First post, by giantenemycat
- Rank
- Newbie
I posted elsewhere about this a few months ago, but now that I've since got my hands on all kinds of Slot 1 goodness with just a little bit more knowledge than I had almost 20 years ago, I'm even more amazed at how we coped.
It all started with finding this Belarc Advisor report my dad for some reason wrote to a floppy disk, which I found looking through old stuff.
All of that spec had been packed into this lovely Y2K case.
Obviously this was purchased second hand, and at a cost of £100 from an illicit computer shop loaded with non-genuine XP installed...it's safe to say we didn't really have a clue about computers. 256MB RAM! The Radeon 9200/9250 (essentially a rehashed Radeon 8500) was an odd pairing to go with such an older platform, whoever owned it before must have chucked it in without much thought. But this is how I first experienced the internet, YouTube, Skype, Windows Live Messenger, everything. Somehow what is essentially a mid-1998 PII Deschutes 450 MHz with SSE tacked on carried me and my family through to the end of the noughties, with LimeWire and who knows how much malware & bloat dragging it down even harder.
I've recreated that exact configuration we had, and found the games that I would play at the time ran abysmally. WarCraft III is a slog, Zoo Tycoon 2 you're lucky to get 15 FPS, - dips and stutters galore. AvP2 runs well...when you don't have the audacity to look (even through walls) in the general direction of anything that would use a crumb of a CPU cycle, otherwise again, sub-15 FPS for you. I was lucky enough to get a FCPGA slocket adapter for basically nothing, but even my shiny 1GHz Cumine doesn't really propel these games into the realm of consistent 30 FPS. As much as I love Slot 1 and 440BX, it ultimately just can't hack it for 2000s gaming.
