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Then how did you get online? Or were you part of America Offline, the information dirt road?Tempting, but I think I'll pass. Never had an AOL account when it was "the hotness". Not about to start now.
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Then how did you get online? Or were you part of America Offline, the information dirt road?Tempting, but I think I'll pass. Never had an AOL account when it was "the hotness". Not about to start now.
It's an eMachines! Very reliable, and, even though it doesn't say so on the front, it's NEVER obsolete!Tempting, but I think I'll pass. Never had an AOL account when it was "the hotness". Not about to start now.
Wait, you used Hotmail.Never had an AOL account when it was "the hotness".
I had a Dialup account via another telco. PSTN Modem connection to a local POP and if you wanted TCP services you used a winsock client. AOL was just a wrapper on the same internals that abstracted it for people who weren't really technical and didn't know how to actually set up their own stuff. Since 99% of what people were doing on the early internet was text anyway (BBS, Usenet, IRC, FTP, etc...), There was already a well functioning framework in place by the time things like graphical browsers came around. It's where I cut my teeth on unix and linux and I've just kinda stuck around since.Then how did you get online? Or were you part of America Offline, the information dirt road?
This tech stuff just sounds interesting to me. Then again, I'm glad that cable exists and is a lot easier.I had a Dialup account via another telco. PSTN Modem connection to a local POP and if you wanted TCP services you used a winsock client. AOL was just a wrapper on the same internals that abstracted it for people who weren't really technical and didn't know how to actually set up their own stuff. Since 99% of what people were doing on the early internet was text anyway (BBS, Usenet, IRC, FTP, etc...), There was already a well functioning framework in place by the time things like graphical browsers came around. It's where I cut my teeth on unix and linux and I've just kinda stuck around since.
I've never purchased a prebuilt with my own money.It's an eMachines! Very reliable, and, even though it doesn't say so on the front, it's NEVER obsolete!
I'm surprised you can get 98 to install on modern hardware.This tech stuff just sounds interesting to me. Then again, I'm glad that cable exists and is a lot easier.
Meanwhile, I go and have to wait hours for Windows 98 SE to install. It's a pain.
Shuttle XPC SK43G. It's from 2003. I put a floppy and CD drive in it. Used to be my Dad's.I'm surprised you can get 98 to install on modern hardware.
I might manage to scrape enough money together to get a nice not prebuilt machine someday.I've never purchased a prebuilt with my own money.