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13 votes
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Zilog discontinues production of original Z80 processor after forty-eight years
28 votes -
Sci.Electronics.Repair FAQ
7 votes -
Word processing like it's 1993
I thought younger people may find it interesting to experience what older, very popular, word processors were like. Here's WordPerfect 6.0, emulated in the browser:...
I thought younger people may find it interesting to experience what older, very popular, word processors were like.
Here's WordPerfect 6.0, emulated in the browser: https://archive.org/details/msdos_wordperfect6
Here's a link to the instruction manual: https://archive.org/details/wordperfectversi00word/mode/2up
Here's a bit of history: DOSDays - WordPerfect $495 in 1983 is roughly $1500 today.
Here's the recommended specs (not the minimum specs)
Personal computer using 386 processor
520k free conventional memory
DOS 6.0 or memory management software
Hard disk with 16M disk space for complete installation
VGA graphics adapter and monitorF1 is the default help key.
Page 409 of the manual talks about menus. This is version 6 so they give you a drop down menu. To get an idea of how version 5 and earlier would appear by default (without the menubar, just the blue screen), hit alt v, then p. T (To get the menu back hit alt =, then V, then P) People might find it weird but those drop down menus first appeared in 5.1, and were a bit deal: "On 6th November 1989 WordPerfect released what would be their most successful version - WordPerfect 5.1 for DOS, selling for $495 in the U.S. This was the first version to support Macintosh-style text-based pull down menus to supplement the traditional function key shortcuts and mouse support."
I'd be interested to know how easy people find it to use. At the time I had the keyboard overlay (example for WP5) and the muscle memory, but that's all gone now.
53 votes -
Early on-demand music streaming required lots of nickels
2 votes -
C64 OS: A modern(ish) operating system for the Commodore 64
16 votes -
Going deep with the Book 8088, the brand-new laptop that approximates the specs of the original IBM PC 5150 from 1981
12 votes -
2,200 forgotten vintage computers are being liberated from a barn in Massachusetts
25 votes -
Reutilizing old computers for modern use
I really like tinkering with older PC's, trying to make them work for modern usecases which is mostly using web browser. Anyone else do this here? Or interested in it? I have old 10" netbook from...
I really like tinkering with older PC's, trying to make them work for modern usecases which is mostly using web browser.
Anyone else do this here? Or interested in it?
I have old 10" netbook from 2007 or so, it has 1gb RAM and Intel Atom 32bit that barely can handle things. However, I switched it's old SATA hard drive to an SSD, and it is a bit faster at booting now! I also ordered 2gb RAM stick, so maybe that will help it a bit too. It's also running OpenSUSE Tumbleweed 32 bit, but i dont recommend this for linux newcomers since it's a bit different distro.
If you have an old laptop or PC lying around, try breathing life into it by installing a Linux distro like Debian 12. Change a spinning hard drive to an SSD. For even older retro hardware there are even SD card adapters and such, that can work in place of old hard drives.
My goal is to make this tiny netbook good for light web browsing and maybe even scripting on things and having a Matrix chat window open. It's perfect tablet size, but very underpowered, even during it's release, so it's a challenge. But that's what makes this kinda fun! Also it helps tone down e-waste if one can use an old device for modern things.
44 votes -
What do you miss the most about the old internet?
Personally one of the things I miss is when social media sites weren’t trying to emulate TikTok.
63 votes -
Crafting ribbon cables for retro hardware
8 votes -
Why these old Japanese vending machines are genius
14 votes -
Computer dating 1960s style (1966)
5 votes -
Two C64s plus a pile of floppy disks equals one accordion
6 votes -
WebTV returns with custom server emulating 1999 experience
6 votes -
A curated collection of HCI demo videos produced during the golden age from 1983-2002
6 votes -
Nineteenth-century critiques of technology show how longstanding many current concerns are
4 votes -
Scifi hifi
7 votes -
When SimCity got serious: The story of Maxis Business Simulations and SimRefinery
7 votes -
Hark back to the late 1990s with this re-creation of the dialup Internet experience
6 votes -
How the personal computer broke the human body
10 votes -
Classic social networking in 2022: SpaceHey
12 votes -
Cassette history/trivia: A series of fortunate events
4 votes -
title.wma - The origins of Windows XP's welcome music
3 votes -
Browservice demo - Browsing modern websites on retro computers
4 votes -
Brexit deal mentions Netscape browser and Mozilla Mail; recommends outdated security algorithms
13 votes -
Google Desktop (2004) - demo and retrospective
6 votes -
Reverse engineering a forgotten 1970s Intel dual core beast: 8271, a new ISA
10 votes -
Winamp in 2020 (Webamp Electron app)
13 votes -
Retrotech: The Novell NetWare Experience
4 votes -
SCOPETREX vector gaming on your oscilloscope!
@tubetimeus: announcing the SCOPETREX -- the vector gaming console for your oscilloscope or XY monitor! ever wanted to buy a Vectrex, but can't afford the high prices on auction sites? well now you can build your own! full design files at https://t.co/hHAbFwwePE
4 votes -
This is a web page
37 votes -
Old mobile websites?
Hey everyone, I'm currently looking for some web 1.0-esque websites, but with the twist of being designed for some ancient smartphones. An example of what I mean would be i.reddit.com , reddit's...
Hey everyone, I'm currently looking for some web 1.0-esque websites, but with the twist of being designed for some ancient smartphones. An example of what I mean would be i.reddit.com , reddit's original (and still fully functional) mobile implementation, or Twitter's site when you access it without a modern version of Javascript (which reverts to a clone of itself from around ~2012). I understand this is a super niche category and there's hardly any of them left, but if you happen to know of any or stumble upon one, please let me know! Thank you! :)
24 votes -
The enduring allure of retro tech
9 votes -
US Air Force finally retires 8-inch floppies from missile launch control system
14 votes -
The story of the IBM Pentium 4 64-bit CPU
7 votes -
Exploring Computer Reset, a massive retro computer warehouse
5 votes -
VHD in the USA: Failure to Launch
4 votes -
The experience of working on a thirty-year-old Macintosh SE
6 votes -
Eight ways sci-fi imagines data storage
8 votes -
The cover of MAD magazine #258 from October 1985 announces a special computer section featuring the MAD Computer Program
7 votes -
Four perfectly reasonable-sounding 2018 technology predictions that failed
8 votes -
Kalashnikov takes on Tesla with retro-look electric 'supercar'
12 votes -
A program from a thirty-five year old magazine for “BASIC Month” and a chat with its author
4 votes -
Remembering an Atari Computer Lab in Hampton, Virginia
3 votes