VOGONS


where to get the hardware?

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Reply 20 of 36, by RandomStranger

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user33331 wrote on 2023-01-03, 07:07:
Face it old school offline gamers are not the most social people in the world. The ones who tinkered with PCs in 1990s were all […]
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Face it old school offline gamers are not the most social people in the world.
The ones who tinkered with PCs in 1990s were all underdogs.
We were never "popular" if you know what I mean.
There were name calling and bullying involved if you said your hobby is computers or such.
Computers gave a change for escapism from reality.

It's more like a combination of characteristics. People back then and now can get away with almost any hobbies if they have enough charisma. Not everyone was antisocial, unpopular and bullied because they had the hobby of tinkering with computers, but a lot of them got into the hobby because they were already antisocial, unpopular and bullied because it allowed social isolation. Underdogs will be underdogs and get bullied whatever they do, that's how kids and teens' societies work.

sreq.png retrogamer-s.png

Reply 21 of 36, by brostenen

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RandomStranger wrote on 2023-01-03, 08:09:
user33331 wrote on 2023-01-03, 07:07:
Face it old school offline gamers are not the most social people in the world. The ones who tinkered with PCs in 1990s were all […]
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Face it old school offline gamers are not the most social people in the world.
The ones who tinkered with PCs in 1990s were all underdogs.
We were never "popular" if you know what I mean.
There were name calling and bullying involved if you said your hobby is computers or such.
Computers gave a change for escapism from reality.

It's more like a combination of characteristics. People back then and now can get away with almost any hobbies if they have enough charisma. Not everyone was antisocial, unpopular and bullied because they had the hobby of tinkering with computers, but a lot of them got into the hobby because they were already antisocial, unpopular and bullied because it allowed social isolation. Underdogs will be underdogs and get bullied whatever they do, that's how kids and teens' societies work.

He wrote escaping to computers, because of bullying. Not bullied because of computers. Except when you accidentially slipped and let them know that you were tinkering with computers, because you thought it would bring respect from those that bullied you. But no. Absolutely not the outcome you wished. Then the populair kids would have more ammo to bully you with, and nerd were used in the most negative way imagineable. Like being called computer nerd.

And no.... We were not antisocial. We did not keep to our self. We were frozen out by the populair kids and their cult of followers. F**K I hated school back then. It took me around 20 years after finishing primaery school, to get over what I experienced, and actually be happy to go to school, in order to finish and get an education. And I would mostly have kept on being lonely, if it was not for the local computer club. And I can tell you we were social to the max in that club.

Underdogs be not underdogs by own doing. Eighter that be by choice or be that because how one thinks. Underdogs in school, are underdogs, because those who set the game of social activity and the populair ones, decide actively that you are not permitted to have an opinion, talk to them, be equal to them and even be allowed to attend anything social when they are present. And yes. They use the underdog as the fallguy for their own antisocial psychopathic doings. Like when they destroy toys on purpouse at a birthday party, and then blame the underdog in order to get free....

Those psychotic, egomaniac, psychopatic populair kids. Nope. They are the reason why we looked antisocial. In reality, their ways of hurting others, were the only antisocial behaviour. Just because we did not speak to them, does not mean that we are antisocial.

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

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Reply 22 of 36, by brostenen

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lon3heart wrote on 2022-12-30, 14:23:
Hey! […]
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Hey!

First up, if this threat doesn't belong here please let me know :3

But the actual point of this threat is exactly what the headline say's, where could i get 'retro' hardware?
I am currently searching for a Windows 98 computer for some 98 and DOS games, and I got a decent idea of what I want to have, but the price tag always seems to be too high.
I mean old Hardware is old and rare and old and strange and old, but 200€ for just a voodoo3 in an 'it may work' state seems a bit... bad.
But it could be that this is just because I live in Germany and the parts are just rarer here? I don't know but the whole point of all this here is to ask for sites or sellers of old hardware witch may have better prices, I know there are some but I cant seem to find them😅
But if that's just the Price for witch these things sell and there are no alternatives to ebay please let me know too🙃

so yea, that's all
Thanks in advance for anyone who can "help" me with my ""problem"" 😀

Bye!

The reason why prices are that high today. Are all about supply and demand. When there is only a limited supply of working stuff, and many people want the same. But old X86 platform hardware are still not the most expensive in the field of vintage computing. Take a look at prices for the following: Atari Falcon, Commodore branded Amiga-4000-Tower (not Escom) and Amiga-3000-Tower.... You will quickly see that Voodoo3 cards are not that expensive yet. Even a lower priced Amiga-4000-Desktop, goes for around 2000 to 3000 Euro when in good working condition, just with a slight yellowing front.

Like I bought my Amiga1200 in a dismanteled and dusty non-tested condition for just over 200 Euro. Yes it was a gamble. But the sale went as following. The seller shipped for free before I paid (we knew each other from +10 years on the same forum). Then I had to test it, and pay what I found reasonable. I recieved it, tested it, and found out what needed to be fixed. Then I adjusted the price, when comparing to market value and I paid the seller what it was worth. Then came the repair prices.....

- Recapping at around 107 Euro.
- New membrane at around some 50 Euro.
- Replacement floppy drive at some 47 Euro.

After that I paid for the following upgrades.... (still waiting for the keycaps to arrive in the mail)

- Newly produced a1200 dot net case at around 95 Euro.
- Tsunami-1230 accelerator at around 180/188 Euro.
- IndivisionAGA-MK3 scandoubler at around 196 Euro.
- Kickrom 3.1 replacement at around 15 Euro.
- Angled CF-IDE buffered adaptor with extra 40 pin header for around 23 Euro. (plus some Sandisk extreme 32gb CF card)
- Brand new produced a1200 dot net Amiga keycaps at 73 Euro (plus import fee and vatt)

So. Even an Amiga 1200 is way more expensive than X86 platform hardware.... If you want it as close to factory new as possible.

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

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Reply 23 of 36, by user33331

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Yes that is what I'm talking about. Times have now probably changed to better.
Todays 2020 PC-gamers are now professional heroic e-sportsmen that have idol status among youngsters.
Back in 1980-90s it was not a good time to be a PC-hobbyist people used the "Nxxd" and "Gxxk" insults everyday.
Seriously even some teachers called students that liked PCs "Nxxds" and though it is alright horrible memories.

Do these todays successful e-sporters then pay high sums from old hardware I don't know ?
Maybe it is now more approved to be a PC-hobbyist ?

PC-gaming has become oddly mainstream.
There were LAN-parties in 1990s and early 2000s for similar interest people but that was it.

Last edited by user33331 on 2023-01-03, 09:42. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 24 of 36, by brostenen

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user33331 wrote on 2023-01-03, 09:28:

Do these todays successful e-sporters then pay high sums from old hardware I don't know ?
Maybe it is now more approved to be a PC hobbyist ?

I dont think they will bother with hardware that are older than 2 years. They wont have the time to play Doom or UT99.
They are plenty of busy, with going to the gym, eat healthy, get sleep and play/train their skills in the game they are competing with.

Even people who play modern games without competing, do not even know that Commodore64's are a thing other than by the name.
And they are always surprised when I tell them about my ATX form factor C64 board/machine.
They dont even know about old X86 hardware from before XP era. They think Dos is a shell and they believe that Atari have always been
a software brand only. They have no idea what the Commodore was. And god forbid, if you mention Os/2, BeOS or Netware.
Then they are all one big question mark.

EDIT:
Yes. PC gaming are becomming oddly mainstream. But that is because the newest new have become pop culture.
Jerks and bullies back then, were all about polished surface. Remember back.... As an example, they only listened to top-10 music.
They never listened to stuff like Black Sabbath or Uriah Heep. They hated classic music like Mozart.

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

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Reply 25 of 36, by user33331

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Yes I'm 36 born in 1986 and I feel myself very old talking about these computer stuff.
I feel like Abe Simpsons(TV-series) baffling about these things.
I'm just too old.

I have lived through:
PCs: 386,486,pentium 1,2,3,4,core2...., AMD duron, athlon,...
Video games: nes,snes,n64,gamecube,wii,wiiu,switch,...

Last edited by user33331 on 2023-01-03, 09:52. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 26 of 36, by Tetrium

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lon3heart wrote on 2022-12-30, 14:23:
Hey! […]
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Hey!

First up, if this threat doesn't belong here please let me know :3

But the actual point of this threat is exactly what the headline say's, where could i get 'retro' hardware?
I am currently searching for a Windows 98 computer for some 98 and DOS games, and I got a decent idea of what I want to have, but the price tag always seems to be too high.
I mean old Hardware is old and rare and old and strange and old, but 200€ for just a voodoo3 in an 'it may work' state seems a bit... bad.
But it could be that this is just because I live in Germany and the parts are just rarer here? I don't know but the whole point of all this here is to ask for sites or sellers of old hardware witch may have better prices, I know there are some but I cant seem to find them😅
But if that's just the Price for witch these things sell and there are no alternatives to ebay please let me know too🙃

so yea, that's all
Thanks in advance for anyone who can "help" me with my ""problem"" 😀

Bye!

There are alternatives to ebay. But your main issue isn't actually where, but when. Anyone starting this hobby right now is really at the trailing edge when it comes to parts that are beyond 20 years old now, particularly if said items are also interesting and popular or if you are very picky.

Of course I could jump in and add that I'm also one of the early birds that got their voodoos for a sixpack of beer (or even just 2 beers or for postage), but that won't help you solve your current predicament anyway.

If you forego glide, you'll widen your space of movement significantly. Even though I do consider myself something of a 3DFX fanboy, the vast majority of my retro rigs never had any 3DFX hardware and my most used retro rig was probably my Celeron 400 with TNT2 M64 and I loved it.

Like Brostenen already explained, it's a matter of supply and demand. Demand has gone up by a LOT and supply has dwindled if only due to natural decline (old pc parts were considered junk and excess back then, so most was thrown out and destroyed with very few people valuing it).

Sorry to say, but either you find a place outside of ebay where these cards are still cheap (kinda unlikely as, due to prices, scalpers will probably have already found their way to there by now) or you look and look and look until you get a lucky find.

You mentioned you already know what you want. What do you want?

Whats missing in your collections?
My retro rigs (old topic)
Interesting Vogons threads (links to Vogonswiki)
Report spammers here!

Reply 27 of 36, by Tetrium

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user33331 wrote on 2023-01-03, 09:28:
Yes that is what I'm talking about. Times have now probably changed to better. Todays 2020 PC-gamers are now professional heroic […]
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Yes that is what I'm talking about. Times have now probably changed to better.
Todays 2020 PC-gamers are now professional heroic e-sportsmen that have idol status among youngsters.
Back in 1980-90s it was not a good time to be a PC-hobbyist people used the "Nxxd" and "Gxxk" insults everyday.
Seriously even some teachers called students that liked PCs "Nxxds" and though it is alright horrible memories.

Do these todays successful e-sporters then pay high sums from old hardware I don't know ?
Maybe it is now more approved to be a PC-hobbyist ?

PC-gaming has become oddly mainstream.
There were LAN-parties in 1990s and early 2000s for similar interest people but that was it.

So about the bullying I can be very simple: Lots of victimblaming going on here (and I'm talking about in general and not specifically directed at anyone on Vogons).

Regarding the professional heroic e-sportsmen, I think it's a completely different animal compared to the LAN parties of back then. It's to a large degree streamers with a following putting on a show. These days we have twitch which is literally filled with gamers (and some pretty chicks in a bathtub just chatting) with very very few content related to retro computing. There is some retro gaming on there, but streamers streaming old hardware are very few.

The LAN parties of back then were a completely different bunch of people.

PCs of these days are something of an odd bunch to me. I guess I just haven't gotten used to the fluorescent neon contraptions with a case that superficially seems to be nothing but fan holders and a distinct lack of external (and to a large degree internal) drive bays.

Whats missing in your collections?
My retro rigs (old topic)
Interesting Vogons threads (links to Vogonswiki)
Report spammers here!

Reply 28 of 36, by brostenen

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Tetrium wrote on 2023-01-03, 10:05:
So about the bullying I can be very simple: Lots of victimblaming going on here (and I'm talking about in general and not specif […]
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user33331 wrote on 2023-01-03, 09:28:
Yes that is what I'm talking about. Times have now probably changed to better. Todays 2020 PC-gamers are now professional heroic […]
Show full quote

Yes that is what I'm talking about. Times have now probably changed to better.
Todays 2020 PC-gamers are now professional heroic e-sportsmen that have idol status among youngsters.
Back in 1980-90s it was not a good time to be a PC-hobbyist people used the "Nxxd" and "Gxxk" insults everyday.
Seriously even some teachers called students that liked PCs "Nxxds" and though it is alright horrible memories.

Do these todays successful e-sporters then pay high sums from old hardware I don't know ?
Maybe it is now more approved to be a PC-hobbyist ?

PC-gaming has become oddly mainstream.
There were LAN-parties in 1990s and early 2000s for similar interest people but that was it.

So about the bullying I can be very simple: Lots of victimblaming going on here (and I'm talking about in general and not specifically directed at anyone on Vogons).

Regarding the professional heroic e-sportsmen, I think it's a completely different animal compared to the LAN parties of back then. It's to a large degree streamers with a following putting on a show. These days we have twitch which is literally filled with gamers (and some pretty chicks in a bathtub just chatting) with very very few content related to retro computing. There is some retro gaming on there, but streamers streaming old hardware are very few.

The LAN parties of back then were a completely different bunch of people.

PCs of these days are something of an odd bunch to me. I guess I just haven't gotten used to the fluorescent neon contraptions with a case that superficially seems to be nothing but fan holders and a distinct lack of external (and to a large degree internal) drive bays.

Old timers dont care for modern e-sport as far as I understand. So yeah. You are right that it is a different type of people.
I do not victim blame anyone from back then, but rather call out those who made someones life a hell back then.
Those that made you never want to go to school, but you had to because you feared authorities like the school system.
Those that treated one so bad, that one were numb all the day, and used the day to watch the time only waiting to get home again.

All this resulting in one never wanting to do homework, never learned to read letters before 3'rd class, and never spoke with anyone.
Never having a play date, never socialising with anyone. One that were in tears, once discovering the local computer club.
I remember them using something they called "the picture frame". It was when one was pinched between the big glass doors and the wall.
And then you had 4 or 5 kids pushing as hard as they could. I still remember how hard it was to breathe.
Did not help a thing, that you had like 10 other kids pointing fingers, laughing and shouting picture frame.

Or how about 5 of them making you carry their school bags, kicking you in the butt and calling you a donkey?
Nope.... Those people were psychopaths. Bad, rotten apples...

Don't eat stuff off a 15 year old never cleaned cpu cooler.
Those cakes make you sick....

My blog: http://to9xct.blogspot.dk
My YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/brostenen

001100 010010 011110 100001 101101 110011

Reply 29 of 36, by konc

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Factoring in another parameter: are you sure that the "decent idea of what you want to have" is really what you need for some Win98 and DOS games?

I doubt it and let me explain: in communities of niche hobbies people tend to suggest only "the best". It's often miscommunicated that you don't need 2 soundcards and 2 midi devices to enjoy the popular games of a certain era. Yes, this configuration might cover everything in the best way for the price of a... car, but you can also cover most things in a very adequate way for the price of beers. My recommendation in a few words is to leave the expensive stuff for when/if you become irrecoverably addicted (then the price won't matter!) and start with something similar to a neglected celeron + tnt2 m64.

In case I'm wrong and you do know exactly what you need, well unfortunately these are the prices lately and I'll agree that they seem, to put it politely, illogical.

Reply 30 of 36, by Tetrium

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brostenen wrote on 2023-01-03, 10:22:
Old timers dont care for modern e-sport as far as I understand. So yeah. You are right that it is a different type of people. I […]
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Tetrium wrote on 2023-01-03, 10:05:
So about the bullying I can be very simple: Lots of victimblaming going on here (and I'm talking about in general and not specif […]
Show full quote
user33331 wrote on 2023-01-03, 09:28:
Yes that is what I'm talking about. Times have now probably changed to better. Todays 2020 PC-gamers are now professional heroic […]
Show full quote

Yes that is what I'm talking about. Times have now probably changed to better.
Todays 2020 PC-gamers are now professional heroic e-sportsmen that have idol status among youngsters.
Back in 1980-90s it was not a good time to be a PC-hobbyist people used the "Nxxd" and "Gxxk" insults everyday.
Seriously even some teachers called students that liked PCs "Nxxds" and though it is alright horrible memories.

Do these todays successful e-sporters then pay high sums from old hardware I don't know ?
Maybe it is now more approved to be a PC-hobbyist ?

PC-gaming has become oddly mainstream.
There were LAN-parties in 1990s and early 2000s for similar interest people but that was it.

So about the bullying I can be very simple: Lots of victimblaming going on here (and I'm talking about in general and not specifically directed at anyone on Vogons).

Regarding the professional heroic e-sportsmen, I think it's a completely different animal compared to the LAN parties of back then. It's to a large degree streamers with a following putting on a show. These days we have twitch which is literally filled with gamers (and some pretty chicks in a bathtub just chatting) with very very few content related to retro computing. There is some retro gaming on there, but streamers streaming old hardware are very few.

The LAN parties of back then were a completely different bunch of people.

PCs of these days are something of an odd bunch to me. I guess I just haven't gotten used to the fluorescent neon contraptions with a case that superficially seems to be nothing but fan holders and a distinct lack of external (and to a large degree internal) drive bays.

Old timers dont care for modern e-sport as far as I understand. So yeah. You are right that it is a different type of people.
I do not victim blame anyone from back then, but rather call out those who made someones life a hell back then.
Those that made you never want to go to school, but you had to because you feared authorities like the school system.
Those that treated one so bad, that one were numb all the day, and used the day to watch the time only waiting to get home again.

All this resulting in one never wanting to do homework, never learned to read letters before 3'rd class, and never spoke with anyone.
Never having a play date, never socialising with anyone. One that were in tears, once discovering the local computer club.
I remember them using something they called "the picture frame". It was when one was pinched between the big glass doors and the wall.
And then you had 4 or 5 kids pushing as hard as they could. I still remember how hard it was to breathe.
Did not help a thing, that you had like 10 other kids pointing fingers, laughing and shouting picture frame.

Or how about 5 of them making you carry their school bags, kicking you in the butt and calling you a donkey?
Nope.... Those people were psychopaths. Bad, rotten apples...

I agree with you completely. My point is that these people tend to blame the victim. Them saying stuff like "They need to be more assertive" or "They are asking for it" or "That's just what teenagers do (so it's supposed to be normal)"and that kind of bs. It's just victim blaming because it fits their habits (so they won't need to change).

Whats missing in your collections?
My retro rigs (old topic)
Interesting Vogons threads (links to Vogonswiki)
Report spammers here!

Reply 31 of 36, by Tetrium

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But anyway. The tldr answer to

where to get the hardware?

imo is wherever.

Look around, be clever, spend hours digging and hope you get lucky, learn how to search and learn what tom expect. It's kind of a time and effort consuming thing if you want expensive stuff for cheap.

Whats missing in your collections?
My retro rigs (old topic)
Interesting Vogons threads (links to Vogonswiki)
Report spammers here!

Reply 32 of 36, by user33331

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If free:
- Befriend with local people age fork somewhere around: 35-70 y.o that could have old computers laying around and accumulating dust.
Younger than that don't have vintage desktop computers and older than that have never used computers.

Forget finding old retro computers from recycling centers in year 2023:
- In Europe it is almost illegal to take anything from recycling centers.
- Also a chance of finding recycled 1990s PCs are next to nothing today.
Maybe in 2010 it could have happened.

If I were you I would just use hard cash around 100-200 euros and buy any ready made working old 1990-2000 desktop PC.

Reply 33 of 36, by dionb

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HanSolo wrote on 2023-01-02, 22:56:
lon3heart wrote on 2022-12-30, 14:23:

But it could be that this is just because I live in Germany and the parts are just rarer here?

I would say Germany is a pretty good place to be for this hobby. Just like with every other hobby some basic investment is required, but it's still pretty inexpensive to get into it compared to other activities. ..unless you want the more rare stuff (like Voodoo) of course. But a capable Win98-system doesn't cost a lot. The most expensive part will be the mainboard.

Definitely. I live next door in NL and the grass is much greener on your side of the fence 😉

DE is a big market, affluent enought that people in the early days of computing could actually afford computers. Full of little old ladies with things in their attic that their late husbands used until their untimely demises. There's a lot of stuff on regular eBay, sometimes even for decent prices, but the one specifc DE resource is eBay-Kleinanzeigen. I see a lot of good stuff come by there for far less inflated prices (for those not familiar with it: it's an eBay-hosted Craigslist-equivalent in Germany). I also second Amibay as a great place for good deals on specific stuff.

Then there's the question of what to get. Which era/target hardware you're looking for is up to you, but a couple of tips:
- the prices you see when you search for a given component on eBay are *NOT* the going rates, they are precisely the prices no one is willing to pay. Cheaper stuff gets offered all the time, but gets picked up quickly, leaving only the overpriced ones. So if you dedicate time and attention to spotting the good deals, you can get things much cheaper, even on eBay - but the principle applies everywhere.
- if you have more money than time, by all means splurge on the expensive stuff.
- unless your pockets are infinitely deep, try not to focus on very specific parts. If you need a motherboard with i440BX chipset that supports Coppermine CPUs there are a lot more options out there than the Asus P3B-F rev 1.06. Being satisfied with one of the other options will save a lot of money and time.
- a big component of price is the amount of knowledge the seller is adding. You pay more for tested than untested. You pay more for "Asus P3B-F rev 1.06" than "some old computer part I found upstairs". Depending on your own knowledge and abilities, you can save a lot of money by going for the "big pile of old crap" adverts. I have literally filled my (7-seat) car from top to bottom with 25-30 year old stuff for nothing more than 400km's worth of LPG doing that, and once bagged a very sought-after Roland MPU-401AT in a "assorted crap EUR 10" ad. If you can do this (both in terms of knowledge and time/patience required to hunt down, pick up and test the stuff - and offloading all the other things you don't need afterwards - oh, and you need space to store it all and if you have a significant other they need to not freak out too much), it's a very good way to reduce costs and increase your familiarity with how everything works.
- if you're not familiar with old hardware, KEEP IT SIMPLE for your first build(s). Get 'boring' parts that are easily found, combine them in ways that were supported and common when new, running software from the same age too. Even doing that, the learning curve with an AT-style motherboard that can't boot from CDRom will be steep. Don't complicate it with hugely complex hardware setups, trying to run hardware way out of what was normal or run software much too new (or old!) for it. All of that can be great fun later, but don't try to run before you can walk. In fact, I'd suggest to go for an early ATX system for your first retro machine. That lets you use modern peripherals, cases and power supplies. Only when you're happy with that take the step backwards into AT era.

Finally, never underestimate keeping your eyes open for stuff dumped with rubbish. Where I live, bulky rubbish is picked up from the kerbside once a week. I always keep my eyes open when cycling my children to school the day before for interesting stuff. I've picked up a few little gems. I realize this is a rare luxury, but even if electronic waste like this must be taken to a municipal depot, and you're formally not allowed to take stuff others have dumped with you, there are option. I've yet to meet the first depot operator who's not willing to turn a blind eye to your dragging off that ancient case that would be destroyed anyway in exchange for a beer or similar 😉

Reply 34 of 36, by Doornkaat

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dionb wrote on 2023-01-03, 15:43:

(for those not familiar with it: it's an eBay-hosted Craigslist-equivalent in Germany)

Ebay Kleinanzeigen was founded by (and originally called) kijiji, a brand of your own Marktplaats(.nl). If I understand correctly they were in turn founded by Ebay to establish various craigslist-like portals across Europe. Now ebay Kleinanzeigen is owned by Norwegian company Adevinta and will soon be renamed to Kleinanzeigen.de so it won't be associated with ebay any longer. They operate independently, ebay still owns ~40% of Adevinta and has a ~33% vote though.
Yeah, I know: Not important but I thought it would be fun to know that technically ebay Kleinanzeigen was founded by Marktplaats.😄

- the prices you see when you search for a given component on eBay are *NOT* the going rates, they are precisely the prices no one is willing to pay. Cheaper stuff gets offered all the time, but gets picked up quickly, leaving only the overpriced ones.

Preach it, brother! 😃

Reply 35 of 36, by lon3heart

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thanks :3

Reply 36 of 36, by bogdanpaulb

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Yeah, no offence, not that i 'love' the prices of ebay, but there is also the other 'side of the coin' where on a 'local site' where i ask ~50E for this build, i got a the 'great offer' of 10E for it because of the motherboard (AGP2X/4X so it supports Voodoo cards). I would rather die of hunger then accept it.

CPU - AMD Athlon XP2200+
MB - JETWAY V266B rev. 3.0 (KT266A) , 2x SDRAM , 2x DDRAM
RAM - 2 GB DDR
HDD - Western Digital 80 GB
VIDEO - Nvidia FX5200 128B/256MB
SOUND - ESS SOLO 1 (wavetable connector) and MS-DOS support
LAN - RTL8139D (WAN connector)
FDD - 1.44 MB
ODD - LG GSA-4167B
PSU - FPS250-60PNA (PF)
White retro case 7 out of 10