liamC
Member
Registered: 28th Feb 04
User status: Offline
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Intel Celeron 533mhz
6gb HDD
64mb SDRAM
On board graphics
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Marc
Member
Registered: 11th Aug 02
Location: York
User status: Offline
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Amiga 500
7mhz
1mb ram
First pc:
150mhz
1.5gb hdd
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Demo
Member
Registered: 27th Sep 01
Location: south wales Drives: astra sri ecoflex
User status: Offline
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dx1 33mhz i think
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Dan B
Member
Registered: 25th Feb 01
User status: Offline
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Atari 2600 console!
However, if you mean PC, then:
Intel Pentium P233MMX
32MB SDRAM
3.2GB HDD
2MB S3 Virge graphics
15" monitor
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bradgsi
Member
Registered: 12th Jun 06
Location: Leicester,E.Mids Drives: corsa GSi 16V
User status: Offline
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My first one only had 8mg of ram
Now i have 32mb
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Mad Moe
Member
Registered: 14th Jun 01
Location: Northumberland
User status: Offline
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Compaq Presario
CDS520
66Mhz
12MB RAM
520MB HHD
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topshot_2k
Banned
Registered: 1st Dec 03
Location: Northampton Drives: Pug GTi-6
User status: Offline
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AMD K6-2 233Mhz
64MB RAM
ATI graphics
10GB HDD
at the time it was the fastest PC availble and cost £1500!!!!!
[Edited on 07-11-2006 by topshot_2k]
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Cybermonkey
Member
Registered: 22nd Sep 02
Location: Sydney, Australia
User status: Offline
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DX66 66mhz
8MB RAM
2MB VRAM
900MB HDD
2x CD-ROM
Ran Windows 98SE very badly
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Doggy
Member
Registered: 6th Nov 06
Location: Barnsley
User status: Offline
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Sony 286 or if you really want to go back in time ZX spectrum
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Liam
Member
Registered: 19th Jan 06
Location: Stafford
User status: Offline
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200 MHz Processor
9 GB HD
32 MB Ram
This was years ago, still have it in the loft
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jamied
Member
Registered: 27th Oct 03
Location: Marbella,Spain Drives: C63
User status: Offline
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"640k should be more than enough for anybody."
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kz
Member
Registered: 9th Aug 02
Location: Southend, Essex Drives: Mini Cooper S
User status: Offline
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Pentium 1 166Mhz
16Mb RAM
2Gb
1Mb video graphics
later upgraded to 48Mb RAM!
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flash22
Member
Registered: 13th Sep 05
User status: Offline
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Ibm xt 1Mhz with an extra processor card and 40 Mb Hdd oh and not forgetting the 8" floppy drive
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PaulW
Member
Registered: 26th Jan 03
Location: Atherton, Greater Manchester
User status: Offline
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All what I owned...
Commodore C64
0.985 MHz
64Kb RAM, 20Kb ROM
16 + 16 Colors + Border Colors
40 x 25 Charector Display
Acorn A3010
80Mb HDD
4Mb RAM
Custom Risc-OS Hacked ROM
Intel P200 (This set me back near 3k in 1995...)
32Mb RAM
2Gb HDD
17" Monitor
8Mb Matrox G-something Graphics Card
Dual Celeron 500
512Mb RAM
40Gb + 8.6Gb HDD
CDRW
GeForce 2 MX-400 128Mb
Current System - http://monolith.servebeer.com/phpsysinfo
Also have a Laptop - Dell Latitude 110L... is shit
[Edited on 07-11-2006 by PaulW]
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JM_16v
Member
Registered: 17th Oct 05
Location: Essex Drives: GLC63S
User status: Offline
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quote: Originally posted by liamC
Intel Celeron 533mhz
6gb HDD
64mb SDRAM
On board graphics
thats basically my current spec pc
dont see point in upgrading it runs Cs fine
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drunkenfool
Member
Registered: 7th Feb 03
Location: Hereford Drives: Audi R8 V8
User status: Offline
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P1 75mhz
2GB HDD
32MB RAM
14.4 kbps modem
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Alex
Member
Registered: 9th Feb 03
Location: Nottingham
User status: Offline
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486 DX2-66mhz
540mb hdd
4mb ram
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Marc
Member
Registered: 11th Aug 02
Location: York
User status: Offline
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Not forgetting an old Texas TI-99 we have:
16 bit
3.3mhz
16k RAM
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IntaCepta
Member
Registered: 25th Mar 02
Location: Mill Hill East, Greater London
User status: Offline
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386 machine.
think it had 8mb ram.
win3.1.
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ed
Member
Registered: 10th Sep 03
User status: Offline
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I had a BBC micro when I was little
* 2 MHz MOS Technology 6502A processor (6512A in model B+)
* 32 KB ROM (48 KB in model B+ due to the presence by default of the WD1770 disk filing system 16 KB "DFS" ROM) + (16 KB MOS (Machine Operating System), 16 KB read-only paged space defaulting to the BBC BASIC ROM)
* 32 KB RAM (16 KB in model A, 64 KB in model B+)
* Full-travel keyboard with a top row of ten red-orange function keys f0 - f9
* Highly configurable graphics display based on the Motorola 6845 CRTC. Eight graphics modes were provided by the system ROM:
* Modes 0 to 6 could display a choice of colours from a logical palette of sixteen, though only eight colours were available; the eight basic RGB colours (0-black, 1-red, 2-green, 3-yellow, 4-blue, 5-magenta, 6-cyan, 7-white) and eight colours in a flashing state, (8-black/white, 9-red/cyan, 10-green/magenta, 11-yellow/blue, 12-blue/yellow, 13-magenta/green, 14-cyan/red, 15-white/black)
* Mode 7's Teletext capability was provided by a Mullard SAA5050 Teletext chip:
* Four independent sound channels (one noise and 3 melodic) using the Texas Instruments SN76489 sound chip
* Built-in hardware support included:
* Sideways (paged) 8K or 16K ROMs (of which the BBC BASIC ROM was the only one supplied by default): up to 16 were supported by the OS but only 4 by the standard hardware. Add-on boards were made by a variety of companies to allow use of the full 16.
* Tape interface (with a relay operated motor control), using a variation of the Kansas City standard data encoding scheme running at 1200 or 300 baud
* Centronics parallel printer (model B only)
* Serial communication (using RS-423, a superset of RS-232)
* Display output for TV, RGB or 1v p-p video monitor, colour or monochrome (link S38)
* A DB15 pin with four 12 bit analogue inputs (suitable for two joysticks), two inputs suitable for pushbuttons and an input for a light pen
* Proprietary "Tube" interface for external second CPU (options included a 3 MHz extra 6502, a Zilog Z80 for e.g. CP/M, an NS32016, an ARM1, and others)
* A 16 pin IDC style "user port" (not in model A, by default) with 8 general purpose digital I/O pins and two special/trigger sensitive digital pins
* generic expansion through the "1 MHz bus"
* Use of floppy disc drives required the installation of a DFS ROM (disk filing system) and a disk controller card based on the Intel 8271 chip (later, and on the model B+ (as standard), the WD1770 AND WD1772)
* Via "The Tube" a second CPU could be attached (including a 3 MHz extra 6502, 4 MHz WDC65C102, a 4 MHz Zilog Z80 for e.g. CP/M, an NS32016, an ARM1, and others)
* The default Model A/B motherboard could also be upgraded by adding the following components:
* "Econet" large-scale low-cost networking system - around 100 Kbit/s using the Motorola 6854 - standard on US model
* Serial ROM cartridge filing system via a slot to the left of the keyboard - usually fitted as part of the Speech Upgrade
* Speech synthesis hardware based around the Texas Instruments TMS5220 - standard on US model. (Very few people bothered with this upgrade - the synthesiser was rather limited, and some games programmers succeeded in producing more versatile software speech synthesis using only the standard sound hardware)
* Reset Button (It is doubtful if anyone ever added this, as a complete hardware reset can be accomplished by pressing BREAK on the keyboard at any time, even if the machine has crashed.)
[Edited on 07-11-2006 by ed]
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Cosmo
Member
Registered: 29th Mar 01
Location: Im the real one!
User status: Offline
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Cant really remember all the specs, I remember it had something like 1/2MB RAM and it cost about £200 to get it upto 1.5MB
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