WarhammerDarkOmen wrote on 2024-07-08, 10:32:
[..] I will put the Geforce 2 back in it as it has a Geforce 4 MX440 in it at the moment which i did think was a bit too 'modern'.
Hi, I think the Geforce 4 MX GPU is based on Geforce 2, so it's not that far off.
Technologically, they're siblings.
I remember this, because older MacOS releases (9.x to 10.4) would support GF2/3/4MX.
(The Geforce cards were popular among Power Mac G4 users.)
In 2000, we had a Pentium III 733 MHz (slot), 128MB, 20 GB HDD, Geforce (not the GF 256, so I think it was a Geforce 2), an ISA slot at the bottom and an Elsa Microlink 56k USB modem.
Monitor was an 17" CRT, I think. On-board sound could emulate SB16 in the Setup Utility.
If you're willing to take and advice about period-correctness: Take it easy. 😉
An approximation with a few exceptions is good enough.
Things like RAM or HDD capacity weren't always sufficient back in the day, for example.
So it's better to make a decision on what the system "wants" rather than what was common or socially being accepted.
That's especially important to keep in mind when checking old catalogues, I think.
Because they're just telling half the story. The stock configuration was seldomly being kept as is.
Users typically bought extra RAM or another HDD about half a year after they got the brand new PC.
Unfortunately, this is something that followers of period-correctness miss to realize, I believe.
Personalization and modification was very common in the PC or home computer scene.
That's why I often must shed a tear when I see so called "restoration" videos on YouTube.
The "from factory configuration" wasn't always the real experience. In my opinion, at least.
It's comparable to the automobile scene. Car owners did upgrade/modify their cars, as well.
Edit: First we did with the Pentium III was to upgrade RAM when XP was out. In its final configuration, it had 768 MB of RAM total. Because, that was all RAM we had available in SDRAM format.
This was between 2000 and 2004, I think.
"Time, it seems, doesn't flow. For some it's fast, for some it's slow.
In what to one race is no time at all, another race can rise and fall..." - The Minstrel
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