You've been looking at my signature, haven't you?The more things change, the more the stay the same...
You've been looking at my signature, haven't you?The more things change, the more the stay the same...
I'm not sure if it's so much that the parts were so much better (I'm sure people will be remembering some of the old computers and the fun you had with them*...), but a lot of them were much more simple and easy to maintain.
Things like CPU's that at most needed a heatsink the size of an old 50p so you had no chance of a failure due to overheating when a fan bearing fails after 3 years of continuous use (or less in a lot of manufacturing environments), and interface cards that might have been fully custom but because they were built to work on an ISA bus using off the shelf parts (except maybe a bit of firmware on a common EEPROM that could be copied off, or replaced if the company kept the file) you could actually pay a specialist company (or even a good hobbyist) to make you up a replacement interface card if need be with them looking at the failed one and reverse engineering it because they could actually see and trace the connections.
One of the problems with wanting more and more performance is that it does come at a cost of far more things that can go wrong, and when they do you're less likely to be able to fix it in a workshop or with normal off the shelf parts.
I watch a few youtube channels of people who restore old machines and it's fun watching them work through issues and in some cases rebuild failed boards, but part of the reason they can usually do that is that if a part fails it's often something they can actually replace with a stock part or it was a bit that was available to the likes of field techs, and the process of replacing it involves maybe a 2 or 4 layer PCB not a 16 layer one (which also means if the board is cracked due to say poor handling or decades of thermal stresses you can potentially bridge the crack to repair the board as opposed to it being junk).
*Poor quality solder joints and design choices made by companies that relied on the fact their customers could do the final QC/build checks at home or bodge up fixes involving blue tack and dropping the machine from a few inches onto a desk...
I remember that...
I had an Abit KA7 that had that issue...
I think it also affected the Dell 2001FPW's although that might have just been that Dell went with 70c capacitors when they should have gone with the marginally more expensive 95c versions.
So December 31st 1999.
I was the manager of a high end private hire car firm in central London that only did account work at the time for the likes of JP Morgan / Chase Manhatton Bank , ABN , Lehman Brothers , Bank of America , Godman Sachs and UBS - We did work for all of these banks that night transferring in and out I.T workers.
If I remember correctly we were charging 3x standard rates and 2 of the banks each had 10 cars on standby in their basement at £500 car. All the I.T guts we drove all said they were being paid ridiculously for 48 hours and they all had absolutely zero issues, I'm sure most of the leg work was done prior to that anyway.
It always amuses me to see things like that, usually the story behind it is either they simply don't need anything better, or quite commonly they'll have some equipment hooked up to those ancient machines that uses a custom interface and replacing the computer might mean replacing several million dollars of associated equipment or recreating some software that there isn't something as easy/good to replace it off the shelf
Qtek?Around 2000ish we had a PSU capacitor go pop and go through the build room ceiling like a bullet.
I can quite believe it.You might like this then - I'm not sure if it's still the case but certainly, into the 2010s, there was a warning system monitoring some critical infrastructure for some of the biggest banks in the world that ran on an old windows PC - it may have been XP but I'm pretty sure it was older - like 98, 95 or NT era!
I was a teenager getting drunk with my mates on NYE but I did later work in finance and after that in financial technology and there were older guys who had been around back then. Ironically the pay just hasn't shifted much at all in that sector (the tech part that is) - it is funny how much pay has stagnated. The sort of amounts people would have talked about back then would still be considered very good amounts today not accounting for inflation even though they've actually been inflated away significantly!
You might like this then - I'm not sure if it's still the case but certainly, into the 2010s, there was a warning system monitoring some critical infrastructure for some of the biggest banks in the world that ran on an old windows PC - it may have been XP but I'm pretty sure it was older - like 98, 95 or NT era!