Your favorite generation (or system?)

Soldato
Joined
3 Dec 2004
Posts
2,643
Hi all,

If you had to chose what generation of PC hardware did you most enjoy and what kind of system were you running?

I think for me it was around the early 00's. Socket A moving into sk.939.

I was pretty new to building systems then and it seemed everyone was dedicated to getting every last drop of power from their rigs. The naming schemes on CPU's and graphics were much easier I think too.

I owned an abit KT7A with a athlon 1.1ghz cpu and massive 40gb storage.
Geforce 2 64mb.

Games were released pushing the boundaries of the CPU and graphics all the time with game-play to match.
 
i would say my fave machine was my first way back in 1993 :)
an ibm ps2 thats specs were -
286 sx-16
5.25 floppy
3.5 floppy
20 mb rll hard drive that took up 2 5.25 drive bays
2mb memory board
1/2 mb cirrus isa graphics card
10" ibm vga monitor
pc speaker (bleep bleep bleep)
about the size of my coolermaster stacker laid on its side :D

i played sensible soccer and x-wing for hours at a time on that thing :)
 
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i would say my fave machine was my first way back in 1993 :)
an ibm ps2 thats specs were -
286 sx-16
5.25 floppy
3.5 floppy
20 mb rll hard drive that took up 2 5.25 drive bays
2mb memory board
1/2 mb cirrus isa graphics card
10" ibm vga monitor
pc speaker (bleep bleep bleep)
about the size of my coolermaster stacker laid on its side :D

i played sensible soccer and x-wing for hours at a time on that thing :)

Great system :)
Reminds me of our first family PC bought from the now dead 'Tiny' manufacturer. It was a 486 if I member correctly and that was slow enough, can't imagine what a 286 must've been like!
 
My fave generation would be DS9, fave system is anywhere in the gamma quadrant!
Oh, computers!
The Amiga was my fave. Beat PCs until the pentium came out really (compared to the basic Amiga models anyway).
First PC was with the BX chipset, so overclockable, celeron 600 at 1.1GHz :D
 
Great system :)
Reminds me of our first family PC bought from the now dead 'Tiny' manufacturer. It was a 486 if I member correctly and that was slow enough, can't imagine what a 286 must've been like!

286's were damn fast processors... Remember they were not bogged down by windows most of the time, and even when they were, it was such a light weight OS back then compared to what we have now.

My first "PC" was an Amstrad 1512, upgraded with an EGA card & Monitor. Technically it was dual screen as it was impossible to disable the internal CGA card, and the monitor contained the powersupply for the entire PC, so the old amstrad screen was tucked away under the desk!.
Oh yeah, system spec... 8mhz 8086 CPU (true 16 bit processor), 640Kb ram, and 40Mb hard disk

I used to play Sierra adventure games like Kings Quest, Space Quest and Leisure Suit Larry, and one of my favorite games was Elite.


Some of those second generation IBM's (PS/2's rather than XT/AT's) were odd systems. A full height (what we call a 5.25inch bay now is technically a half height bay) 20meg disk in 1993!!!! My 1986 Amstrad had 3.5inch 40Mb hard drive. I think I even have that disk in the attic somewhere.

Funny to remember that a ram upgrade back then envolved inserting individual ram chips! Orientation "check", Pins aligned "Check", push firmly.. Wee it works an extra 128K of ram. (Yep I upgraded from 512Kb to 640Kb)

By the time I could afford to get a 286 computer, I was playing Wing Commander, and that had seriously great graphics, sound (Thanks to Creative Sound Blaster), and only just ran smoothly on my 10mhz 286.. But it was playable to the end on that spec.

BTW. Amiga 500, while a fairly decent machine, its main CPU was considerably somewhere between the performance of an 8086, and an 80286, but it seemed faster because it had hardware acellerated sound and graphics. However a 386 with a decent VGA card was more than a match for the Amiga in my opinion, no need to have waited for Pentiums, which quite frankly kick the ass of the basic Amiga 500. I had an Amiga as well as my PC, and where possible I bought the games for the PC, as long as they supported Soundblaster or even better Roland LAPC-1 , otherwise I would go for the Amiga version for better sound.

My, that sends me back... PC Games with Roland support had the best sound of any platform of its day, stunning music quality, and even though you needed both a Roland and a Soundblaster if you wanted both music and speech, the combined result was stunning. Modern games tend to be much less cool when it comes to music, as they are often just embedded MP3's. With the midi based Roland, the composers could design the music to flow smoothly from one area to another and they were much more dynamic when an unexpected event happend in game.
 
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i loved my athlon 900 with a Gforce2 64mb gfx :)
but im sure il love my i7 with a 5870 a little more when i eventually order it (hopefully next week)
 
amiga was good but for me was prob my 1st pc, celery 400, 32mb ram, 6.4gb hdd (I think), win98, 15" crt, bought as a bundle from asda :)

I remember upgrading the ram to 64mb and buying a voodoo3 16mb pci gfx card to play team fortress and then counterstrike via 56k, then I got isdn home highway and it was sweeeet online pings of 60 instead of 150/200+

basic mouse, standard keyboard, games ran fine even tho pc was pants.... how it should be :D
 
I think for me it was around the early 00's. Socket A moving into sk.939.


You skipped a generation mate.

It went from socket A, to 754 then 939...

I built many a system around those three sockets, cant say I miss them.

The latest tech is always my favourite tbh.
 
A tought call for me, either between socket A or 754 for me...
Socket A - Barton @ 3200 was ultra value and easy oc-ing. I loved the NF7 v2 also. :D

754, I just liked it. Running DTR mobile Clawhammer's at 3700+ speeds. The Epox 8npa was a nice one to have, not many people were running them.
Wasting cash on a Turion :D
Was great performance and really fun to mess around with.
 
my fav system was one my brother made for me.. amd 600mhz Socket A i think (large plastic thing). and a ati 128 gfx card that had terrible drivers.

I also enjoyed once i got the geforce 4 gfx card in the mix it was sooooo much faster.
 
The early Socket A generation has to take it for me, the joy of the pre-XP Athlons wiping the P4's away, things were just a lot simplier in those days with CPU choices, or so it seemed!
 
I entered very late so my first pc was windows 95 based, had a 266mhz cpu, and 16mb of ram, i remember upgrading to a voodoo graphics card and 32mb ram and that thing flew.
 
Great replies,

Seems it's not only me who you fond of the 'older tech'.


....................and even though you needed both a Roland and a Soundblaster if you wanted both music and speech, the combined result was stunning.

Great post. Enjoyed reading that.
I never realised that was how speech and music worked back then! You actually needed two soundcards to get both?



You skipped a generation mate.

It went from socket A, to 754 then 939...

Yep, that's right. But not for me, I had my socket A for so long it was on .939 before i next upgraded. And i'm still on .939 to this day! Although every part has been improved on (PCIe, faster cpu etc).
 
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The Barton at 3.2GHz great value for money, its still going to this day, its getting well used by a silver surfer who l gave the PC to.
 
Great thread. Nice to think back.

Blimey some youngsters on here - 'my first system was a P4':D hee hee

My history starts with Spectrum 48, Commodore 64, Acorn A3000 (awesome machine), but first family PC was also '93. Back then £1000 seemed to be almost a minimum spend for a PC (shudder to think what that equates to nowadays with inflation - just feel sorry for my parents!). Pentium was just out, but for that money we got a 486 DX2-66, 2MB Ram (nearly hit the G key, but no it really was MB:)), SVGA baby!, whopping 340MB HDD, 14" monitor. No sound card or optical. Not long later we 'needed' to spend about £180 on a soundblaster 16 (massive full length card) and a single or double speed CD ROM. Never understood why, but some outofdateedness on our MOBO meant digital sound effects didn't work in some games. Heartbreakingly that included Doom, so we were stuck with soundblaster FM music and PC speaker sound effects for a good few years:( Still - such fond memories of Sim City 2000, Indycar Racing, Monkey Island 2, X-wing, TFX, Worms... aaaaaahhhhhhh:):). Getting intimate with multiple versions of Autoexec.bat and Config.sys to free up all that lovely sub-640K base ram... booooooooooo :(:(

My own first PC was when I was at uni. Another £1000 got AMD K62 400, 64MB. Having my priorites straight, I managed to convince the shop to ditch the bundle's scanner, printer and software and give me a Voodoo 2 card instead!:D Pushed that AMD all the way to 500 in my first dabble with OCing. Demolished Jedi Knight and Half life, and with UltraHLE it could juuuuust about emulate the N64 well enough to annoy my housemate who'd spend hundreds on his console (as long as I only tried to play Mario 64). Voodoo 2 soon became TNT2 Ultra for Unreal Tournament purposes, and after a good summer holiday of work before fourth year I had enough for my uber OC'd PIII 650 @ 975 build. Spent a silly proportion of student loan on a Geforce 2 GTS and was sorted for Quake III and heavily modded Counterstrike with which I prevented all my house mates from using the phone line for a whole year:)

That build lasted a long time until the AMD Barton 3200 and Radeon 9800 finally replaced it, and that was eventually upgraded to Athlon 64 and a Geforce 6800 GT to improve the Half Life 2 and Doom 3 experience. Still stuck with that today as I've not played much for a few years having other stuff like reno a house and get married to do, plus the Wii and PS3. But now finally looking to build a 4GHz i5 Radeon 58xx system to finish HL2 E2 and see what this Crysis thing is all about.

Good times.

Liam
 
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