Fun Linux tip, if you forget sudo on a command that you just entered, just type "sudo !!", it'll repeat the last entered command but with sudo preceding it. I find that's quicker than hitting up, then home, then typing "sudo "
@HalianTheProtogen7 ай бұрын
Today I learned! :O I've used Linux for twenty years, and somehow never knew that.
@SeishukuS127 ай бұрын
@@HalianTheProtogen Don't feel too bad, I've been a Linux vet for about the same time and I only learned that maybe 5 years ago lol
@tmg_beamng7 ай бұрын
the more you know..
@FrenziedManbeast7 ай бұрын
I used to get so frustrated with this era of OEM machine for omitting AGP slots. These systems were perfectly fine, but by cutting $0.50 in cost they absolutely killed re-use or upgradability of these machines. It's a big reason why I got into building my own systems for friends and family.
@AiOinc17 ай бұрын
Even if it had an AGP slot, how much utility would it truly have added? Being a P4 with a RAM ceiling of 2GB, you wouldn't be able to go much further than Vista or 7 anyways, and having used 7 on a machine of this stature with a PCIe slot and a fairly fast video card, it's not a good experience. Additionally, the north bridge changes between versions with and without AGP, and so it required not only the 50 cent slot, but a $3 chip and then a whole $10 card because the integrated video was omitted.
@ahabwolf75807 ай бұрын
While I agree it's disappointing, you have to remember these were being mass produced, so even the slightest cost savings multiplied by thousands adds up quickly.
@FrenziedManbeast7 ай бұрын
@@AiOinc1 Due to the extreme limitations of the PCI Bus in the P4-era, the lack of an AGP port made this at best a budget office machine. Even an AGP x4 would have allowed this PC to rock a mid-range GPU of it's time and play almost everything pre-Crysis. To answer your question, if someone was using this machine for office tasking, web browsing, and light gaming: the inclusion of an AGP port could have doubled (or more) the effective lifespan of this machine. There is intrinsic value in expandability/upgradability as well if you care about things like keeping machines such as this one out of landfills and refurbished while they still have good life left.
@FrenziedManbeast7 ай бұрын
@@ahabwolf7580 I understand the economies of scale, but the margins in the 2000-era could absorb a $1 sticker price increase. Especially at the volumes that Dell and Gateway were dominating at during this time.
@RuruFIN7 ай бұрын
@@AiOinc1At least 20 years ago that would still have been a decent gaming PC with a dGPU like Radeon 9600 or similar. Only a masochist used Vista/7 with a single core system anyway.
@victorfigueroa93857 ай бұрын
Found one of these a year ago on the side of the road, really cold and moist. had a 2.0Ghz Pentium 4 and a Maxtor Fireball 3 40GB HDD and a 1GB of ram. After rebuilding and cleaning, it sprung to life perfectly working, surprised on how it hasn't died yet after the harsh condition it was in.
@robichag7 ай бұрын
Its always a good day when one of the vidoes appear. Kinda like a rare pokémon. But funner. xox
@darkdigitaldesigns7 ай бұрын
Hi Mike. First off, I want to say, I love your content. I’m reaching out to you, because I might have a retro PC, that you might be interested in featuring on your channel. It is an IBM Personal Computer 300XL. I found it abandoned, in an old single-wide trailer house, that I was helping my nephew clean out. When I opened it up, I did not see any bulging or leaky caps, and I was able to power it on for a short period of time. However, now it will not power on. While it did power on, the hard drive sounded like it was still in decent shape, and the floppy drive did spin up, but I did not have any floppy disks to test it. The case lid looks rather rough, but I did try to clean it up as best I could. Please let me know, if you are interested. I am willing to donate it to your channel, but I am not sure that the shipping costs would be in my budget. Anyways, thanks again for the amazing content, and hope to hear back from you soon.
@combossss2 ай бұрын
Here is a tip regarding stuck coolers. Try heating up the heat sink with a hairdryer. It'll come right off when heated.
@branscombe_7 ай бұрын
thanks Mike for another episode of my favourite youtube show!
@miketech10247 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! ❤️ I’ll put it into the CR2032 battery fund. 🙂
@AiOinc17 ай бұрын
I remember being a kid in school and seeing these. Honestly the coolest design of the era!
@studydude7 ай бұрын
Been binge watching your channel, I am impressed with your knowledge and ability, I have learned new things, and the format you use is top notch for a pc channel.
@exequiel_hyan7 ай бұрын
cannot believe that no one is saying anything about that context menu item at 21:09
@reidster877 ай бұрын
It certainly adds more *context* for the system's dubious past! 🤣
@TNTUP7 ай бұрын
LOL! I was about to comment on this! I'm not the only one who saw this
@RetroTechChris7 ай бұрын
Always love your vids! Thanks for another great one. I have a few Gateway 2000 systems, and a PIII Gateway system too!
@gen_angry3 ай бұрын
A bit late for this video but one thing I did when I worked at a comp shop around this time: I had a 512MB or 1GB stick of DDR RAM that 'belonged to the shop' that I'd temporarily throw in these types of systems with very little memory and an infestation that's overwhelmed it. It helped speed things up quite a lot by eliminating most of the pagefile thrashing till I could get it clean.
@mutestingray5 ай бұрын
These systems remind me of visiting the Gateway store as a kid. Yes, the Gateway store. Actually, I thought it was a really awesome store. There was some interesting stuff in there. I remember Gateway was selling their own large flat-panel TVs (maybe just monitors since I think it was meant to go with their HTPCs). Then things just took a turn for the worst for ol’ Gateway.
@Cinnawah7 ай бұрын
33:22 You should probably chuck that WT power supply right into the trash as I've had one of those exact PSUs blow up and fry a motherboard before
@branscombe_7 ай бұрын
Ahh my friday is complete thanks Mike tech! 🐄🚀
@blackheart587 ай бұрын
I like systems that can cover up the floppy drives. I like the black and silver system. There’s something about it that speaks to me. The reflective Gateway logo is very cool. Another great video to kick off the weekend!
@Greg10967 ай бұрын
Gateway for some strange reason decided to engineer strange retaining systems for almost everything for no good reason, they just had a weird fascination with avoiding screws 😂
@marktubeie077 ай бұрын
I love adding new active 'descriptors' to my vocabulary Mike after watching your videos & superb commentary. Today's word is _disconnectify_ ! Thank you !👍
@MDBenson7 ай бұрын
The momoent I saw that Maxtor label on the second HDD I 100% new it was faulty. Those early 2000s Maxtors are some of the worst drives of the era.
@siroy-digitaltech82517 ай бұрын
love the look these P4 tower`s from Gateway, brill video on them enjoyed
@sjgrall7 ай бұрын
Oh this is a throwback. My first boss had one of these at home, and it crawled with a P4 HT. Eventually he replaced it with a Mac.
@sjgrall7 ай бұрын
Watching the video, I see this one crawls too. I always wondered if something about this specific logic board design or BIOS revision factored into that, because it wasn’t slow earlier on in its life, and a similarly equipped Dell Dimension 3000 wasn’t slow at the time either.
@jblyon27 ай бұрын
I used to support someone who had one of these. It always seemed slower than it should be with a P4 HT (a 2.8 IIRC) and I could never figure out why, even with a clean OS install. Interesting that it doesn't seem to be a fluke.
@probablyanadult73547 ай бұрын
You wanted a high rpm HDD. @@jblyon2
@sjgrall7 ай бұрын
@@jblyon2 a P4 3.0 HT Dell Dimension 3000 my Aunt had for over a decade was quite fast until around the time XP went EOL, so I’m thinking something unique to the Gateways
@SGTMacBC7 ай бұрын
@@sjgrall I had a HT 3.0 in mine. Ran circles around my wife's PC. Hers was what is here with a 2.8 HT. I made sure I got the better spec'd one.
@hi-friaudioman6 ай бұрын
I really liked this era of case, with the removable drive sleds, removable spacers, and removable PSU. I think they were really onto something with that. Its a shame we went back to screws on most cases but i kinda get it.
@DarKnightKilla137 ай бұрын
As always, excellent video! Always enjoy seeing these, glad to see the first system was basically in primo condition. The AGP thing still to this day baffles me -- my first XP machine was a 1.6 GHz P4, with 512 MB's of RAM and an AGP 4x slot that housed a 64 MB GeForce 2 MX200 stock. Granted that was a Compaq Presario, but still... lack of AGP is just a very odd choice considering how pretty bad plain PCI expansion video cards were.
@westtell47 ай бұрын
ahh maxtor.... The bane of my early 2000's existence i have bad memories of that we went through like 3 in 4 years
@sjgrall7 ай бұрын
They were terrible
@LabCat7 ай бұрын
Maxtor managed to somehow out-Quantum Quantum's Fireball line.
@sjgrall7 ай бұрын
@@LabCat ha!
@TonyAtkinspdx7 ай бұрын
I love your videos!!
@fridaycaliforniaa2367 ай бұрын
My weekly dose of MikeTech. This channel is a therapy =)
@sjgrall7 ай бұрын
I agree. It’s truly relaxing to watch these videos.
@BurritoVampire6 ай бұрын
I just found a Gateway desktop at a thrift store for $10. I think it's a few years newer than this one as it has an AMD Athlon 64 X2 badge on it. Haven't tried to boot it up yet but, yep, a capacitor plague victim as well.
@justsumguy2u7 ай бұрын
Mike, KZbin is calling; it's been 3 weeks, and it's time to feed the beast!
@miketech10247 ай бұрын
Yeah, it’s a madhouse over here. Just got done feeding the garage with a third ewaste haul! Now I should be good through next year.
@justsumguy2u7 ай бұрын
@@miketech1024 I am definitely looking forward to your videos on the ewaste machines, I know they'll be fun
@JuanGonzalez-hv6vs7 ай бұрын
This computer was ahead of its own time, incredible.
@I_am_Allan7 ай бұрын
12:10 - date code is 02 for 2002. 21 for the 21st week. May 20, 2002 to May 26, 2002
@MSmith-Photography7 ай бұрын
Archeology... Indiana Mike And The Capacitors Of Doom. 🤣
@thenoblerot7 ай бұрын
The mussed up hair in the thumbnail is super cute ❤
@theslicefactor45907 ай бұрын
Mike is rocking that perfect hairline.
@gen_angry3 ай бұрын
Yea those thin maxtors were always junk. About the only think they're good at is being 'clay pigeons' for a bit of trap shooting. :P
@maxtornogood7 ай бұрын
For a futuristic design these Gateways were stuck in the past with no AGP & Crapacitors. Not surprised that the 2nd system's Maxtor is no good, living up to my channel "name" 😝
@robwilson11407 ай бұрын
Those caps by the ram on the first board look a bit puffy also. Could explain the lag and performance.
@Tatarus316 ай бұрын
Nice systems, thanks!
@tvkstelav-es7er7 ай бұрын
i love youre videos please do a coustome retro build of trash picked parts bene watching since day one you have inspired me i am just starting in the tech industry pleas make more videos
@catachresis7 ай бұрын
goo gone is very good for removing thermal paste, just make sure to avoid getting it on plastics
@ThatBritishSnep6 ай бұрын
19:34 Notice the "WINNT" folder, wonder if this machine was upgraded from 2000?
@computersetc11237 ай бұрын
Hi I have a model from 2004 looks exactly alike just a little newer. Mine does have a AGP Slot and also SATA I am happy about that. I purchased a 60 GB SSD and a SATA to IDE before I knew it has SATA. I also have Gateway Recovery disk it is just a Red Drivers CD and a Yellow Application CD and a Blue OS CD One XP Home and 2 XP Professional. The red drivers CD is bootable has MS DOS and there is a hidden program called GW Scan. It is just an old version of WD Diagnostics and GW Scan will wipe a Hard drive and write 0's.
@HWMonster7 ай бұрын
Man that Windows XP floppy action brought back memories. Thanks for the time travel!
@thetechguy50697 ай бұрын
Man, that right there is my childhood pc I’m young however My dad gave his Gateway MDX500 series that was the exact same as that first one. I kept it for many years in 2014 I come home from the beach to find that it was gone among a bunch of other things. Would love to find one that doesn’t cost a fortune.
@Heckatomba7 ай бұрын
21:08 Now that is an interesting JavaScript shortcut in the right click menu. Can't say I've ever seen that before
@lauram59057 ай бұрын
Seems like you'd wanna wash your hands after handling that machine 💀💀💀
@jasmijndekkers7 ай бұрын
Nice Gateways. Great video again. Greetings from Steven from the Netherlands
@dabombinablemi61887 ай бұрын
The Pentium 4 based HP the library at my old highschool had used the same 20GB Maxtors. Have no idea how any of those PC lasted well into the Windows 7 era - no preventative maintenance they were only cleaned out when the fans clogged with dust, causing them to overheat badly enough to shut down. Still have a locked HDD from one of those that I was allowed to take home.
@mikesocha1734Ай бұрын
Your CR2023 batteries have a very variable price range.
@-S.T.P.7 ай бұрын
such quality built into that first case. then cheaping out on the agp...
@ThePolaroid6697 ай бұрын
Yay - a nice Friday afternoon video to watch after work!
@cullmaster73617 ай бұрын
Great stuff as always Mike 👍🏻 Nice to see these different systems. Keep em Coming… Cheers 🍻
@johnnyrichards21197 ай бұрын
Those cases would make great sleeper computer cases
@T3hBeowulf7 ай бұрын
I like to keep my copy of SpinRite around for situations like that Maxtor drive. It either finishes off the drive, adding to the sacrificial pile, or it forces marginal sectors to reroute and in some cases can restore the drive enough to copy things off. I know in this case that actual data recovery isn't the goal so it may not make sense here but SpinRite can do a phenomenal job of bringing a mechanically sound but marginal drive back from the brink... or it seals the drive's fate. Either way, it answers questions. You'd want to run it on a test bench rig because it can take days for some drives to finish a pass through SpinRite.
@miketech10247 ай бұрын
This drive might be a good candidate for it. It did make a few sounds like the spindle RPM was stumbling, but that cleared up.
@Greg10967 ай бұрын
Hirens boot drive had a ton of useful programs on it, I worked in a warranty repair and refurbish center for Asus in the early 2000's and all of us techs kept it on thumbdrives and cds for troubleshooting, also had password crackers for most flavors of windows since sometimes the owners weren't able to remove account passwords before sending them in, I feel like some of those programs could be helpful for mike.
@charlybrown90247 ай бұрын
25:15 I think the two capacitors just at the right side of the heatsinks are also bulging.
@joetheman747 ай бұрын
Mike. When you use xrandr and don't get the resolutions you want you can add them rather quickly. Use cvt command to generate a modeline. Example cvt 1920 1080 60 This will generate a modeline for a 1080p 60hz video mode. You can then use the output of this command to create it. Then use xrandr --newmode and use the modeline output here to generate your new video mode. Example xrandr --newmode "1920x1080_60.00" 173.00 1920 2048 2248 2576 1080 1083 1088 1120 -hsync +vsync Now use xrandr --addmode followed by the display id and the new resolution. For example xrandr --addmode VGA-0 1920x1080_60.00 Replace VGA-0 with the appropriate screen connection for your system. It is displayed as part of xrandr output or use xrandr --listmonitors. Replace the resolution and refresh in the cvt command with your desired paramaters.
@orenraveh11627 ай бұрын
Wow this video is perfectly timed i just finished building a retro pc from the mid 2000s
@jethrocode21127 ай бұрын
Did....Did he just use a guitar pick to get the rest of the thermal paste off of the heatsink? My man!
@menotyou83697 ай бұрын
Why do you always suffer through McAfee, when you can just run the uninstaller?
@shodan29587 ай бұрын
I had luck using a hair dryer to unstick the heatsinks on an OG Xbox CPU and GPU. Worked wonders and now have a nicely refurbished and working system on my desk.
@truxttondogyuun7 ай бұрын
What is your watch? I like the watch band you got, is it Apple Watch Ultra?
@miketech10247 ай бұрын
It’s a Series 7 45mm.
@truxttondogyuun7 ай бұрын
@@miketech1024 nice. Thought it was Ultra.. looks bigger on camera. Also I like the watch face.. pride one? I used to have Series 4.
@chrism29647 ай бұрын
It amazes me how long these things just sit somewhere for so many years doing nothing. Who has the space for that? Its much harder to find old stuff like this in the UK and Im guessing its because we have smaller houses so just cant hang on to older stuff for so long.
@arizonapalms7 ай бұрын
Never see many Gateways here in Oz let alone these things! I do hope you thoroughly sanitised that hard drive in the first system after exploring it... Maybe 10 passes in DBAN should be enough? 🤠
@AJComputerServicesUK6 ай бұрын
I’ve found that Maxtor Hard Drives at: 36:45 were not very reliable from that Era to be honest! 🇬🇧
@mikecawood5 ай бұрын
The best thing to do with McAfee is to uninstall it. I remember when I had a Windows Me PC and it actually caused damage to the OS.
@TheGaryOgden7 ай бұрын
Maybe Gateway diverted capacitor funds to R&D for fancy power supply mounting! I got the Broadcom reference!.... seen a few videos on that lately.
@brandonupchurch76287 ай бұрын
In all fairness the capacitor selection was Intel's doing, Gateway mostly used off the shelf Intel boards with their branded locked down BIOS.
@yatapaws7 ай бұрын
Damn my school had hundreds of these when i was there around 15 years ago now. Kinda tempted to pick one of these some time lol
@doomer3712 күн бұрын
When testing the CMOS battery, what do you attach the other probe to?
@flyski74737 ай бұрын
I loved these. Really great design.
@RuruFIN7 ай бұрын
Wonder would that work if you solder the AGP slot on that board yourself.
@lexluthermiester7 ай бұрын
@MikeTech What desoldering alloy do you use? Like you, I'm stateside.
@Dweller7777 ай бұрын
What happened to, "Let's get this out onto a tray. Nice!" oh.. wait.. wrong channel.. LOL! :)
@justintitus87827 ай бұрын
Odd date codes for some of the parts are likely do to said parts being sent to the users for replacement. They designed these things to be totally user serviceable, with tech support to walk them through the whole process. Walked countless users through replacing just about everything in these
@al3x_10m7 ай бұрын
dedustify everything :3 (also you're cute)
@charbo1876 ай бұрын
how come you only use those brushes to remove dust rather than compressed air??
@lukelegg99157 ай бұрын
i have two of these they're very cool
@MrSzalonnaOriginal7 ай бұрын
Where do you get these systems? I need a (super) socket 7 one.
@randysmith70947 ай бұрын
Heat gun on the heatsink for a few seconds usually softens and unsticks hard paste. Desoldering alloy? What? Wow, I've never ever had a cap fall out so easy. You missed a bad cap next to the RAM.
@Junkyard_Dawg7 ай бұрын
I do not know the pinout of AGP, but there do appear to be traces to some of the pin locations. I wonder if soldering in an AGP slot would make it functional, or if the BIOS would restrict this possibility.
@DuneRunnerEnterprises7 ай бұрын
Hi,Mike,i'm glad you bring 'em!!
@pibbles-a-plenty11057 ай бұрын
I used to own a Gateway of that vintage. That's one of their tooless maintenance models. You can change everything including the motherboard without lifting a screw driver. 🙂
@911delorean7 ай бұрын
My dad gave me one of the MATX versions of these years ago. I really miss the case. Looked so cool.
@weepingscorpion87397 ай бұрын
Great video. Interesting, I have heard that opinion about Maxtor drives from several KZbinrs now... I guess I have just been lucky with my drives because they still work. :)
@The.Orchard7 ай бұрын
Those green sliders are a great design. Other than Enlight cases, a few Dell models, and Apple's towers, machines back then weren't usually that easy to take apart like that.
@pierreinthavong1817 ай бұрын
Smart video!😊
@youtubasoarus7 ай бұрын
Really like the design of those cases!
@blakecasimir7 ай бұрын
XP from SP2 really needed 512MB RAM at minimum for a useable experience. Preferably 768MB or more. McAfee certainly wasn't helping on that first system, but the lack of RAM was the bigger problem.
@thewi2kbug7 ай бұрын
Sentry Turret from Portal lol 😅 "Are you still there?"
@gen_angry3 ай бұрын
12:12 I read that date code as the 21st week of 2002
@flamaalt-hx9io7 ай бұрын
is possible to dump the bios rom?
@trashtrash21697 ай бұрын
I have this exact machine in my room. The nearly all silver one.
@stockholm23757 ай бұрын
It looks like another cap went bad by the smaller heat sink after testing the first system…
@cbluebeard7 ай бұрын
I have a Windows 7 install on a Samsung 870 EVO SSD that wont clone (samsung's clone tool) because of too many bad sectors. It still boots and runs 7. How would you go about cloning it using linux or live cd?
@lftdblazer7 ай бұрын
Funny you post this video. I've gotta space cow sitting here with a P4. I've been searching for the correct system restore media to get her up and running again. Do you happen to know anything about it? Just wanna restore it back to factory.
@westtell47 ай бұрын
hope your doing ok.. looking forward to your next video... just wanted to say hi
@miketech10247 ай бұрын
Hey! Doing ok, thanks. Just crazy busy. I did pick up another ewaste haul though! Hoping to finish up the next video in a few days.
@xylobot7 ай бұрын
Dude, you missed greatness in this video by a hair. You should've used the meme with fellow that had fried hair that said "I'm not saying it was Aliens, *_but it was Aliens!!_* "
@josephsager94257 ай бұрын
What's the deal with those headphone and microphone logos on the front? I see two round holes but its unclear if they're "poverty buttons" or if the jacks are just concealed by a dust cover.
@SGTMacBC7 ай бұрын
Oh man. I had one of these. Same case, but just a bit taller with one more drive bay. It was big, black and ugly. Pent4HT. I used it all the way up to 2013.Totally missed the core 2 models. Then graduated to an i5. The motherboard in it was a hotdog. It was pretty good speeds for the era it came from. Plus 2 sata ports on the motherboard. Mine also had AGP slot. No leaking caps when I put it away.
@windowsuser3217 ай бұрын
You sound like my dad, who upgraded from a first gen Pentium 1 to a Pentium 4 directly.
@SidneyCritic7 ай бұрын
12:00 Looks like that date code 0221 is 2002 week 21. I don't think there is a std, so it could be YYWW or WWYY, and they even put them on ICs.
@windowsuser3217 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the Chieftec Dragon cases.
@RalphLuftmann3 ай бұрын
Where have you been for a month?
@plunderydoo17 ай бұрын
Intel 845 GL/GLVA or GVSR. The good old cheapo OEM Boards without AGP-Slot. A big benefit for user: never any compatiblity issues with AGP-Graphic Cards 😁
@williamtech46687 ай бұрын
I knew that maxtor wasnt going to work 😂 had so many troubles in that same era with those