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Was born in 1995 but god do I remember playing Redneck Rampage on Dial up when I was 5 or 6. My dad and the whole 9 person family was there to experience building our profiles on Windows ME. That game was all I had when mom had to make phone calls lol.
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Matewis: One thing that I'm super glad is dead and buried, is the use of those infernal 3.5 inch disks. Those things were super unreliable!
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ScotchMonkey: Fuck that, remember Zip Disks?
I don't think I ever actually saw one of those, but dang: 100mb capacity in 1994? That would've been so much easier. I still remember trying to copy doom 2 onto my pc from a stack of about 20 3.5 '' disks :P
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ScotchMonkey: Fuck that, remember Zip Disks?
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Matewis: I don't think I ever actually saw one of those, but dang: 100mb capacity in 1994? That would've been so much easier. I still remember trying to copy doom 2 onto my pc from a stack of about 20 3.5 '' disks :P
ZD's were prone to failure.

A friend was a graphic designer who bought into them and loved them until they mostly broke and cost him a lot in lost jobs.
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Matewis: I still remember trying to copy doom 2 onto my pc from a stack of about 20 3.5 '' disks :P
Actually, Doom II came on five floppy disks. I know this, because I still have them. In the box, with (admittedly useless) manual.
Envy me. :-) (Or not, because I'm pretty sure at least one of the disks has gone bad, and I don't even have a proper floppy drive anymore.)

The switch from floppies to cd-roms was a seriously exciting time for me. FMV for the win! IT'S LIKE MOVIES! ON YOUR PC! WOW!
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Matewis: I still remember trying to copy doom 2 onto my pc from a stack of about 20 3.5 '' disks :P
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PimPamPet: Actually, Doom II came on five floppy disks. I know this, because I still have them. In the box, with (admittedly useless) manual.
Envy me. :-) (Or not, because I'm pretty sure at least one of the disks has gone bad, and I don't even have a proper floppy drive anymore.)

The switch from floppies to cd-roms was a seriously exciting time for me. for the win! <i>IT'S LIKE MOVIES! ON YOUR PC! <span class="podkreslenie">WOW</span>!</i> <a href="http://www.gog.com/forum/general/pc_gaming_in_the_90s/post124" class="link_arrow"></a></div> Around 2000, my oldest brother had one of those [url=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tape_drive#History]huge tape drives and stored DVDs on it.
Yeah, there are still descendants of the datasette around.
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Klumpen0815: ...
That's pretty mindboggling. By the time I got into computers, cassette tapes were no longer widely used for data storage. But a schoolfriend of mine had a C64, and the thing I most remember about that machine is how long it look to load the games into memory. By the time it finally finished loading something, we'd usually already moved on to the NES in the next room. :-)
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Emob78: Sure do. I remember getting Encarta 95 and watching a 20 second grainy video clip of a space shuttle taking off and being completely blown away by it.
Heh, you too? That's my best memory from Encarta (which was a pretty good piece of software, sort of like an offline Wikipedia). I remember showing that little clip to everyone as proof how advanced and "photorealistic" computer graphics had become. With games FMV like Phantasmagoria, it seemed that soon we would have games indistinguishable from live-action TV in which we would be able to do anything we wanted.

But that was only after I got my first Pentium. For much of the early 1990s I owned only a PC 286 / 25 MHz / 2 MB RAM / 40 MB HDD. The bottleneck was actually my EGA graphics card. I wept with envy as I watched my friends play so many more great games just because they had VGA. I still played many classic games, to be sure, but a few more years had to pass before I could play Monkey Island 2 or Fate of Atlantis at home.
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Matewis: I still remember trying to copy doom 2 onto my pc from a stack of about 20 3.5 '' disks :P
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PimPamPet: Actually, Doom II came on five floppy disks. I know this, because I still have them. In the box, with (admittedly useless) manual.
Envy me. :-) (Or not, because I'm pretty sure at least one of the disks has gone bad, and I don't even have a proper floppy drive anymore.)

The switch from floppies to cd-roms was a seriously exciting time for me. FMV for the win! IT'S LIKE MOVIES! ON YOUR PC! WOW!
Oh? That's interesting. Actually, I think that our neighbour installed Doom 2 on my 486, or perhaps the pc came with it (it's so long ago!) Coming to think of it, I wasn't trying to install doom 2 from the stack of disks, I was trying to copy it for a friend, who handed me a big stack of disks at school. Not that I could do it in any case. I ran into the massive .wad file and didn't know what to do with it. We were young and stupid :P
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ScotchMonkey: Fuck that, remember Zip Disks?
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Matewis: I don't think I ever actually saw one of those, but dang: 100mb capacity in 1994? That would've been so much easier. I still remember trying to copy doom 2 onto my pc from a stack of about 20 3.5 '' disks :P
Ha yup.. this is my disks for star trek judgement rites.. sigh shouldve take better care of it.

but still after a lengthy installation.. it feels like a reward ;D
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Matewis: I don't think I ever actually saw one of those, but dang: 100mb capacity in 1994? That would've been so much easier. I still remember trying to copy doom 2 onto my pc from a stack of about 20 3.5 '' disks :P
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mikopotato: Ha yup.. this is my disks for star trek judgement rites.. sigh shouldve take better care of it.

but still after a lengthy installation.. it feels like a reward ;D
Lol, that pic immediately made me nervous :)
Hey honey, here's the disk you so desperately searched yesterday.
Post edited December 19, 2015 by Klumpen0815
Yikes. I bet he was real happy about that.
There's 2 person in the house and one of em gonna be dead. And it aint me !*shotgun cocking sound*
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Cavenagh: I played on the Amiga 500, games such as Elite, Heimdall, Hired Guns, Ishar2, eye of the beholder, Gods etc..

Still have a few old systems C64, Amiga500, Amiga1200, Apple ][e, IBM turnkey [that's what I call it as it need a key to start it]

MY sister who died at 16 [1990] left behind Spectrum48, C16, C128, and another spectrum, had a built in Cassette player [can't think of the name]

Yes I'm Old :(

All the best
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CARICATUREKILB: I think that was the Sinclair Spectrum +2 which had a built in cassette player. It was modeled on the same design as the Amstrad, as The Most Holy Lord Sugar had taken over Sinclair by then.
Thanks, that must be it, when my dad bought her a C128 I was like NOOOOOO, god rest her soul, still missing my little sis. :( is it really 26 years ago, father died at 56, nine months later my little sis died, and a year later my mum died.

Thanks for your time.

all the best
Post edited December 20, 2015 by Cavenagh
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Matewis: One thing that I'm super glad is dead and buried, is the use of those infernal 3.5 inch disks. Those things were super unreliable!
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ScotchMonkey: Fuck that, remember Zip Disks?
I got my disc caught in a zipper once.