sedrosken
Florida Man
Sedrosken is probably the only member of Storage Forum who runs hardware older than he is.
Hey, I resent that remark!
Also, I totally do. I have a Pentium II 300 around here somewhere. I run Windows 2000 on it.
Sedrosken is probably the only member of Storage Forum who runs hardware older than he is.
Hey, I resent that remark!
Also, I totally do. I have a Pentium II 300 around here somewhere. I run Windows 2000 on it.
Nearly the same for me. Mine was a 386/33 with DOS 5.0 and Win 3.1 and 4 MB RAM. I soon upgraded to a friend's spare 386-40 which I maxed out at 16 MB of RAM. I also put in a 387 math coprocessor (anyone remember those). This was c. 1998. The machine was dated even for its time but it served me for about a year until I ended up with a Pentium 100 which seemed blazingly fast compared to the 386.386/33 on DOS 6.22 and Win 3.1
This was the first one I owned. The first PC I used was at work, a Radio Shack Trash-80 with two 8" floppy drives running CP/M.386/25 with Dos 5.0, 1 MB RAM, I think 10 MB HDD, VGA color monitor.
Hey Moderators, can you extract the subsequent "my first/early computers" posts into a new thread? Yeah, that would be great.Hey, I resent that remark!
Also, I totally do. I have a Pentium II 300 around here somewhere. I run Windows 2000 on it.
If I have a pro version, will I end up with a pro version of Windows 10? The reservation software seems to imply that free is the estimated retail price of Windows home 10 full license.
I seem to remember a slot on some motherboards for more video memory. Anybody else?
I only typically saw those on name brand systems in the 286 and early 386 era, eg Amstrad PC3x86 systems had socketed VRAM for the Paradise VGA controllers... as well as some same generation Nokia and Compaq's as well... (Yes, Nokia had some 286 PCs).Dedicated video memory on motherboards was very rare - not unheard-of but rare. .
I've spent 15 minutes reading the EULA once the installation was completed. Microsoft now makes it mandatory to accept Windows updates. I can see problems with this and many softwares we use at work which are only certified to work with certain very specific updates (mainly automation programs, but I'm sure there are plenty others). It is also prohibited to use Windows Pro as a server. What this means for shared folders in an enterprise networks isn't entirely clear to me. If one users put stuff in one folder he shares with his co-workers, does Microsoft considers this a server use? If so, why is the functionality still there? Like I wrote : unclear.
Once I've agreed to the EULA, the installation completed without a itch. The only semi-issue I've had is that the FAH client no longer opens in a web browser, but I've always used the Advanced interface anyway, so I don't really care. The installation completed less than 15 minutes ago though, so I haven't had time to spot potential problems yet.
From their position I completely understand the decision. You only want to support one version. Also, how much of their reputation for getting viruses and malware is from people who haven't installed updates?
According to the EULA, yes.Are you saying that the Windows has no option to turn off updates?
And that's it.[h=2]Defer upgrades in Windows 10[/h]
- Some Windows 10 editions let you defer upgrades to your PC. When you defer upgrades, new Windows features won’t be downloaded or installed for several months. Deferring upgrades doesn’t affect security updates. Note that deferring upgrades will prevent you from getting the latest Windows features as soon as they’re available.