Dell Latitude D400
$9 on Tradera (Swedish eBay). Few lid scratches and missing HDD, otherwise a nice machine.

2003 Custom Athlon XP rig
Donated along with the custom PIII-1000. Don't think it's tested yet.

2005 Fujitsu-Siemens Amilo V1300
Garbage find 2-3 years ago. Unbelievable condition for a scrapped machine. Missing battery and AC adapter, not tested yet.

2006 Dell Inspiron 6400
$20 on Tradera. Alright condition. Have a soft spot for these after high school's Latitude 131L.

~2007 HP Pavilion a6026.sc
$10 backyard sale including other stuff. Had a blown PSU and sometimes won't recognize all RAM. Rocks a 3800+ single-core!

2007 Fujitsu-Siemens Amilo Pro V3515
Garbage picked boring budget system.

2007 Toshiba Satellite L40
Garbage picked with the V1300. Works great, cleared HDD and ready for gaming.

2009 Macbook
Recent garbage pick. Not tested, semi-poor condition.

2009 Asus K70AB
Recent garbage pick, bottom lid and RAM missing, untested.

2010 i7-930 custom rig
Pensioned many times, put to rest since 2 years but still in the lockup.

2010 AMD x4 custom build (donation)
Found in snow outside gf's job. Malfunctioning GPU solved by component reseating and a new CMOS battery.

2010 Compaq Presario CQ61 (Xmas gift)
Xmas gift from gf's. Old lady as previous owner, neat condition.

2011 HP Elitebook 8460p
Server manager.

2012 i7-3930K custom rig
Main PC.

2012 Dell PowerEdge R520
Defunct home server for raid backups. Bricked raid controller.

2013 Lenovo Thinkpad X230i
Gift from unknown neighbour five years ago. Restricted OS and BIOS, fixed with a screwdriver and paper clip. Upgraded to 16GB RAM, SSD and original AC adapter.

2x2013 Dell PowerEdge T320
Home server for raidz3 backups.