|
-
July 1st, 2002, 07:49 PM
#11
My suggestion? Keep it for a command-line only application, router/firewall/NAT, or a dedicated SETI@HOME box if you can, but in terms of upgrading without changing the motherboard I'm thinking it isn't worth it. Sure, you MIGHT be able to incrementally change the processor speed or ram, perhaps, but it wouldn't be worth it because it would still be quite obsolete.
It makes me think back to the day...
You can put together a high quality box nowadays for less than $700, actually. I'm currently looking at a list of dream parts, and here are some of the components from my spreadsheet and an estimated cost total:
- AMD XP 1800 (1.8 ghz equiv, supposedly)
- 512 MB of PC2700 memory (takes advantage of 333mhz board)
- ASUS A7V333 (Onboard simple audio, firewire, USB 2.0, AGP Pro slot, 5 PCI, 3 ram slots)
- Antec Performance Plus 1080 (black) Case (w/ 430w power supply, 1 firewire 2 usb ports on front panel. Removable intake filter. Drive door. Etc etc etc.)
- EIDE 60 GB Hard drive
- 1.44 Floppy
- CD Burner/CD Reader (32x/12x/48x)
Estimated total cost without taking into account motherboard shipping and time of assembly...
$571.00 . As a sheer guess, actual costs may vary upwards to more like $600-$630.
Items missing from this list that you would probably want or changes to make:
The case is a bit overkill. You can find much cheaper beige boxes.
You'll need a monitor, Keyboard, Mouse.
CPU cooling device
[HvC]Terr: L33T Technical Proficiency
-
July 1st, 2002, 07:55 PM
#12
Member
/me has one p/s1 i am selling also, has the manuals and all, lol
But www.newegg.com i have found elimiates www.pricewatch.com cuz there prices are so dam good.
-
July 1st, 2002, 08:03 PM
#13
Member
Buy a new or use computer that is more up to date. I just took 1 of them a part like 4 days ago and the only thing that was even good to me was the power box. Funny thing is that I had 4 slots. Humm. Most of the 486"s or what they send you free when you take a on line course. You might want to look at the pown shop as I just got a HP Parilion XG814, Cleeron 766 mhz cpu, 20 gb hdd, with 64 mb ram, 48x Cd rom 56k pci modim, 2 speakers,keyboard, mouse, windows ME, 17" color monitor. For only $375.00 had to buy more ram and the floppy was broke but works real well. Look at a few pown shops but make sure you can test it before you buy it.
Zuriel
 [gloworange]Zuriel- This Angel Lends Us The Power To Find Balance When We Desperately Need It[/gloworange]
-
July 1st, 2002, 08:22 PM
#14
I dont know if this makes any difference. . . but every component had stickers on it that said Assembled in Canada. Maybe thats why it only had 2 slots for ram.
"Never give in-never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in to convictions of honor and good sense. Never yield to force; never yield to the apparently overwhelming might of the enemy!" - Winston Churchill
-
July 1st, 2002, 08:33 PM
#15
Wow, reading that post took me back in time! You're better off A: using it as a BBIAgent router (all you need is a floppy drive, no hard drive for storage!) or B: building a new one. That one's not worth pulling out the parts to even give to a school.
We the willing, led by the unknowing, have been doing the impossible for the ungrateful. We have done so much with so little for so long that we are now qualified to do just about anything with almost nothing.
-
July 1st, 2002, 08:48 PM
#16
You could always sell it to NASA. hehehe They are looking for that old stuff all the time. Good luck.
Mankind have a great aversion to intellectual labor; but even supposing knowledge to be easily attainable, more people would be content to be ignorant than would take even a little trouble to acquire it.
- Samuel Johnson
-
July 1st, 2002, 08:52 PM
#17
Originally posted here by KorpDeath
You could always sell it to NASA. hehehe They are looking for that old stuff all the time. Good luck.
Hey! Good idea, don't they use 486's on the shuttle?
-
July 1st, 2002, 11:56 PM
#18
As someone once said, I think it was from Orson Scott Card's "Earth": "You know when they sent the shuttles into space? They had five computers on them, but nowadays your wristwatch could play cheat at poker with them and then convince them to vote republican."
(or something to that effect. I'll look it up later... gosh, it's been years since I read that book.)
[HvC]Terr: L33T Technical Proficiency
-
July 2nd, 2002, 01:00 AM
#19
What's with all these people and Walmart/LindowsOS machines? Haven't we already had that discussion *way too many times*?!?!
Back to the question, though. I personally wouldn't even try to upgrade it. The case you have won't even support new motherboards (since they require ATX cases), so you're better off just scratching it or using it for other purposes. I have two 486s which I still use, one with Windows NT 3.5 and another with Windows for Workgroups 3.11. They have fairly good specs, considering... (32 MB EDO-RAM, dual 500 MB hard drives, etc.) but they work great, as someone else metioned, for older applications. They both have Word 6.0 on them so I can at least do some text processing, if I need to, but they're both stocked with various older compilers (Borland C++ 4.5, Turbo C++, Turbo Pascal, Win-Prolog) so I can easily create quick DOS based programs if I ever need to (which, surprisingly I actually end up doing quite a bit, especially for testing purposes, etc.) So, that's my opinion... buy a new one (or build one from scratch) and use the other one for playing around. You could even run some versions of Linux on it...
AJ
-
July 2nd, 2002, 01:30 AM
#20
Junior Member
its not even worth it to update that pc whatsoever.
illv//
illv // seen the digital world from monochrome dial up to what it is today.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|