• Redredme
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          9 months ago

          20 MB BABY! (Slaps the top of his Amstrad 1512 CGA overclocked to 8mhz 8086)

    • Pronell
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      9 months ago

      I had hundreds of 5.25" floppies with pirated Apple II games.

      I even owned a 9" floppy disk drive and a few disks, but just as a novelty.

      • BeeegScaaawyCripple
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        9 months ago

        We even got that damn zip disk drive for a while. 28k modem days, I was telecommuting via floppy and usps

    • BillTongg
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      9 months ago

      I have an unopened box of 5.25" floppies in the attic, still in their shrink wrap. I’m not holding my breath for them to come in handy any time soon.

  • Odo
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    9 months ago

    Don’t forget the classic:

  • letsgo@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    I’m old enough to remember Win3.0 and the 10-digit activation codes that were valid if they were mod-7. Yes, that did include 000-0000000.

    • essell
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      9 months ago

      Nice.

      I recall my win95 key.

      I say “my” like I’d paid for it. Really it was just one that worked.

  • MajorllamaBanned
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    9 months ago

    I am almost certain there is a copy of both XP and 7 with the key written on the disc just like this in my box of “maybe I’ll need it one day” computer cables and parts box lol.

    • Optional
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      9 months ago

      The sacred box of parts! May it never be called on.

      Amen.

      • MajorllamaBanned
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        9 months ago

        I had to pull out a DVI-D to display port cable from there a few days ago. I felt so validated for holding onto that cable for 3 moves lol

    • The_v
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      9 months ago

      It’s in the stack with the StarCraft and red alert CD’s.

      • MajorllamaBanned
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        9 months ago

        I found an original StarCraft jewel case in the trunk of my car last year. It had heros of might and magic 4 inside lol.

  • CarbonatedPastaSauce
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    9 months ago

    I’m old enough to have saved and loaded data with a cassette drive (i.e. a random ass tape deck with a special cable attached to the computer) on a TI-99/4a. You had to set the volume level the same for recording and reading or else it wouldn’t read correctly. Get off my lawn.

    • BoxOfFeet
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      9 months ago

      The TI-99/4A was a gorgeous machine. Visually. I hated using it.

    • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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      9 months ago

      I remember playing Parsec, TI Invaders, and a bunch of other games on that. We also had the periperal expansion box, with its flat firehose cable.

      • CarbonatedPastaSauce
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        9 months ago

        I remember Parsec from a friend’s house but I didn’t have that one. I had Jawbreaker and Hunt the Wumpus, and the extended BASIC cartridge. I was a party animal back then.

    • someguy3
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      9 months ago

      Apparently they’re still used for data storage.

  • intelisense@lemm.ee
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    9 months ago

    Pfffft, you kids! I remember shuffling through a couple of dozen 3½" disks to install Windows 3.1 for Workgroups.

      • Midnight Wolf
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        9 months ago

        That’s what, like 28MB? For a fucking operating system. Now windows uses like 60GB and just bloats from there.

        • Buelldozer@lemmy.today
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          9 months ago

          Yes Windows is bloated AF but even Linux Mint has a minimum space requirement of 20G with 100G as the recommendation. Hell just my swapfile wouldn’t fit in the largest partition supported by MSDOS 6.22 (2 Gigabytes BTW).

          No preemptive multitasking, no 3D support of any kind, no usb or plug and play, no desktop compositing, no web browsing…and the list goes on and on. Desktop environments just do so much more now than in the WfW 3.11 days that a DE install 1,000 times the size of WfW is pretty much normal.

          • Midnight Wolf
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            9 months ago

            28 x 1000 is still just 28GB (less if you’re counting 1gb = 1024mb…). Windows is a fat fuck :p

      • Optional
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        9 months ago

        Probably meant NT something something.

        I am not a crank!

      • BillTongg
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        9 months ago

        Once, a long time ago, I had to create management reports from a mainframe accounting system, built in-house by someone long since retired. The only way to extract data was to capture a print file and then use an application called Monarch. I seem to recall that came on >20 floppies. I used Crystal Reports a lot, and that had a similar number or perhaps more.

  • u/lukmly013 💾 (lemmy.sdf.org)@lemmy.sdf.org
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    9 months ago

    Haha, no.
    I’ve got better, a modified ISO that doesn’t need a key. Maybe there is malware, who knows, but it doesn’t need a key.

    Matter of fact, I carry around a portable USB DVD drive and book case with discs in my backpack. Linux ISOs but also the newest Hiren’s Boot disc (which is based on Windows 11 PE).

    But I just like DVDs. Yes, I have a Ventoy disk, yes, it boots in seconds, not minutes, yes it’s smaller and more convenient, but does it spin? Does it make any (audible) sounds? Is it nice and shiny? Does it require burning, verification and some more care? No, it’s just a boring USB stick.

    But my backpack also includes a WRT54GL with DD-WRT, so…

    It’s similar to how I grabbed at 3G when its shutdown was announced. I switched my phone to 3G only (“WCDMA only” in *#*#4636#*#* menu) until I was forcefully disconnected when the cell towers in my area shut down. But for the sake of affecting some possible statistics, I switched back to 3G only every time before entering area that still had 3G and switched it back only a while after exiting it.
    My idea was there could be some statistics for the last days of 3G usage, and perhaps it could include devices that would not successfully re-connect after the shutdown.

    Just an example there. I like to keep old technology around, and I like to affect statistics in certain ways, and I do want DVD purchase statistics to be higher, so I keep using them, and I like them too.

      • Jo Miran@lemmy.ml
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        9 months ago

        About a year ago I was moving old backups to newer, larger drives and I came across stuff I had archived in an old format. They could only be opened by Win98. Something similar with XP. There are custom pieces of software that only work on XP.

  • BoxOfFeet
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    9 months ago

    I still have mine around here, somewhere! It’s WinXP Media Center 2005. That I still use on my Dimension E510.