I can't really explain it, but I just love this video in particular. I can watch it over, and over, and over again all day and never get tired of it.
@JakeFromLateFarm9 жыл бұрын
Pretty neat find, Bill! Strangely enough, that drop-down CD drive almost reminds me of the time when I discovered how the cupholder works in an old Saab. Open!!...Close!! Open!!...Close!! It's just a cup holder... but OMG ITZ SOOO KOOL THO!!! Hahaha
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+peculiarmadman It's nice to know I'm not alone in terms of being easily amused. :-P
@hirez19722 жыл бұрын
We had a meeting room that doubled as an IT training room. These were kept in a cupboard and were quickly set up whenever needed. Loved them. Very neat. Got two in my loft.
@KrunchyTheClown788 жыл бұрын
I really like the lengths you go to to get information, or customer service, and even the lengths you think about going to LOL. Thats dedication!
@LZGAjeepslav7994 жыл бұрын
Nothing more nostalgic than the Windows 2000 startup sound. I grew up on XP which to this day is still nostalgic for me. But my first computer was a Bluelight Special my family got from Kmart when I was still an infant (would’ve been late 2000- early 2001), preinstalled with Windows 98. They gave it to me to have something to learn on when I was maybe 3-5 years old. One of the first things I somehow managed to do was update the OS to Windows 2000. After maybe a years worth of service, a power surge from a transformer fried the Celeron processor in it among other appliances we had. They got me a new PC, it was Dell Dimensions (can’t remember the exact model), running on a Core 2 Duo which at the time was blazing fast compared to the Celeron and Pentium CPUS and came preinstalled with Windows XP. Compared to today’s technology when it comes to computers, those PCs were about as slow as a grandma on a Sunday drive. But for the time, they was quite good, and for guys like me who were born in that era, it’s still very nostalgic and kinda saddening to see the breed of old PC’s dying out and being cast out on curbsides. Emulators may not be the best but I’ve used one on my current PC to run 2000 and XP and run the legacy softwares they supported.
@dgerdi8 жыл бұрын
Thanks for your review of this PC. At moments like these I wish, I would have a bigger apartement to collect those old computers.
@leocomerford6 жыл бұрын
It's a lovely little all-in-one in a classic IBM industrial design. Thanks for the video.
@RosePhoto19 жыл бұрын
Bill, you are creating a very important historical record of these older machines. I really enjoy these videos. Thanks for your dedication.
@iuqiddis9 жыл бұрын
Wow, thanks for bringing back some old, but good, memories. This was my workhorse for many years at a previous employer. Even for the time it was not very powerful but quite capable, and out of the box it had some nice features. The screen and the speakers are the best part, and I remember other people looking rather enviously at me while they were still on their huge CRT monitors.
@Anthrit9 жыл бұрын
That is a really neat find. Would make a perfect kitchen machine to look up recipes. Wait you are in the kitchen. Off to a good start already.
@skchen839 жыл бұрын
Back in the day.... I ordered some of these when I was working at University of Illinois Chicago. They were definitely interesting. Our department head used it on his desk. This video sure brings back memories!
@Monster404ftp5 жыл бұрын
Glad we can classify this one under the real computer category, hence the LPT1 and PS/2 ports. :)
@noelj629 жыл бұрын
Someone is a Dave Jones (EEVBlog) fan I presume. The computer is a pretty compact and nice design. Thanks for sharing.
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+noelj62 No, I don't follow his videos. The saying "Bob's Your Uncle" is actually pretty common. I knew of and used it long before KZbin.
@user996739 жыл бұрын
@uxwbill this same exact thing happened to me. I went to my local goodwill and noticed an iMac G3... which was labelled as a television...which even though it was in the original (!) box, they still did not catch on that this was in fact, a computer.
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+AlanD996 That is the most awesome Goodwill related story I've heard in a long time! Or maybe ever. Great stuff!
@orinokonx019 жыл бұрын
Oh that is an awesome find!! Thanks for sharing this. Really unique design really and very IBM. Looks like a solid win2k system too! I would have been very happy with that system back in the day, especially since it has PCI too. Glad to see it's in good hands now and not trashed.
@scgamer24429 жыл бұрын
I love how that dvd rom drive opens so slowly and dramatic. I have always wanted one of these all in one point of sale machines and I really hope one turns out at my local recycling centre some day!
@worldgate9899 жыл бұрын
Those things usually get used as POS.
@youtubasoarus9 жыл бұрын
+worldgate989 My first thought as well. PoS device or Kiosk. Many have a cash drawer and receipt printer attachment.
@alexmurdie94789 жыл бұрын
Yeah, at a shop near where I live they got one of these or at least simular model that has a cash drawer attached, it's quite a interesting little system as I get to have a play with it when they have problems with it.
@worldgate9899 жыл бұрын
***** Probably under it yea.
@compgeke9 жыл бұрын
+worldgate989 +youtubasoarus While you could use this one as a POS, it wouldn't interface with any of the IBM equipment. For that you'd have to go with one of their SurePOS units which had the odd 12\24V USB, odd proprietary connectors, liquid proofing, etc. An example of one I own is this: imgur.com/a/6lCmg
@worldgate9899 жыл бұрын
Wow did they really put corsair ram in those?
@ahsokatano60598 жыл бұрын
great find, luckey that you found all the parts. now you have a fully working all in one pc.
@Browningate9 жыл бұрын
It's interesting that you brought up TV prop computers because it just happens to be that a ThinkPad laptop that may have been used on an episode of the series "Chuck" sold on eBay not long ago. It was posted up on the ThinkPads community forums because it had white Windows flags where the ThinkPad emblem should have been (as had been seen on some TV shows as a Microsoft promotional from around 2010, give or take a couple years) and because it was confirmed to be the same model featured on the show. This so intrigued one member that he actually bought it and shared some higher resolution pictures of it. The computer ended up being a Colorware custom design, and while anyone could have theoretically had his or her ThinkPad customized that way by Colorware, the only people who would have logical reason to do so would be the production company. While the trail runs cold at this point, there is still speculation as to whether or not it was the actual laptop used on the show.
@pettttson4 жыл бұрын
I love the sounds of that model m keyboard you used with the computer
@BBC6009 жыл бұрын
A DVD Drive! How well would it play a movie?
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+BBC600 It ought to work perfectly well for playing a movie. Higher end Pentium III processors could perform DVD video decoding in software easily, so it should be nothing for a Pentium 4.
@albertpratt49993 жыл бұрын
I used too work for ELO Touchscreens in Rochester, NY and serviced a few of those. The Unknown PCI device is an ELO touch driver board. We made many sub assemblies for major companies products. I Have a Netvista 6274-12U I dragged out of a closet for a little tinker time.
@uxwbill3 жыл бұрын
If this in fact has a touch screen, that would be very interesting and useful. I'm surprised it'd be implemented as a PCI expansion device, rather than USB or serial.
@albertpratt49993 жыл бұрын
@@uxwbill I think it does use serial for input. Currently setting up an emubox with mine, batocera hopefully if not I always have other linux distro and old school dos but dos comes with driver issues
@TheCarterHour9 жыл бұрын
Nice Find...Love all the I am sorry to say vintage computer equipment.
@nerdyorganist9 жыл бұрын
I love small all-in-one computers. I have different computers throughout my home that do different tasks and an all in one placed in a central locations is perfect to use as a Remote Desktop Client. I'm actually using one of the small blue iMacs to connect remotely to windows PCs and it works just as well as a PC using a free piece of software from Microsoft.
@Wehiremonkeys2 жыл бұрын
In my RM Ascend (much newer 775 P4 @ 3.4Ghz) I had something similar with the monitor. What appeared to be happening was that there was some kind of VGA inverter board in the case along with 2 speakers. This would offer a video connection to the monitor in some weird propriety format and convert whatever the speakers used to attach to a volume control on the front panel.
@EdFrankes9 жыл бұрын
That is a really nice find! Allthough i'm not collecting computers, i wouldn't pass on that for that kind of money! Looks to be in very good shape too, cool!
@windowsuser3219 жыл бұрын
I always get excited when I see a computer-related uxwbill video in my subscriptions box...I do like your other videos, it's just I like computer-related ones the most. Also, hamfest 2015?
@1912RamblerFan019 жыл бұрын
When I interned at the local newspaper office, the manager placed this old (from around 2003 or so) IBM ThinkCenter on my desk. That thing was slower than molasses in the dead of winter - it took it 10 minutes to boot into Windows, around 15 minutes to load Notepad. I tried opening Internet Explorer and Firefox, but neither would open. Thankfully they upgraded me from that thing to a first-gen MacMini running 10.5 or something around their. That PowerPC G4-based MacMini was so much faster than that IBM.
@JRobert1111119 жыл бұрын
A Pentium 4? I'd scream and run away from it! But wow, do you get around great with just a keyboard, I'm impressed!
@applepinez9 жыл бұрын
Gotta love these awesome long videos!
@voca-chan79533 жыл бұрын
Focusing is the sole reason I love using a DSLR. It’s pretty fast, or I could do it manually easy.
@andrewgong27949 жыл бұрын
Hello uxwbill. I'm curious, what linux distro did you use on your pxe network at 22:12? Is it some rescue disk or something similar to Trinity?
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+Andrew Gong ERPXE can boot into several different systems, including Windows, DOS, Linux and more. The server itself is built upon Debian Linux.
@mrnemo2049 жыл бұрын
Actually today, I saw a old netvista used to run a flight simulator.
@crawford60999 жыл бұрын
That's a cool find! I was wondering what kind of computer that was! Also those are hard to find even on ebay! I am looking for cheap touch screens to just have as a collectable! Know any good web sites that sell old cash registers or computers! Thanks again for the suggestion on the mac computers as well!
@xaer0knight9 жыл бұрын
that's what I call a score! bravo! I have been striking out at used shops and even my PCs lately... Sellers at amazon need to learn to package and label processors better! PS/2! PS/2! PS/2! the crowd goes wild! I still love em!
@Castaa8 жыл бұрын
I have this very computer as well. I bought it on ebay years ago to put MAME on it. Very solidly built and still runs XP. Going to up grade it's memory with another 512 PC-133 module. Should make it run much quicker. :) With the most recent ATI GPU drivers, it still runs Quake 3 like a champ.
@thelazywanderer_jt6 жыл бұрын
Castaa I would suggest trying something from the likes of UT2003. Quake 3 is easy to run, my old pc used to run it really smoothly, and I had a meagre FX 5200 to work with.
@weisnoobs8 жыл бұрын
" uxwbill tells a story " , that should a series on it's own. :P
@cadpietre43788 жыл бұрын
that is a POS/POP machine from a supermarket. it used to have a money drawer and/or printer attached to that parralel port. Check if the screen supports touch :)))), it might if all system drivers are installed correctly.
@Lachlant19848 жыл бұрын
I would think that the reason why the optical drive drop down mechanism is controllable in software would be so that you can eject the disc by clicking on the drive letter in Windows Explorer. It's possible that when you do that, the drive drops down if it's previously been retracted, then the drawer opens.
@Time4Technology8 жыл бұрын
That was my thought as well.
@youdud449 жыл бұрын
Yeah, we're gonna need a 10-hour loop of Bill pushing up and lowering the CD drive ASAP.
@DevonsChanel9 жыл бұрын
Interesting, I didn't know they made all in one machines back then, Learn something every day lol
@Bluethunderboom9 жыл бұрын
Speaking of the HDD (Hard Disk Drive), I've seen some certain hard drives had a similar brand names like IBM, Hitachi, and Toshiba had used the type of the hard drive like desktop known as "Deskstar," and the Laptop HDD known as "Travelstar," I just happen to curious why that the hard drive are related to the brand name that are look the same but the logo are different and the model on the case are look quite either are the same or different. On this Built-in IBM Computer, where was it made? And have you heard that Dell had also made a Built-in computer two that they called, Dell Inspiron One?
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+Bluethunderboom Hitachi bought the Deskstar hard drive line from IBM. After that things are less clear. Western Digital bought Hitachi's hard disk division and still sells hard drives under the Hitachi name. And yet Toshiba seems to have ended up with the actual tooling and manufacturing plants for the Deskstar/Travelstar drives.
@Kenny-bw2cz5 жыл бұрын
Make more computer videos.. these are a joy to watch for any geek!!!
@Madness8329 жыл бұрын
About 9-10 years ago, my brother had acquired one of those. Worked, but had an intermittent problem w/ the display: a red vertical bar would appear right-of-center. It had been upgraded to XP.
@RubyIsBored9 жыл бұрын
speaking of computers at goodwill, i went to a goodwill one day and i actually saw a compaq presario either SFF or desktop machine, and i believe it got there because it had very boombox looking speakers on the front, it was 8 dollars, but sadly, i had forgotten my wallet, and also i was exercising that day, i took a bike
@krist0sh9 жыл бұрын
I've got a couple of IBM SurePOS systems that are very much alike this thing. They are, however, much more designed for use in a POS environment due to the lack of a CD-rom drive and non-standard RJ45 serial ports. These have touch screens, and are therefore interesting to use as terminals even today, but due to their lacking processing power they're really just useful for terminal use. The last one is a bit newer than the elder one ('07), but surprisingly still uses ancient hardware for it's time, sporting an Celeron 478 processor. I recently recapped the motherboard as several of the capacitors besides the CPU had failed, and the system seems to run correctly. I also found a very nice IBM POS keyboard with it, which expect for it's significantly small buttons, is a very decent membrane keyboard with relatively good feedback.
@Jallge9 жыл бұрын
Holy cow! That thing is awesome!! Finally. An all in one system that I actually want to own. As if I didn't already have enough that I wanted to buy off of eBay! :P I'm pretty sure I've seen those used as POS machines in a department store here. The ones I saw were running Windows 7, no less! I actually like the look of the big bezel. The glossy expansion cover on the back is a typical design quirk from IBM at the time. The older ThinkPad models from around 2001-2004 used a glossy black trim piece for the power and volume control buttons. I think it looks nice. Helps to break up the matte black, or midnight blue-ish. Whatever colour of plastic it happens to be. I find your idea about possibly contacting a TV production company to obtain a prop very interesting. I've always wondered how long they keep stuff they use on TV. I figure they must have a cache of it for period production and whatnot. The optical drive lowering thing is just bitchin'. It's like something you'd see on MTV Cribs in slow motion, constantly repeated for a few seconds, lol. On the other hand, props can end up on eBay! forum.thinkpads.com/viewtopic.php?f=48&t=119557
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+MrMaguire Even though it is "only" an early Pentium 4, I thought it was interesting enough to pick up and ultimately explore. Windows 7 is probably doable, though I'd envision it to be on the outer limits of what hardware like this would be capable of running well. (Maximum RAM is probably 1GB if memory serves.) Some of the various television studios have massive warehouses of props. I've seen pictures of the Warner Brothers and Universal Studios props storage areas, and they are amazing. (I don't remember seeing any computers in the pictures, however.) Universal in particular seemingly still has the original desk that was used in The Rockford Files.
@Natures_Intentions7 жыл бұрын
Awesome videos man I have worked on computer's for over 20 years.
@Dewotto8 жыл бұрын
That power supply would even make the Colecovision blush.
@daviddadut46202 жыл бұрын
hi nice netvista x41 this :) but i don,t understand from netvista x41 only 1.6ghz p4 cpu treatment and not upgraded and vga upgrade solution this? my coolection only netvista x40i inside with p3 667mhz cpu 512mb sd ram and 40gb hard drive
@NanoMapper9 жыл бұрын
awesome video and for my bday cant be better than this hahah keep up the good work :)
@jeffk77349 жыл бұрын
Nice find especially from Goodwill!
@jhigdem9 жыл бұрын
Another outstanding video, Thanks!
@KekoFurryFox9 жыл бұрын
IBM predicted Windows vista!
@PhantomWorksStudios8 жыл бұрын
My first os was 95 before I upgraded to 98 when I was 8 years old. I ended up with 2k when I was 12 and I loved it since then and I still do. Now I use 7 and 2008 server but I still go back to 2000 on a spare PC to relive the fun memories :)
@LOLZpersonok9 жыл бұрын
I've always thought the IBM NetVista systems were kind of cool. I'm still waiting to come across one to have for myself. I remember in one of my schools we had a few kicking around. I had no idea that IBM ever made an all-in-one system. That kind of reminds me that not too long ago I saw an Apple eMac in person for the first time too, there's a vacuum shop in my city where they're still using one as their main system.
@hackerinsidetm42717 жыл бұрын
There was a tower version of these machines that were around for some time in the early 2000's. They're certainly funny machines and they tend to show a little personality with them.
@dosman013029 жыл бұрын
Nice machine Bill, as usual!
@OfficialiGamer9 жыл бұрын
This reminds me (since its sorta of a rarity) When I was younger, Toshiba made a desktop PC and it either the monitor or the tower had a built in radio. Do you remember seeing those? UXWBill? I would love to find one again. My friend's dad had it.
@admiralalcatraz60809 жыл бұрын
Quite interested as to whether the motherboard is a standard 'mid' tower motherboard or is it tailored to fit into this model? Also was shocked when you opened it as i expected laptop ram sockets to save space....
They did well on designing the wind tunnel for the Pentium 4
@abczyx9 жыл бұрын
Thanks for yet another awesome upload, Bill. Haven't seen one of these AIO NetVistas working in quite some time now. If my memory serves me correctly, the last one I worked on had a power supply built into the base and the ODD release was mechanical instead of electro-mechanical. Since you mentioned it in this video, is there a possibility of a "Fun with Wake-on-LAN" video from you anytime soon? :-)
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+foobar I'm glad you enjoyed the video. DD-WRT contains what looks to be support for firing magic packets at dozy computers, but I've never tried it or any other method.
@yorgle119 жыл бұрын
At a glance, those short purple capacitors look like Sanyo Os-Con polymers. IBM would be the type to use those, especially back then, and certainly a small form factor chassis with a P4 inside would be a good application for them. Those caps are expensive but practically bulletproof. I'm kind of amazed this thing still works. I would have expected the heat in such a small case, the high level of integration, and it's dependence on a very old LCD panel would have ensured it's death by now. I think that may also be the time frame when IBM Deskstar hard drives developed a bad reputation, but this one has kept working. Seems it's only life threatening "failure" was dependence on a nonstandard PSU, but you were able to resolve that. Those were the early days of desktop LCD monitors, so I think the size of the bezel is typical for the time. I don't think the spec for Express video card power connectors was written yet, but if this happens to have the same pinout it would be an interesting coincidence. I've seen a similar connector on an old cable modem and a Cisco router. The Cisco feeds both 12V and 5V through it, not sure what the modem does.
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+yorgle11 I think you're right about the capacitors. Rather surprisingly, maybe even miraculously, this system really doesn't get all that hot in operation. I've had nothing but very good service from all my early 2000s LCD panels, most of which are quite overbuilt compared to what's on the market today. Even most of my 1990s laptops still have excellent displays with good backlighting. Even if not intentional, and I'm sure by virtue of the reason you point out that it wasn't, the pinout is standard PCI Express. What I wasn't sure of at the time was whether or not this thing ran from a single voltage. Color coding of the wiring tended to suggest that it did, but that's not always gospel and I'd have hated to burn it out.
@Krivulda8 жыл бұрын
Wait a minute! The Rat King - was that annotation to Terry Pratchett's The Amazing Maurice and his Educated Rodents?
@canadaeast6 жыл бұрын
William, your knowledge of computers is admirable. Have you been schooled on the subject or mainly self taught ?
@uxwbill6 жыл бұрын
Almost entirely self taught.
@LBXComputers9 жыл бұрын
My P4 3.2 HT is Fanless ;) has a massive heat sink on it though. I'll do a video of it soon over on my channel. Did you figure out the software eject yet? I wonder if right-clicking on the drive in My Computer try's to eject the tray pops the drive down first or simply tries to open the tray whilst it is up in the caddy?
@EmorySmith7 жыл бұрын
Pretty cool! I've got five of these that were given to me. They were used as POS terminals and they have the ELO touch screens. The PCI slots all have IBM 56k MODEMs installed. Yes, TWO MODEMs per machine! They also have credit card readers that plug into the PS/2 kbd port and have a wedge so the reader and kbd can both be used. I had hoped to use these for dedicated music players but the touch screens generate quite a bit of noise. Too bad! Several years ago I tried upgrading the RAM but they didn't like the memory I had at the time. I've now got several pounds of DIMMs that I will play with. Hopefully, I can get them up to a gig or two and put XPSP3 on and use one as a dedicated machine for running a Willem EPROM programmer. My manuals show a serial port on the main board but they do NOT have the pins installed. I was thinking about soldering wires straight to the board but watching you go through the BIOS, there was no comport setup. :( I have the 22jt37a and 22jy36usa BIOSes and all drivers. I had ideas of using one as a dedicated serial terminal running DOS and Telix. BTW, the power supplies are 12V @ 7A. You could put one in a car!
@casualretrocollector6 жыл бұрын
i remember seeing this being reviewed in a PC mag in 1999
@SuPerbMusiCFan9 жыл бұрын
It may have a large bezel so you could stick sticky notes on it. You can see adhesive trases on the upper left corner. Or jt may just be for case integrity.
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+SuPerbMusiCFan Those traces are all that's left of an asset tag that I removed.
@SYIBOI8 жыл бұрын
So what actually became of this glorious beast? Is there anything it would be really useful for anymore?
@plossalypse8 жыл бұрын
I still use this case to this day
@thedebug38669 жыл бұрын
I have a netvista, but the problem is it's got some strange video problem, at least that's what I think it is. It starts booting, displays a windows xp splash screen, and goes black. It may also be the memory is bad, I dunno.
@1980sGamer9 жыл бұрын
There should be a recovery partition that can be accessed by pressing F11 while the system is starting up. There's one on an IBM Netvista from around the same time that also runs Win2k that I have.
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+1980sGamer Thanks for the information! I'll give it a try, and if it pans out, I'll do the recovery and image the hard drive immediately afterwards.
@1980sGamer9 жыл бұрын
***** You're welcome. Always nice to see one of my favourite KZbinrs make another computer video. :)
@1980sGamer9 жыл бұрын
+uxwbill Well it's about 2 months later. Did it work out for you?
@gottathinkupanewone9 жыл бұрын
You find the coolest stuff!
@adey88splace9 жыл бұрын
One of my customers had one of those. It was a P3 running windows 98. It was a nice idea but I guess it didn't take hold. Maybe it was ahead of its' time.
@KrissBartlett9 жыл бұрын
thanks Bill was great I have simular mother boards but not like yours and I actually followed all what you did except when you went in and cracked the password very good thanks
@stonent9 жыл бұрын
+Kriss Bartlett He used the old NTPASSWD boot disk. pogostick.net/~pnh/ntpasswd/
@KrissBartlett9 жыл бұрын
ohh ok I pulled the pin on mine thanks dude
@KrissBartlett9 жыл бұрын
actually thanks I did need that ill use that to thanks very much went to the page you said
@Trance889 жыл бұрын
I believe a lot of these were used with cash registers. I also believe some of these actually had touch screens too!
@Elfnetdesigns9 жыл бұрын
The Goodwill here only sells clothing and TV sets and the TV sets are old CRT sets marked way up high because they think they are worth it as part of the whole old TV / radio restoration thing. a 1998 name branded Funi CRT TV DOES NOT classify as an antique tv set as that label it.. They will accept computers for donation but they have a computer guy in store who cleans them up and sells them on ebay for a 200% mark-up. The whole thing is a scam when it come to electronics here. Now I remember getting a pallet of these IBM Netvista machines from the state auction for $50 with all the cords, input devices, OEM disks, manuals, etc. back in 2009. I sold them all off for $50 each, so needless to say I made my money back on them.. What you can try is putting a new intel core i3 ir AMD AM3+ cpu on a micro-atx board in that case and a bigger hard drive and a low profile video card and make some sort of lan party type low tier gaming rig out of it.
@unknownsoldier41569 жыл бұрын
That system will fit nicely with your Dell Dimension 2300, although it's retired.
@Lachlant19849 жыл бұрын
I wonder what kind of keyboard and mouse this computer came with. Do you think IBM would have shipped Model M keyboards to match this computer?
@WaybackTECH9 жыл бұрын
Seems like a good candidate for the Fortress of Amplitude
@PhantomWorksStudios8 жыл бұрын
ok now this may have been mentioned before but im still new to his channel, but does anyone think he sounds or even reminds you of don knots?
@uxwbill8 жыл бұрын
You should be proud of yourself, because never before have I been likened to Don Knotts. (That said, I don't particularly care for being likened to others, no matter who. I'm me, I sound like me, and that yam that.)
@circletech77459 жыл бұрын
When are you gonna make that video about setting up a PXE boot server? I repaired computers over the summer as my job and this would be VERY useful to me (I can't find instructions on how to set up ERPXE anywhere). Thanks for the video anyway Uxwbill, hope you have a good x-mas.
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+Dylan 873 It'll take a lot of prep work, a lot of which comes in the form of clearing off my workbench in the back room. I'm not sure. I hope to do it sometime in the near future.
@circletech77459 жыл бұрын
OK sounds fair (we are all very busy). Can you point me to a tutorial about installing it then?
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+Dylan 873 ERPXE's Wiki has some decent instructions -- at least they worked for me. The only "gotcha" I remember having to deal with is that of what packages to install. I thought that the SELinux stuff was necessary, but it isn't. A vanilla Debian installation works fine as a basis, although you can use any distro that you'd like with some adjustment. I used the Debian Stable branch on a Dell Dimension B110.
@lovelaga6 жыл бұрын
Bill, can I replace the pentium 4 with a dual core. Both have a 775. Thank you.
@uxwbill6 жыл бұрын
No. Even if you could, there's little point to doing so.
@jturner7189 жыл бұрын
Perhaps the NetVista is a descendent of the PC300GL series. My 300GL has a model number of 6287-40U.
@jturner7189 жыл бұрын
Also, with 256K of cache it is almost certainly a Willamette chip.
@jturner7188 жыл бұрын
Looked up the PC300GL series on a whim, turns out it WAS replaced by the NetVista.
@K1ll3rM4st3r9 жыл бұрын
I'd guess that this computer was pretty expensive brand new, given some of the expandability capabilities given, and the ports, the quality of the display for 2002 is really good in my opinion even over the camera. This is actually a decent all in one, i wouldn't want a modern one though.
@Quiparounddreams19999 жыл бұрын
what I would like to request ( because I am new to this and dont know the proper way how to do it.) is a question , have you made any progress with the white buick, because after you made the more farm cars adventures video of you, bizzarefurhead and the keykeeper trying to see if it will crank I didnt see an update video so I would just like to know.
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+isaac roberts The white Buick is long gone. I don't have any farm cars right now.
@Edvinas_channel9 жыл бұрын
Really interesting find! I looks pretty beaten-up for it's OS state. Maybe it was reinstalled?
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+TheEdvinazard It's in better condition than the video would suggest. It's dusty more than anything else, because this is and always has been a dusty old house. I cleaned it up prior to making this video, yet it wasn't that good of a job.
@alistairstuart20099 жыл бұрын
where do you find drivers for this computer? I have a IBM NetVista 8305-2EG and I cant find working drivers for xp or 2000. great video as always very interesting
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+alistairstuart2009 I haven't had to find any, but this is new enough that Lenovo *might* still have them. I'll see if I can shake anything loose.
@ValorZeroAdvent9 жыл бұрын
I don't think you should be surprised. To a layman, they would think that's just a big fat monitor. Someone who's more discerning or is experienced with computers would otherwise know just by glancing at it. I don't think Goodwill emplyees are too bothered with the details.
@DarkenMoon979 жыл бұрын
It probably doesn't matter to you very much, but this PC appears to be equipped with a optical drive that can read Gamecube and Wii games.
@rockymm108 жыл бұрын
DarkenMoon I doubt that
@zyrgle9 жыл бұрын
Nice find! I would try Lubuntu, Puppy, and AntiX on it... just for kicks and giggles.
@notapplicable32209 жыл бұрын
Just wondering, what's your favorite computer that you own and your dream computer?
@cee128d9 жыл бұрын
I gotta get me one of those just for the drop down optical drive.
@kirbster579 жыл бұрын
I had a business donate me one of those, only it wasn't the all-in-one edition it was a (how I explain it) flat tower, it had no operating system but a Windows XP certification sticker and a Windows 200 licence.
@Lollllllz9 жыл бұрын
whoa 6 usb ports on a Willamette era machine that's is just about ddr and agp slots slot short of a top spec machine then heck it supports up to 2gb ram (according to the ibm brochure on the web).......could that pci device be for the optional touch screen ?i wonder if a north wood could be persuaded to work with this machine ?
@uxwbill9 жыл бұрын
+James Mike A very early Northwood processor might be supported. I don't know for sure. I'm not sure about the PCI device either. My best guess is some sort of possible system management functionality. I don't think there would be touch screen logic present (or enabled) since this example hasn't got one.
@JohnSmith-xq1pz7 жыл бұрын
James Mike Better than a Prescott lol.
@bradleyelders79047 жыл бұрын
Homer voice: CD goes up, CD goes down. CD goes up, CD goes down...
@C-128 жыл бұрын
Did anybody else notice that the IBM Rapid Restore PC logo had and IBM ThinkCentre on it?
@lululombard9 жыл бұрын
Could you verify your theory about this panel ? How is it connected to the motherboard ? I'm interested. Anyway good video !