I remember calling my ISP support in '99 when I was having some issues, and they asked me about my machine specs. Since I was doing 3d for TV/video and was doing a lot of rendering with big Max scenes, I had 256 megs of ram. When I told the tech support that I had 256 megs, he said, "That's not right." We need to know the amount of MEMORY. I said, "Yeah, that would be 256." We went back and forth for awhile, and I explained that I really did have 256 megs. The tech called his supervisor, and they began geeking out on the whole concept that somebody had that much memory in a machine.
Now, here I sit with a gig, bitching to myself that 2 would be much better.
Back then I was still counting triangles individually in my models and worried about the ~200 triangles articulated hands take. Oh and I considered a head of 200 triangles "excessive".
I had to give my PC an extra 8Mb RAM (up to a whole 16Mb!) in 1998, in order to run Warcraft 2. I think it had a 486 DX2/66 at that point. I think it had 1mb of onboard graphics RAM, and a 400mb hard drive.
I found that hard drive recently, and actually laughed. Quite silly to think that something so big, heavy and clunky held 10x less information than a DVD I can write on my laptop.
Not in any way anything I had, but I figured I'd post it. My first family comp was a gateway 386 with 4 megs of ram, first personal comp a 486. Nothing special about them...
[edit] Oh, and in 98 I got a 266mhz compaq from Fry's on a trip to Cali for a family reunion... god I hated that thing after a while. Some no-name 2d card and a 3dfx Voodoo 1 expansion card, if I recall.
I started on a C64 (as far as computers go, we had a Pong TV game back in the day). If I can find it I'll scan in the ad for a 20MB harddrive for 2999 DEM (1500$) in a magazine.
256000 VGA colors? That's three zeros too many. VGA was 8 bit, 256 colors. And a VGA in a 20MHz 386SX with no harddrive? Looks out of place.
Asthane: We had Pac Man later when we got an Atari 2600. Yes, I know that's not real Pac Man but I was a kid so I didn't mind, I'd hardly ever manage to clear a level.
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WHOAH! 128 megs of RAM!! But that's so...excessive.
as a side note: I see your Lewisville and raise you a Louisville
Now, here I sit with a gig, bitching to myself that 2 would be much better.
my older p2 233 could outperform that thing though, with 192mb of ram and all
Not even Total Annihilation would have run well on that.
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Actually just stick in an extra 16mb and it will.
/me had used a P100, 1337mb hd, 32mb RAM, s3 trio64v+ 2mb from 1994-1998
wow technology ages FAST man.
i think i had a pentium 166, with 32mb of ram and a 2 gig harddrive
Sure, I miss out on the last PC games, but so what?
Qauek 2 fo lyfe!!!!!
I found that hard drive recently, and actually laughed. Quite silly to think that something so big, heavy and clunky held 10x less information than a DVD I can write on my laptop.
Qauek 2 fo lyfe!!!!!
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You da man!
I watched them do that at the time.
*sigh* Kate
My 3rd computer in 99. Pentium 3... much better.
Not in any way anything I had, but I figured I'd post it. My first family comp was a gateway 386 with 4 megs of ram, first personal comp a 486. Nothing special about them...
[edit] Oh, and in 98 I got a 266mhz compaq from Fry's on a trip to Cali for a family reunion... god I hated that thing after a while. Some no-name 2d card and a 3dfx Voodoo 1 expansion card, if I recall.
256000 VGA colors? That's three zeros too many. VGA was 8 bit, 256 colors. And a VGA in a 20MHz 386SX with no harddrive? Looks out of place.
oh the innocence lost.