Another nostalgia purchase from my teen years that arrived in the mail yesterday.
The attachment IMG_20150724_181758194.jpg is no longer available
The attachment IMG_20150724_181832679.jpg is no longer available
The attachment IMG_20150724_181911300.jpg is no longer available
The attachment IMG_20150725_141546266.jpg is no longer available
Specs as received:
-Cyrix MediaGX 180MHz
-24MB RAM
-1.6GB Hard Drive
-16x CD-ROM
-Floppy Drive
-33.6k Modem
-Built-In Speakers
-MS-DOS 6.22 (But nothing else)
It's a machine I like to hate, but still have a soft spot for. I remember my old Presario 2200 being one of the most unreliable computers I had ever used back in the day. Very crashy, and woefully underpowered (I recall once hearing the early MediaGX being likened to a "slightly-overclocked 486"). But, I still feel some nostalgia for this little satan-spawn system because I quite enjoy the small form factor, and the built-in speakers have some of the best sound quality I've ever heard from factory-shipped PC speakers, even to this day (Not counting separately-purchased third-party speaker systems of course).
I plan on restoring it to match the factory-original state of the old Presario 2200 I used to have, which means downgrading the memory to 16MB, replacing the CD-ROM with an 8x model (I predict difficulty in finding one with a black bezel), and installing Win95 OSR2.
Off-hand, does anyone happen to know what model(s) of hard drive the 2200 could have shipped with from the factory? I ask because Wikipedia and a few other pages state that it came with a Quantum Bigfoot, yet I can swear up and down that the old 2200 I used to have did NOT come with a Bigfoot (Although it was still a 1.6GB drive). I'm also fairly confident my newly-acquired 2200 never had a Bigfoot because the 5.25 mounting holes in the hard drive bay are in pristine unscuffed condition. It currently has a WD, and the fact that it is the correct 1.6GB suggests it could be the factory original, but it lacks the Compaq stickers found on all the other internal components. Admittedly, this system was so bargain-basement in its day that it wouldn't surprise me if Compaq just used whatever was cheapest at the time of manufacture.