I came across this and found it amusing. Also makes me feel old...




https://www.computerhope.com/jargon/x/xt.htm
Extended technology
They were my favorite computers in college,.. the 386 was so fast back then,.. we had just one in the lab,.
 Back in the day this was a monster machine.. and then the Pentium arrived.. the first few were hot, not too fast and really expensive..
 Back in the day this was a monster machine.. and then the Pentium arrived.. the first few were hot, not too fast and really expensive..
I still have a 486 DX2 66MHz with a gigantic 8MB RAM a 420MB HDD a SCSI 4 speed CD ROM and a Trident 9400 VESA graphics adapter with 1MB graphics RAM, it first ran DOS 6.22 + Windows 3.11 for Workgroups, later on Windows 95, it has a Soundblaster 16 soundcard...Back in the day this was a monster machine.. and then the Pentium arrived.. the first few were hot, not too fast and really expensive..

 . We kept borrowing it when newer cards failed so we could get into the system.
. We kept borrowing it when newer cards failed so we could get into the system.The first generation Pentium chips, the 60 and 66Mhz ones were flawed, ran hot and were not much faster than a well configered DX-100 or AMD DX-133
You guys are proper silicon heads and I'm not being derogatory. I barely remember the configuration of my previous system (or even the current one), never mind the first one I bought twenty-six years ago.

You guys are proper silicon heads and I'm not being derogatory. I barely remember the configuration of my previous system (or even the current one), never mind the first one I bought twenty-six years ago.

I worked in the computer software industry for 34 years and hardly remember a thing about the hardware now I'm retired. I used Sun 2/3/Sparc and Apollo workstations back when it took four big blokes to heft a 500MB SCSI disk drive unit into its enclosure. Sun were good kit back then - a pleasure to work on. Before that I mainly used mainframes - ICL 1906A, Amdahl v7a later v8, a godawful Prime something or other - as well as an HP VAX 11/780 mini I think it was with a bigass 11-inch floppy drive with a capacity that a modern USB stick would piss on. Afterwards came work on several generations of PCs from 16 up to 64-bit - running DOS and Windows but mainly Unix and later Linux flavours. The hardware details are a blur. I can remember roughly the memory and disk storage capacities, bus width, CPU architecture and approximate CPU speed but fine details, nah, forget it. Graphics processor, memory cache, coprocessor details - also forget it. Erased them from memory I have.Hmm 26 years ago it was a NEC Powermate SX with a 16mhz 80386SX, 6MB ram and 2x 40MB HDD.
It gave way shortly after to an Epson AX3/25 with 8Mb ram and a 140MB ESDI drive.
Both had very nice keyboards as well.
But from there on it gets hazy as I built my on machines, had a couple of sun Sparcs, a Mac mini, ran Windows, Mac OS X, Solaris, FreeBSD and a bit of Linux and even played with SCO UNIX
26 years ago.. Philips NMS 9100 XT we replaced the 8088 with a NEC V20 running at a staggering 8Mhz, 768KB RAM a Seagate ST-225 20MB HDD and a Paradise ISA VGA graphics adapter, 720KB 3.5" floppy drive, no soundcard though, it did have a VGA screen which was black and white, this machine is still there, still working that is why I still know the specs of the thing..You guys are proper silicon heads and I'm not being derogatory. I barely remember the configuration of my previous system (or even the current one), never mind the first one I bought twenty-six years ago.

godawful Prime something or other


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