On 02/16/2017 09:23 PM, Mike Easter wrote:
[snip]
Speaking of over-the-hill IDE hardware, not only do I have a stack of
IDEs from 5, 40, and 80G, I also have removable IDE trays and their docks.
Collections of gangs of USB sticks of various sizes take up a lot less
room :-)
I have one (Pentium2 class Celeron) where the motherboard is marked "y2k
compliant". That sounds like it SHOULDN'T mean it's old.
For a "hard drive" is has an adapter to use a SD card. That card has
Windows ME installed. I don't use this system much, just occasionally
when I want to see how my website looks in a very old browser (like the
IE5.5 that comes with it). Strangely IE5.5 is better than IE6 in some ways.
The oldest I have that still works is original Pentium. Too slow for
anything modern, but I have used it for FREESCO (a program that makes a
PC act as a router) to provide a dialup connection that uses my network
(I actually tested IE2 once last year, it was essentially unusable since
it doesn't send the Host: header needed by modern shared hosting). I
know someone who uses such a machine with Win 2000 to play "Spider
Solitaire".
--
Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.us/
"It is undesirable to believe a proposition when there is no reason
whatsoever for supposing it to be true." [Bertrand Russell]