cj_reha wrote:Picked up a Dell Dimension 4400 from the thrift store. 99 percent of the time I pass these by (I only have so much room and don't want to fill it with P4s...) but this one has an early pentium 4 and it is interesting to me.
Pentium 4 1.7 GHz (400 MHz/256 KB), 512 MB or 1 GB DDR (havent checked), ATi Rage 128 AGP video, no hdd.
Caps look bad so I'll see if it posts and probably scrap it.
Some day, those will be rare because even hoarders and collectors find them ugly and unappealing. Bad caps galore, awful creaky cases that don't stay shut, proprietary everything, slow and uninteresting P4... even scrappers don't like them due to all the plastic.
The best I've gotten out of one of those style machines was an OEM Geforce 4 Ti 4600 (that I later baked in an oven to get it to stop artifacting... which worked!). That machine was purchased by a friend of mine for an ungodly sum back in 2002 as a top of the line gaming system. I think it had RDRAM and a P4 2.4Ghz. I'm sure it was easily $2000 then. I scrapped the system at some point because those things are just such a mess. When I used to work at a PC repair shop (~2003-2006) they were very common... we called them "Story Book" Dell's due to the ridiculous design. They took up so much space on the workbench it was hilarious.
As a side note... this just popped into my head. 2002-2003 was quite an amazing time for PC hardware in my opinion. As expensive as a prebuilt system like that was, a year later I was running a $50 Athlon XP 1700+ at 2Ghz, an Abit NF7-S 2.0 and a Radeon 9600 Pro. That system totally trounced far more expensive ones from the year prior when it came to gaming. Still, those Dells were EVERYWHERE and some of them are still floating around...