I know this looks like it's a generic Dell from the year 1998, and internally it is a generic Dell from the year 1998, but technically this PC is a tera-budget desktop from the year 2004 hooked up to cheap secondhand peripherals (some generic beige USB mouse and a Compaq keyboard that would also have been cheap in 2004). The only thing that makes it so is I put a PowerColor Radeon 9250 (unfortunately, 64-bit, but it has solder pads so I could upgrade it if I decided to) inside it. It's not like this is a huge modernization from the FX 5200 that was in there before the caps on that gave out, that was still a 2004 config, and either way this was the 2004 equivalent of getting one of those decommissioned office PCs with Haswell inside and slapping a GTX 1060 inside it to hide that fact in order to have a computer that plays video games for $150 or however much doing that costs these days. One day I do want to get a Rendition card to put in here instead though, probably a V2100 since they're usually not PCI 3dfx prices. I have a Voodoo 2 that would be perfect for it, but with the FBI missing and all of the e-waste recyclers in China fresh out of them, the only option I see (buying all three chips) is more expensive than just buying a working Voodoo 2
Other than that and the SB Live!, it's entirely stock inside. Pentium II 350MHz, 128MB PC100, original 6.4GB hard drive, graciously and thoughtfully soldered onto the AGP bus ATi 3D Rage Pro, the works.
2004 is actually not anachronistic for this machine (I mean, obviously it isn't if it still exists, it had to exist in 2004 to get here), I got it with the original owner's install of 98 SE still on there (all the dates match the date the hard drive was manufactured or are off by a day or two at most) and in the Juno folder there were cached files from 2003, so the last owner was at least using it that long. It also hangs when you try to change the theme for some reason but seems fine otherwise. I've been using it even longer, I got it from a thrift store in 2013-ish for a cheap price and I do use it regularly (including being naughty and using it for production tasks, at least writing), so it's more mine than theirs at this point, and it's probably the machine I'd sell off last.
"I have to blow everything up! It's the only way to prove I'm not crazy!"
—Dr. Gordon Freeman, May 2000