Reply 60 of 89, by Gmlb256
pixelatedscraps wrote on 2021-09-12, 01:23:BitWrangler wrote on 2021-09-11, 18:47:Good point I probably won't need top end ryzen ooomph for years. I am projecting 2026 as about when it will be unpossible to avoid going to Win11 or equivalent to get the modern internet experience.
I’ve hated Windows for so long (let’s say Vista was my point of no return) that I cannot imagine having Windows 10 or 11 as my daily drivers. Thank god for Macs, though they were becoming increasingly unreliable before the switch to the M processors. I can at least use them without throwing my arms at the heavens and cursing Microsoft.
I don't get the hate around modern stuff from several users. The bashing of Windows Vista was undeserved IMO (many of them due to the initial issues which were later ironed out but people didn't notice) and it was the basis for Windows 7, even Microsoft isn't longer a Windows centric company and releases proper software for other platforms such as macOS and mobile OSes.
Don't get me wrong, there are things I didn't like from Microsoft either such the forced updates (which can be sorta mitigated and mobile devices even do that) in recent versions of Windows, the harsh CPU requirements and TPM (which was for a long time around but wasn't essential) for Windows 11 which was poorly timed and the company being more focused toward cloud services in recent times.
pixelatedscraps wrote on 2021-09-24, 14:51:Another step in the right direction and finally some progress being made on this build. […]
Another step in the right direction and finally some progress being made on this build.
I removed the internals from an old InWin H-500 build I got off eBay and tested it to make sure it booted (another thread entirely) before swapping in the P2L97-DS on the bench table with the just-arrived Seasonic SS-300FS. Also just arrived is a Dell 2001FP in almost pristine condition I got from a Buyee seller in Osaka. Shipping was 3x times the price of the monitor but they’re impossible to find locally and in the end it was about $100 in total.
I installed both CPUs after checking the caps, replacing the CMOS battery and giving everything a good dust off. I loaded up the board with just a single stick of 128MB, a Matrox Millenium II 4MB PCI, a floppy drive and the Quantum 6.4GB - for ease of use (and I’m missing a SCSI cable I believe) I’m setting up the build on the IDE drive first. Once I verify everything is working, I’ll re-paste the heatsinks and delve into SCSI for the first ever time in 30 years of computing 😉
Both CPUs spin up, though one fan sounds like a banshee and here we go, we’re straight back into a typical 1997 boot up sequence.
I’ve been trying to boot off an original (eBay) DOS 6.22 disk 1 but despite configuring the boot sequence correctly and trying out a second 1.44MB drive, it’s not booting off the disk successfully and I am left with constant Press Any Key To Reboot errors.
Ahh, the memories flood back. I can’t wait to get into this over the weekend.
Nice progress there! 👍
I mostly skipped this straight to the Athlon XP/Pentium 4 era. 😁
VIA C3 Nehemiah 1.2A @ 1.46 GHz | ASUS P2-99 | 256 MB PC133 SDRAM | GeForce2 GTS 32 MB | Voodoo2 12 MB | SBLive! | AWE64 | SBPro2 | GUS