Reply 200 of 240, by PcBytes
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momaka wrote on 2024-09-07, 21:40:Having ran many Pentium 3 and similar era systems in the late 2000's and well into the mid-to-early 2010's, here's my 2 cents. […]
Having ran many Pentium 3 and similar era systems in the late 2000's and well into the mid-to-early 2010's, here's my 2 cents.
1) Windows XP is more than FINE for a Pentium 3. Even the slowest P3 will actually perform just about as well under XP as it would under Windows 9x. Perhaps in games, there might be some difference in FPS (depending on the video card and drivers you use... but I wouldn't fret too much about it). Games aside, there's nothing CPU-heavy about Windows XP compared to older Windows (at least once you go past Pentium II)... OK, I take that back and revise it: there's nothing CPU-heavy about Windows XP *IF* you turn off all of the stupid visual crap, like fading of menus, animation of minimizing and maximazing windows (ugh! I always hate this crap), shadow under menus/mouse/ etc. Basically, just run classic UI on Windows XP and it will not be heavy on the CPU at all. With that said, there's really no need to go for the absolute top-end (and expensive) Tualatin CPUs. Yes, they are nice, but not worth the high price when a 800-1000 MHz P3 will do quite well in most cases. Even anything in the 600-933 MHz class will be plenty fast and should allow you to run a good deal of software from the early and mid-2000's.
2) In regards to RAM: contrary to some of the posts here, I will say that you do NOT need a ton... but you do need enough.
For Windows XP SP2, 256 MB will be... adequate to run the system, but not let you multi-task or open too many programs at once (or one RAM-heavy program.) 384 MB (128 + 256 MB stick for boards with only 2 slots) will be a little better. But if you can, try to go for 512 MB right from the start. More than that would be better... but probably unnecessary. And here's why: you really only need more than 512 MB if you plan to browse the (basic) web (yes, you can do it with a Pentium 3 and 512 MB of RAM, and it isn't the most terrible of an experience, though certainly one that requires a bit more patience) -OR- if you intend to play some 2003 and older games. In case of the former (browsing the web), I don't see many people building retro PCs particularly for that reason, so I imagine that won't be your case use here. And for games newer than 2003 - those will not only be heavier on the RAM but also on the CPU and GPU too. So with that said, going past 512 MB on a P3, IME, is not really worth it. Also, as VivienM mentioned above, going beyond 512-768 MB of RAM can actually become quite a challenge, because Intel i810/i815 chipset is limited to 512 MB of RAM, and 440*X is limited to 768 MB. Thus, you would either need some kind of a server motherboard that uses ECC/REG RAM or some rare unicorn board that can support 512 MB SDRAM sticks... which is pretty silly IMO, if all you want is a plain old Pentium 3 PC that can run XP. It might be worth it only if you're doing it just to brag / show off or as part of completing a personal collection.3) Don't be afraid of XP Service Pack 3! Everyone here seems to imply that SP3 will slow downs stuff to a crawl and "eat all ur ramz". NO! SP3 is merely SP2 with a few security updates on there... and a few changes/additions (some of which are annoying, but can be reverted back, like Explorer asking you every time if you're OK with opening "unknown"/locked files - a common annoyance with some downloaded MP3's and similar files.) There's a few good fixes in SP3, too, though (like Explorer remembering a much bigger number of custom views for your folders, which is sometime I frequently maxed out in the past.) Apart from that, I get about the same performance under SP3 as I do in SP2, at least for non-gaming purposes. So depending on the use case of your P3 build, you may or may not want SP3. SP3 is good (in fact, NECESSARY) if you intent to connect that machine to the Internet. With bone-stock SP2, there are still a few viruses and worms roaming around that can infect your PC (DownAdUp is one of these, and it's almost instant as soon as you get online, which is why MS released a special update to prevent this... I can get the KB# later, if anyone is really that interested to know.) So in short: if you want internet browsing capability, you will need either SP2 with that special update or SP3. For old software or retro gaming -only purposes (no online use), then SP2 will suffice. In any case, I do NOT recommend going with anything less than SP2. MS really fixed a lot of bugs with the SP2 update, so I just can't see any justification for going with anything lower (a few rare exceptions aside, like PAE being enabled by default with original / pre-SP1 XP releases.)
Oh, and just to get an idea how far a PIII could go, here's a relatively brief list of my PCs and what I used them for.
-- Dell Latitude C600: Intel Penium 3 850 MHz @ 700 MHz ("downclocked" in BIOS option for silent fan operation), 512 MB of RAM, 20 GB HDD, Windows XP SP2 + a few security updates. <--- this was my "main" laptop for 8 solid years! I got it in 2010 midway through college as a freebie and used it for school-related stuff and "light" browsing until 2018. Would have probably gone an extra year, but the HDD corrupted some OS files, so that was the end of it... at least as a "main" laptop. I've since restored this laptop and still use it for looking up datasheets online (under Windows XP SP3 with Serpent and New Moon browsers) and burning/copying CDs.
-- HP Pavilion 8756c: Intel Pentium 3 850 MHz @ 850 MHz, 384 MB of RAM (the max the mobo can take), 30 GB IBM Deskstar, Windows XP SP2 + security update. <-- similar to the C600 laptop above, this was my "main" desktop for the first 2-3 years in college, spanning from approximately 2009 until late 2012. Past 2012, I relegated it as a secondary PC. Just as a reference, back when I got this machine in 2009, I could still watch Youtube with it at 360p without chopiness, using Opera 10 (Presto Engine) and later Firefox 24 with forced Flashplayer plugin (instead of the "new and efficient" HTML5). Of course, it all quickly went away as the web kept getting more bloated every day, like it still does today. Web-browsing aside, I had no problems using this PC for any college-related software. Of course, this was also the time before online classes and video courses were popular. But in terms of software, I did all my coding, circuit designing, and word typing on this machine, and it was FINE at it. It was also fine for 480p/DVD video watching.
-- custom Pentium 3 PC with 933 MHz CPU, 512 MB of RAM, 100 GB HDD, Radeon 9600 (prior cards were Radeon 7200 and 7000), and Windows XP SP2. <--- this one has a different use from the above 2 machines. For many years, I used it as a data backup PC - mainly holding only a copy of important files, pictures, and music, mirroring my main PC. And also used for some retro gaming too. Latest games it has are Mafia and Need For Speed Underground, both of which work acceptably well at 1024x768, thanks to the Radeon 9600.
Apart from the 3 machines above, I have 2 more P3 machines and also an Athlon slot-A based rig from the same era and performance range. These were used for messing about it, mostly... and torrenting, back when that was popular. 😁 (So yes, all of these were also connected to the Internet and used for light [torrent site] browsing.) All XP SP2 machines too.
So to put it in less words, I think I've had enough Pentium 3 machines with Windows XP (SP2) that I can say it performs fine with it. 😀
BX tops out at 1GB. I've had two mainboards so far achieve that number proeprly, a Soyo 6BA+IV and an ABIT BX6r2. You do need 4 slots tho.
"Enter at your own peril, past the bolted door..."
Main PC: i5 3470, GB B75M-D3H, 16GB RAM, 2x1TB
98SE : P3 650, Soyo SY-6BA+IV, 384MB RAM, 80GB