Just a ramble: I re-organized some of my storage shelves to fit a couple extra machines I'm not using. Lately I've been thinking I should sell off all my pre-Pentium gear, once the pandemic dies down and people are comfortable meeting in person again. DOSBox & PCem adequately emulate anything 486 or below (DOSBox for running the software, PCem for emulating the hardware), and for me all the interesting stuff that's not well emulated - proprietary video APIs, sound cards with onboard synths, A3D/EAX - is for Socket 7 or later. I guess I could keep ONE nice late PCI 486 and a couple swappable CPUs for it, but I have no real need to have a locker full of difficult-to-maintain beige towers when anything I might run on them would do better on my 233MMX.
Not to mention it's so much easier to keep a Socket 7 or Slot 1 machine going in 2020 - they're more robust, spare parts are orders of magnitude more common, and there are far less BS incompatibilities or limitations that need to be worked around.
Anyone else in this boat? I guess this is exactly the same thought process we all went through in, like, 1996, but the difference now is I know exactly what from the early era I still want to have a way to run in the forseeable future.
twitch.tv/oldskooljay - playing the obscure, forgotten & weird - most Tuesdays & Thursdays @ 6:30 PM PDT. Bonus streams elsewhen!