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- MCP server with stdio transport for local use - Search episodes, transcripts, hosts, and series - 4,511 episodes with metadata and transcripts - Data loader with in-memory JSON storage 🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
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Episode: 3117
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Title: HPR3117: The joy of retro computing
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3117/hpr3117.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-24 17:09:14
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3117 for Tuesday, 14 July 2020. Today's show is entitled,
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The Joy of Retro Computing. It is hosted by Nightwise and is about 32 minutes long
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and carries a clean flag. The summary is,
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Nightwise talks about the old computers in his attic and how it is a lovely geek getaway.
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This episode of HPR is brought to you by archive.org.
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Support universal access to all knowledge by heading over to archive.org forward slash donate.
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Hey there, Hacker Public Radio. It's been a while since I've done one of these. This is Nightwise from the Nightwise.com podcast.
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Checking in. It's been a while but I'm on my way to work in Brussels and I'm taking the car.
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It's been quite a couple of, I think, two years since I've done this.
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Mostly I commute by train and of course since the COVID thing I've been working from home mostly.
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So the new rule is going to be that we have to head into work occasionally.
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So today is one of those occasional days. And because of the fact that when I'm taking the train,
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I'm using quite a busy public transport for about three hours a day,
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especially with the rate of contamination at this moment I decided,
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no, I'll just go by car. So for once in a while, just taking the car and driving to Brussels is fine,
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as long as you don't have to do it every day.
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Perfect time to sit back and pick up an old hobby, recording podcasts in the car.
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I've done this for a while.
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Spec'd out to do everything that I need. I'm just using a lapel bike.
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So excuse the road noise, but that's not really what HBR is all about,
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about high definition quality.
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What I wanted to talk to you guys about today is about a little donation that I got.
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I'm an IT consultant, I have my own company, and I'm always working with technology,
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and of course when you're a geek and you're a nerd, a geek actually.
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You also like working with technology when you're free time.
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All of my computers are kind of centered around work.
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I either work as a contractor for client or I work for my own clients,
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so all the laptops that I have, I have a MacBook Pro and have an X1 ThinkPad,
|
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are all like spec'd out with stuff relating to work.
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And especially since I've been working from home so much whenever I look at those two machines,
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I go like work and there's stuff to be done.
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So I decided, especially during the lockdown, to give myself a little play pen,
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where when I use those computers in that room, I've got a hobby room upstairs,
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it's all about play.
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And one of the things that I've done to step back out of the busy rat race
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of modern day technology was to give myself technology that just couldn't handle modern day technology.
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So I've been kind of going into retro computing a little bit.
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To picture this or to frame this story, I would have to go back to the beginning of my IT career.
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It was 1993, when I'm after owning a Commodore 64 and a MEGA for games,
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I needed a computer to write some essays for school.
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And I got my first Pentium 75 running Windows 95.
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I kind of used that computer and I was kind of getting interested in computers again for a couple of years,
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but mostly using it for school when I met my current wife.
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And her dad was a major, major computer, well not geek.
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I remember meeting the man for the first time and I had a little problem with my computer.
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||||
And it was the first time I met the father of my girlfriend.
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||||
It's always a very intimidating moment.
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And I had mentioned to my girlfriend, she said, my dad can take a look at that.
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So, you know, I met the man and I said, I'm really, I've got, you know, problem.
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I said, oh yeah, bring it on, we'll take a look at it.
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||||
So, you know, next time we go up, take my little tower up his arm, walk it upstairs,
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and I follow him and he opens this door.
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And this door is a massive room filled with computers.
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It's 1996, he's got every imaginable machine there.
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From a TRS-80 to a PC-10 Commodore to Pentium's, Pentium 2's,
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dual core machines, the whole thing.
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It's like Valhalla.
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It's filled with discs and illegal copies of software.
|
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It's filled with books with all kinds of stuff.
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It's this massive, massive hobby room.
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And this is where I learned my trade.
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||||
He taught me everything I know.
|
||||
And a year later, I finished my studies and went to work into the computer shop
|
||||
that he started to, he helped to start up.
|
||||
So, I got into IT thanks to him.
|
||||
Fast forward 25 years to the current date, the man's retired.
|
||||
He still has a laptop, but he's not really into computers anymore.
|
||||
The day he stopped teaching, he kind of stopped geeking out.
|
||||
He went like, you know what, I'll just put a laptop downstairs and I'm fine.
|
||||
That's great.
|
||||
So, this massive room has just been standing there, preserved in time,
|
||||
filled with magazines from the late 80s, early 90s,
|
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filled with discs and software and stuff like that.
|
||||
And the room has always fascinated me.
|
||||
So, because he doesn't use it anymore, I've started to curate it.
|
||||
So, I've asked him, you know, will he, can I take some of that old stuff?
|
||||
Because he was thinking about clearing it out.
|
||||
And I'm like, no, no, that can never happen.
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You cannot clear it out.
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||||
So, he said, you know what, you know, just take what you want.
|
||||
You know, we bought a new house two years ago, I have a little den upstairs
|
||||
and he's like, you know, take whatever you want.
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You know, just put it in the den.
|
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If you want to play with it, go for it.
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||||
So, I have started the process of collecting some of the things
|
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that he has up there.
|
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And it's beautiful.
|
||||
I mean, reading magazines from the early 90s about how, you know,
|
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computer magazines like computer totale, computer totale,
|
||||
which is a Dutch magazine, stuff like that.
|
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You know, he has massive collections of those.
|
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So, I started, you know, whenever my wife goes to visit her parents,
|
||||
I dive upstairs and my wife groans and go like, oh my god,
|
||||
he's hoarding again.
|
||||
So, I just be like, like in Indiana Jones, I'm collecting tidbits
|
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of beautiful, beautiful retro technology.
|
||||
I've found a couple of two libretos running Windows 95,
|
||||
a couple of old laptops, of course, one or two old PC towers.
|
||||
And I've started bringing this stuff home and started collecting it.
|
||||
And this has become my new hobby.
|
||||
This retro PC, I don't know, not a fixation, but, you know,
|
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my retro PC world, I go upstairs to my little den,
|
||||
and I step back in time.
|
||||
You know, it's messy there.
|
||||
I don't care.
|
||||
It has cables and stuff all over it.
|
||||
It actually is starting to look like the office of my father-in-law.
|
||||
But I love it there.
|
||||
It's like a little spa, you walk back,
|
||||
you take a step back from the internet of the day,
|
||||
and it might be a wave of nostalgia passing over you.
|
||||
But it's also this little room of challenges,
|
||||
challenges to get stuff working again,
|
||||
and the satisfaction of doing so.
|
||||
So, I've started collecting old PC towers.
|
||||
But whenever I go to the recycling center or I see one of those, you know,
|
||||
dumpsters with tech in them, I always start sniffing around.
|
||||
If I can find something from the past,
|
||||
then the past is fleeting, so my time is short.
|
||||
And I'm trying to hold on to as much as I can.
|
||||
So, one of the missions that I'm trying to do is putting together
|
||||
a Windows 98 machine with original pieces.
|
||||
And the original pieces by that, I mean the pieces that I used to work with
|
||||
when I started my career.
|
||||
I started my computer career in 1997, 1998, about there.
|
||||
In this small little computer shop that used self-assembled PC
|
||||
for their customers.
|
||||
And I've assembled many, many, many PCs there.
|
||||
We did our own assembly, we learned to do it in a certain way.
|
||||
And this computer shop was very highly regarded
|
||||
as an excellent reputation because of the material that they used
|
||||
and the way the computers were constructed.
|
||||
Because, you know, we learned the trait and we had a reputation.
|
||||
This shop was called Bell's Computer Shop.
|
||||
And when you'd work there, people would say, you know,
|
||||
and you would move on to other gigs and other things.
|
||||
Your resume would mean something.
|
||||
Well, whoa, yeah, you're a Bell's Guy.
|
||||
Yes.
|
||||
Okay.
|
||||
You have been trained in assembly and software configuration
|
||||
by the best, you know, they were very strict.
|
||||
And they were at a very, very successful business because
|
||||
they were so, so very focused on quality.
|
||||
So fine, I am trying to reassemble one of those machines.
|
||||
So I have been looking for a case, you know, once in a while,
|
||||
the boss would order one shipping container full of computer
|
||||
cases in China.
|
||||
Shipping container would arrive, we would pack it all out,
|
||||
stuff it in store, everywhere.
|
||||
And that would be the case that we used for the couple two months
|
||||
or three months until the next container arrived.
|
||||
And we got another model.
|
||||
So these Bell's computers had very distinct cases.
|
||||
And you could know by the case what time it was that the
|
||||
computer was working.
|
||||
So what was assembled?
|
||||
So I'm working on one of these cases to get the pieces together
|
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again.
|
||||
So I found some pieces that my father-in-law,
|
||||
and I'm scrounging pieces all over.
|
||||
And I'm putting a machine together from the olden days.
|
||||
With the speakers, monitors are almost impossible to find.
|
||||
But I'm trying to find a keyboard from the time.
|
||||
Speakers from the time, you know, because the Yona would also
|
||||
order a container of speakers that would go out with every
|
||||
PC's and these speakers would be branded with this logo.
|
||||
They were shit, you know, they didn't sound good at all.
|
||||
But, you know, they did stuff like that.
|
||||
And it was great.
|
||||
It's great doing that because it's so much fun to dive back
|
||||
in time, dive back into your old knowledge, your own knowledge
|
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to kind of remember yourself, you know, what was this
|
||||
like back in the days?
|
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What was this, what did we, what were the challenges that we met?
|
||||
And I continually, continually find myself challenged by this
|
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technology, and it's beautiful, you know.
|
||||
I remember getting the mainboard up and running in a way
|
||||
like, oh yeah, good.
|
||||
I got a Windows 98p, a CD, I'll just pop it in there.
|
||||
And oh yeah, that's right.
|
||||
These things don't boot from CD.
|
||||
They didn't boot from a CD.
|
||||
You need the dust disk.
|
||||
Oh, the frilly freaking, where am I going to get the dust disk?
|
||||
So you find yourself a floppy disk, and then it begins.
|
||||
You know, you have the massive internet to assist you
|
||||
and bless the Matrix, and Jason Scott, and his goons
|
||||
for the internet archive, which is absolutely stacked
|
||||
with these things.
|
||||
I also love his podcast.
|
||||
Check out Jason Howell talks his way out of it,
|
||||
which is all about all technology, retro, and his past,
|
||||
stories like this.
|
||||
And you know, you find these things, and then you go, yeah.
|
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Oh yeah, how do I get this to a disk?
|
||||
All right, okay, I got a USB floppy drive.
|
||||
That's fine, okay.
|
||||
And it goes on like this, but it becomes even more interesting
|
||||
when you go way back, and you suddenly go towards
|
||||
five and a quarter inch floppy disks.
|
||||
How the hell am I going to get software on there
|
||||
from the modern day internet?
|
||||
So bridging that gap from today to yesterday
|
||||
is a beautiful challenge, and requires quite a bit of thinking.
|
||||
So I've been working on a couple of projects.
|
||||
So far, I have restored a Windows XP laptop
|
||||
to Shiba from the day, because I found it
|
||||
with its original restore CD in there.
|
||||
I'm working on a Windows 98 laptop at the moment.
|
||||
That's a challenge.
|
||||
No, it's Windows 95 laptop.
|
||||
It doesn't even have a CD-ROM.
|
||||
So I need to find the ATP CD-ROM driver
|
||||
and modify the auto-exec.bat.
|
||||
You bloody young kids don't even know what I'm talking about,
|
||||
but think about brain surgery on your iPad to get it working.
|
||||
And getting a CD-ROM operational again
|
||||
just to install Windows 95, and then you know the quest
|
||||
for drivers begins, and it's archaeology.
|
||||
It actually is.
|
||||
And all of that has been a very refreshing opportunity,
|
||||
a very refreshing way for me to be around computers
|
||||
yet not feel the stress of work
|
||||
and the rush of everyday internet
|
||||
with its information overload and its constant distractions.
|
||||
And I've been working on a couple of machines,
|
||||
and lost weekend, I actually got the chance
|
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to get my hands on a couple of retro Macs.
|
||||
The local community center was vandalized,
|
||||
and these guys are actually next door.
|
||||
And some kids broke in and smashed a place up,
|
||||
and you know, I live in a small town, a little community,
|
||||
so everybody knows everybody.
|
||||
And since I own an IT firm together with my wife,
|
||||
I immediately called up the guys
|
||||
that are responsible for the community center,
|
||||
and said like, hey, I heard about this.
|
||||
Is there anything we can do?
|
||||
Just say it.
|
||||
And they went like, yeah, can you help us with cameras
|
||||
and internet and stuff?
|
||||
So I helped them out with installing a couple of ringcams,
|
||||
making a new Wi-Fi network for them, stuff like that.
|
||||
So while I was working on it, these are beautiful,
|
||||
lovely people that do this, you know,
|
||||
just in their spare time, totally for free.
|
||||
So I decided, you know, my firm is going to help them out
|
||||
pro bono.
|
||||
So I did that, and it was fun.
|
||||
It was really nice.
|
||||
And as we were doing this, we start talking about, you know,
|
||||
hobbies, and I went like, yeah, I'm into PCs,
|
||||
but I'm into, you know, my free time,
|
||||
I love to have some retro PCs.
|
||||
And the guy says, well, you know,
|
||||
and he says, where do you get them?
|
||||
I said, well, mostly, I sometimes I get a donation,
|
||||
or sometimes I find them in the recycling center,
|
||||
and I love doing that, you know, finding them, fixing them up,
|
||||
and donating them, especially the machines that still work.
|
||||
And he says like, well, really?
|
||||
Because, you know, I got a couple of old Macs at home,
|
||||
and I went like, oh, you do?
|
||||
Yeah.
|
||||
There's one, there's this little ball, and you know,
|
||||
two others over there.
|
||||
And I was going to take them to the recycling center,
|
||||
but if you want them, you can pick them up.
|
||||
And I went like, yeah, sure.
|
||||
So, weekend rolls are wrong.
|
||||
He calls me up.
|
||||
He says like, hey, I found them in the attic,
|
||||
and I'm cleaning them up, and they're downstairs,
|
||||
and you want to come and pick them up.
|
||||
So I was kind of excited about this.
|
||||
And I was like, oh, yeah.
|
||||
Maybe there's a G3 in there.
|
||||
I wanted to get my hands back on an iPad.
|
||||
No, no.
|
||||
I'm Mac G3.
|
||||
Because these are one of the machines I used to work on
|
||||
when I was a kid.
|
||||
When I was a kid, when I was a youngster,
|
||||
when I was just getting into computers, you know.
|
||||
I worked at a multimedia testing center
|
||||
that had a couple of Macs.
|
||||
And I remember opening up a Mac the first time,
|
||||
which was amazing.
|
||||
And I went like, oh, yeah, maybe there's a little, you know,
|
||||
I'm Mac G3 there.
|
||||
There's a lot of Bonnie blue little ball.
|
||||
That'd be nice.
|
||||
They're pretty.
|
||||
So I go up and he opens the door,
|
||||
and there are two G4 iMacs.
|
||||
You know, the ones with the half the ball
|
||||
and the TFT screen on a swivel.
|
||||
And these things are rare.
|
||||
Yeah, two of them.
|
||||
And an iMac G5, first generation.
|
||||
And I was like, holy, beep word.
|
||||
This is awesome.
|
||||
So sorry for the road noise.
|
||||
I'm not really, really bad Belgian roads for the moment.
|
||||
So I'm sorry about that.
|
||||
So I'm like, wow, this is amazing.
|
||||
I really want this.
|
||||
And he said like, sure, sure.
|
||||
So I came home with two iMacs and three iMacs,
|
||||
the G5, two G4s, a couple of all the keyboards,
|
||||
all the mice, all the cables.
|
||||
And these machines were perfectly operational.
|
||||
So this is going to be my next quest.
|
||||
We're storing one of them to Mac OS 9.
|
||||
And we're storing one of them to Mac OS 10.
|
||||
The software, the OS is that they use to run in the day.
|
||||
And I've found a lot of things on the internet archive
|
||||
but I've also found this beautiful site called the Mac Garden
|
||||
that curates Apple software from the days.
|
||||
It's like the internet and mother load archive for Mac users.
|
||||
And they have a massive, massive amount of software in games.
|
||||
All beautifully described, all downloadable.
|
||||
But they also have an FTP server.
|
||||
Wow, I mean, just doing this over FTP is bloody great
|
||||
because these machines are old.
|
||||
I think that's an 800 MHz G4 and 900 MHz G4.
|
||||
And I think it's a gigahertz G5.
|
||||
I'm not sure I have to check.
|
||||
And you can't run any modern operating system on them anymore.
|
||||
Because Apple doesn't support BBC anymore.
|
||||
You can go up to 10.4 or something, that's it.
|
||||
And you know, they're also horribly underspect.
|
||||
Now you can open them up.
|
||||
And I think that I have a lot of recycled RAM at home
|
||||
so I can probably bent them up ramwise
|
||||
to about a gig or two gigs of RAM,
|
||||
which is, you know, for the 256 megabytes,
|
||||
they come by a massive amount of RAM.
|
||||
And there are even adapters that you can get to put in an SSD.
|
||||
So you can pin that little Mac a little bit to get faster.
|
||||
But you have to, you know, take into account that, you know,
|
||||
the processor just isn't there yet.
|
||||
And I've seen beautiful projects of people just yanking out the guts,
|
||||
putting in a Raspberry Pi into this beautiful case of an iMac G4
|
||||
and using it as a computer that way.
|
||||
But, you know, the TFTs are good, but they're not fantastic.
|
||||
I think this was the first generation TFT, of course.
|
||||
They have white bleed, you wouldn't believe,
|
||||
but they're beautiful and they're wonderful to work with.
|
||||
So instead of pimping it up to a modern day machine,
|
||||
I decided, you know, let's just leave them in the past.
|
||||
Let's just, you know, enjoy the past
|
||||
and restore them to their original states
|
||||
with the original software they used to run back in the day.
|
||||
So that's becoming my mission.
|
||||
So next week, last weekend, I took off all the data from the previous owner
|
||||
because he asked me, he said, like, there's so many pictures on there.
|
||||
I don't know how to get them off. Can you please help me?
|
||||
So I've been spending, you know, setting them all up on our living room table.
|
||||
My wife is going like, you're nuts, they're beautiful,
|
||||
but you're nuts and I love you.
|
||||
And trying to get the data off.
|
||||
These things are USB1, they are horribly slow.
|
||||
And, you know, finder wouldn't really work with me.
|
||||
So I just, you know, opened up the terminal,
|
||||
zipped all the local data, exported to a USB disk.
|
||||
And it was beautiful seeing these machines,
|
||||
shugging to get it everything, to get every single file into a USB zip file,
|
||||
and then painfully staked, painfully slowly copying them to a USB disk.
|
||||
It was delightful to see.
|
||||
I mean, while I took out, I pulled out the keyboards,
|
||||
and these are these transparent keyboards, remember from the days,
|
||||
and they were full of gunk and nails and food rests.
|
||||
And I cleaned them up, cleaned them out,
|
||||
put them back together. It's beautiful.
|
||||
It's absolutely fantastic.
|
||||
And it's a step back in time.
|
||||
And I love that, to do just that.
|
||||
And maybe you have some old stuff lying around as well,
|
||||
that you want to play with, that you have forgotten,
|
||||
and you think like, hey, that's just lying around.
|
||||
Maybe I should get rid of it.
|
||||
Maybe you should go back to that day, and that you bought it,
|
||||
and maybe you should go back to that time,
|
||||
and you had the challenges that you used to overcome
|
||||
in order to get it working, and kind of feel the satisfaction,
|
||||
again, of doing that.
|
||||
It's nostalgia on one end, but on the other hand,
|
||||
it is confronted me with the fact that how easy computers have gotten.
|
||||
I mean, I'm taking an iPad Pro to work these days.
|
||||
Yeah, an iPad Pro to work these days,
|
||||
with a keyboard and a mouse.
|
||||
And this is becoming my mobile computer.
|
||||
I'm not even taking a PC to work anymore.
|
||||
Just the iPad.
|
||||
There's no skill involved in turning on an iPad.
|
||||
There's no skill involved in getting iOS on there.
|
||||
There's no skill involved in Android.
|
||||
It's just, you go to the store, you tap, tap, tap, tap, tap,
|
||||
and it's done.
|
||||
And for the average user, they go like,
|
||||
the kids these days are really good with computers.
|
||||
Yeah, A, that's because they grew up with them.
|
||||
And B is because they're frequently easy.
|
||||
I mean, a two-year-old can start up an application on a Mac,
|
||||
or on a PC these days, or on a tablet, or on a window.
|
||||
I don't know.
|
||||
They just have to tap.
|
||||
I would give my two-year-old niece a libretto,
|
||||
a couple of dust discs, and challenger to come on,
|
||||
get Doom running there.
|
||||
A two-year-old could really successfully pull that off.
|
||||
I can fairly confidently say that the 46-year-old,
|
||||
me, has a hard time getting that working again.
|
||||
Because it used to be harder.
|
||||
And it also used to be a challenge,
|
||||
and you used to be able to learn stuff.
|
||||
These days, we'd learn mostly of, you know,
|
||||
how to do things with computers.
|
||||
They're becoming more and more appliances.
|
||||
And in a way, that's a good thing.
|
||||
That's what they're for.
|
||||
But learning, or going back to the times that you had to
|
||||
really learn to get something working,
|
||||
that was also a very nice time.
|
||||
So, I've got my little 10 upstairs,
|
||||
and I've got an RG-45 connection that I still need to hook up.
|
||||
And I decided I'm not going to do it.
|
||||
I'm not going to hook up my upstairs,
|
||||
little 10, with the network.
|
||||
Because then I connected to the internet,
|
||||
and the modern internet comes with all of the distractions
|
||||
and yet, yet, yet, yet.
|
||||
So, I have one laptop, a Linux machine over there,
|
||||
disconnected to the internet.
|
||||
I used that one to download everything,
|
||||
and to do what it has to do.
|
||||
And the rest, well, the rest is the rest.
|
||||
The rest is disconnected and gets fed
|
||||
with USB steaks and external drives and floppies.
|
||||
In order to restore them,
|
||||
because they lived in a land where the internet was not a button.
|
||||
And by the way, if you take a modern day internet
|
||||
to a non-supported machine with a non-supported browser,
|
||||
it's kind of like leaking the toilet seat on the train station.
|
||||
The chances that you'll catch something are pretty big.
|
||||
And I'm not really looking forward to doing that.
|
||||
But it's a beautiful experience to do that again,
|
||||
to play around with all technology.
|
||||
It feels like stepping into a spa after a long day at work.
|
||||
It's this little tech jacuzzi that's running on a different pace.
|
||||
Because one of the things that I've learned with working
|
||||
with these old machines is waging patience.
|
||||
My god, patience.
|
||||
Installing Windows 98s?
|
||||
It takes a while.
|
||||
Putting about, I think,
|
||||
three gigabytes of pictures into a zip file using the command line
|
||||
on a 900 MHz machine with 256 Mbps of RAM,
|
||||
or gigabytes, or gigabytes, megabytes.
|
||||
That takes a while.
|
||||
And you have to learn the art of waiting again,
|
||||
and thank the Matrix for all the magazines that I found.
|
||||
Because then I dive into those.
|
||||
And my journey to the past is complete.
|
||||
It's really fun.
|
||||
Last weekend, when I went to my father-in-law,
|
||||
I also started the next part of my collection.
|
||||
I've fetched most of the machines.
|
||||
And I've also fetched a bunch of cables,
|
||||
because you know, a very simple,
|
||||
dint PS2 connector.
|
||||
You can't find that anymore,
|
||||
but if you need to hook up a keyboard to a very old machine,
|
||||
you need them.
|
||||
And it's like stuff like that that I'm looking into,
|
||||
that I'm working on, that I'm collecting,
|
||||
and I'm digging through his office and his old bags.
|
||||
And, you know, piece by piece,
|
||||
I'm starting to get things home.
|
||||
Last week, it was time to bring home the CDs.
|
||||
So I've got six massive shopping bags filled
|
||||
with CD ROMs that I have to sort out.
|
||||
So I'm going to collect and sort them out into OS disks
|
||||
and stuff like that.
|
||||
OS disk, application disks,
|
||||
there's a massive amount of wires on there.
|
||||
I had the moment of the car,
|
||||
and I'd sit in my dad-in-law.
|
||||
I said, like, if we take the cost of all of these software licenses
|
||||
that I have in my car right now,
|
||||
and you would have actually had to pay for them.
|
||||
What would they have cost?
|
||||
He said, like, I don't know,
|
||||
but I think there's a small streets of houses
|
||||
in that car at the moment.
|
||||
It was back in the day.
|
||||
You could do that.
|
||||
They didn't even have a bit for it.
|
||||
They would copy CDs and exchange wares and stuff like that.
|
||||
It's beautiful.
|
||||
So I've got a lot of bags of outdated software
|
||||
that needed to be sorted.
|
||||
I've got magazines that I need to fetch.
|
||||
And he also has a complete covered of bucks
|
||||
that need to be sorted out.
|
||||
And there are things that are going to go to the recycling center.
|
||||
I cannot hoard them all.
|
||||
But I am going to try to keep some of the books like, you know,
|
||||
Windows 95, the unwritten guide.
|
||||
N-T-4.
|
||||
N-T-4.
|
||||
Workstate.
|
||||
No, N-T-3.5.
|
||||
Workstation.
|
||||
The missing manual.
|
||||
You know, books like that.
|
||||
Office 97 for dummies.
|
||||
For idiots.
|
||||
For idiots.
|
||||
Before it was called for dummies,
|
||||
it was called the Idiot's Guide to Windows 97.
|
||||
To Office 97.
|
||||
And the books were orange and not yellow.
|
||||
I love those things.
|
||||
I really enjoyed learning back then.
|
||||
And having them back is vast nostalgia.
|
||||
There's no productive use in there at all.
|
||||
But that's the nice part.
|
||||
There's no productive use in there at all.
|
||||
It's like sitting in a jacuzzi.
|
||||
There's no productivity in there at all.
|
||||
It's just the experience.
|
||||
And that's what retro PC stuff is to me.
|
||||
So yeah, I hope you enjoyed my little journey down memory lane.
|
||||
And maybe you have a machine that you want to play with from the past.
|
||||
Or that you want to teach your kids about or challenge them to do something with, you know,
|
||||
take them back to that time.
|
||||
When things were harder, they couldn't do what they wanted to do.
|
||||
But there was, to me, maybe I'm just gonna say,
|
||||
more magic in computing than they used to be.
|
||||
So that was my little rant.
|
||||
I hope you enjoyed it.
|
||||
I will try if I find anything else that is interesting to keep you up to date.
|
||||
But until then, I am going to go upstairs this weekend.
|
||||
Open up these little one little iMac, clean it out,
|
||||
take good care of it, nurture it.
|
||||
And maybe I'll hook it up to the internet just to connect with this cyberduck application
|
||||
to this web server of Macintosh Garden and download some of that old software like Photoshop 2.0
|
||||
or the unarchiver 1.0 or toast to write CDs, stuff like that.
|
||||
And enjoy my little journey into the way back when computers were slow, frustrating,
|
||||
but also extremely satisfying to work with.
|
||||
You can do your own episode for Hacker Public Radio if you're a listener.
|
||||
Just do what I do. Record it on your phone in the car.
|
||||
You have all the modern day technology that you can.
|
||||
And enjoy talking about the things that you're passionate about.
|
||||
Submit it to the community and make sure for yourself.
|
||||
Until then, this was Nightwise from thenightwise.com podcast.
|
||||
The occasional walk to the edge of real and cyber space
|
||||
where I, if I have the time, talk about technology and how to let it work for you.
|
||||
I will see you on the flip side. Bye-bye.
|
||||
You've been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
|
||||
We are a community podcast network that releases shows every weekday, Monday through Friday.
|
||||
Today's show, like all our shows, was contributed by an HPR listener like yourself.
|
||||
If you ever thought of recording a podcast, then click on our contributing to find out how easy it really is.
|
||||
Hacker Public Radio was founded by the digital dog pound and the Infonomicon Computer Club,
|
||||
and is part of the binary revolution at binrev.com.
|
||||
If you have comments on today's show, please email the host directly, leave a comment on the website
|
||||
or record a follow-up episode yourself.
|
||||
Unless otherwise stated, today's show is released on the Creative Commons'
|
||||
Extribution ShareLight 3.0 license.
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user