My first real build was an AMD 586.Never touch a running system.
An AMD a day keeps Intel away.
(I know there were many more manufacturers than just those two in the 90s.)
Computer got stolen the night my wife and I moved in to our first rental.
My first real build was an AMD 586.Never touch a running system.
An AMD a day keeps Intel away.
(I know there were many more manufacturers than just those two in the 90s.)
I should clarify that this was my fault.My first real build was an AMD 586.
Computer got stolen the night my wife and I moved in to our first rental.
But in the 90s I was all about non-Intel processors (they were cheaper).
Yeah, but is that always done because the alternatives are superior in one way or another or because of “ideological” reasons?I'm willing to say there's always gonna be people to go against the Intel grain for as long as Intel survives as a company.
Amazing how a little bit of competition will light a fire under a company's bum, eh?Yeah, but is that always done because the alternatives are superior in one way or another or because of “ideological” reasons?
Of course, in the years AMD wasn’t competitive (2006—2016) Intel was able to charge higher prices and all, then “suddenly” with the ryze of Ryzen they lowered prices and gave us more cores.
I think this is the marketing dept. of Intel more than the engineering depts. The latter just wants to make great products whereas marketing is all about milking the market to maximize profit. When you lead then you get lazy and don't execute well in the market. Just be thankful we have AMD to allow Intel to be laser-focused on where they need to get to otherwise we'd be in a terrible x86 CPU hell.Of course, in the years AMD wasn’t competitive (2006—2016) Intel was able to charge higher prices and all, then “suddenly” with the ryze of Ryzen they lowered prices and gave us more cores.
Nice!@eyoungren
Just when we talked about the W5700...
https://www.ebay.com/itm/394254647313
https://www.ebay.com/itm/394253263490
MODS: NOT MY AUCTIONS!!!
We were renting a duplex and our house was the rear house. My sisters-in law and my mother-in-law eventually came to rent the front house.It's funny how some neighbors will bake you an Apple pie and others will help themselves to your belongings.
I went with AMD at those computer shows because it was cheaper and it did everything the Intel processors did. Ideology didn't come along for me until later when I actually started caring about this stuff.Yeah, but is that always done because the alternatives are superior in one way or another or because of “ideological” reasons?![]()
Yep, provided you're running Catalina or a later version. With a USB-C hub, you should™ be able to plug all your six displays into one card... and USB 3.x devices.I'm not after new video cards, but would that work in my 4,1 that's been upgraded to a 5,1?
Same here. My first build was in September 1999 (I still have the receipts for the stuff I bought, which is how I remember after all those years) and used a 400 MHz AMD K6-2. Little did I know the lack of on-chip L2 cache was detrimental to performance.Im one of those people who prefer AMD.
Same here. In the laptop universe, Intel's CPUs were more power-efficient (excluding the not-so-mobile Pentium 4). The [ultra] low voltage Pentium III and Pentium M were excellent, AMD's CPUs simply used much more power.This doesn't mean I didn't have Intel boxes/laptops over the years [...]
I still remember the GHz race in 2000. When I did my second build in July 2001, I went with a Duron rather than an Athlon though as it was significantly cheaper, and I was kinda put off by the horror stories of 1 GHz Athlons blowing up within seconds if the cooler wasn't mounted 100% right...AMD was the first to make it to 1ghz and that Athlon cpu purchase corresponded to one of my early gaming builds which definitely influenced my builds from that point onward.
This is off-topic but Star Trek: Enterprise is underrated!I just had Thunderbird, Firefox (with 4 Tabs and Netflix running), Preview, Affinity Photo with a 290mb picture, App Store and Activity monitor running at once without any slowdowns. Netflix continued to play smoothly most of the time, sometimes just some minor hickups when switching between apps.
Actvity monitor reported still 40% CPU inactive and about 8gb ram were used. According to your signature you have 4gb - I guess if you upgrade to 8gb your slowdowns should be gone.
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Yeah, but is that always done because the alternatives are superior in one way or another or because of “ideological” reasons?![]()
I still remember the GHz race in 2000.
It's also repeating itself in that high-end CPUs and GPUs can use enormous amounts of power...I don't, but history is repeating itself, seeing as there's now a fight to get to 6GHz and beyond, so I'm sure I'll get to experience it... second-hand.
That would be so much fun.For now, I might throw together a 750MHz Slot A Athlon build to try out older versions of Linux, like SuSE 7 or Debian 3. Possibly throw ReactOS on it as well to see how it fares.
That's funny because I initially was going to buy a Duron and clock it (a number of my friends did go this route) but ultimately I forked over the extra cash for the Athlon 1ghz cpu. I can't say I wasn't happy with it as that paired with a voodoo5 just absolutely crushed gaming of that era.Yep, provided you're running Catalina or a later version. With a USB-C hub, you should™ be able to plug all your six displays into one card... and USB 3.x devices.
Same here. My first build was in September 1999 (I still have the receipts for the stuff I bought, which is how I remember after all those years) and used a 400 MHz AMD K6-2. Little did I know the lack of on-chip L2 cache was detrimental to performance.
Same here. In the laptop universe, Intel's CPUs were more power-efficient (excluding the not-so-mobile Pentium 4). The [ultra] low voltage Pentium III and Pentium M were excellent, AMD's CPUs simply used much more power.
I still remember the GHz race in 2000. When I did my second build in July 2001, I went with a Duron rather than an Athlon though as it was significantly cheaper, and I was kinda put off by the horror stories of 1 GHz Athlons blowing up within seconds if the cooler wasn't mounted 100% right...
It's also repeating itself in that high-end CPUs and GPUs can use enormous amounts of power...
That would be so much fun.I have fond(?) memories of cutting my teeth on SuSE 6.x and 7.x back in 1999/2000/2001.
Maybe those stories were a bit overblown (pun intendedIt never blew up on me either, so I count myself lucky as I was not exactly laser focused on rig maintenance at the time.
I already have 220…230V in my part of the world, so 380V would be the next step.soon enough I feel like ~240v sockets are going to start showing up in new construction houses soon just for the 2.5kW power supplies of the future.
Sounds solid but watch out for blown capacitors on the mainboard. I really liked my Matrox G400.I'm thinking KX133 (probably the ASUS K7V board, I see one for $70), 1x256MB, Aureal Vortex2 SQ or Trident 4DWave, PCI SATA with two 128GB SSDs for quad booting (if for no other reason than IDE hard drives are finite, but SSDs aren't yet), and either a Voodoo3 or Matrox G400 Max.
Sounds solid but watch out for blown capacitors on the mainboard. I really liked my Matrox G400.
I’d stick to the on-board IDE channels. A CF-to-IDE adapter and a couple cards to switch back and forth between several OSes might be worth considering … or just SATA SSDs on a SATA-to-IDE adapter.
Scored a newer logic board for my $50 2007 black MacBook2,1 - managed to get a 2009 5,2 board for $11 shipped after spending all day yesterday trying to get it to install Yosemite or El Cap. This new board should allow for macOS newer than those, and better performance.
Scored a newer logic board for my $50 2007 black MacBook2,1 - managed to get a 2009 5,2 board for $11 shipped after spending all day yesterday trying to get it to install Yosemite or El Cap. This new board should allow for macOS newer than those, and better performance.
Also have 8GB of compatible RAM to throw in it once that's done, and I also removed the SuperDrive yesterday as I bought it with a disc stuck inside and prefer the quieter operation of having no drive at all.