Unboxing and Enjoying LapLink V from 1993

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  • Опубліковано 29 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 516

  • @kvothesixstring763
    @kvothesixstring763 4 роки тому +407

    “I’m just rambling about computers” - LGR
    That’s kind of why we are here.

  • @TonyDeCoste
    @TonyDeCoste 4 роки тому +257

    Holding off on watching this until I've seen his reviews for LapLink 1 through 4 so I don't run across any spoilers

    • @johnromberg
      @johnromberg 4 роки тому +29

      We don't talk about LapLink 2! Some wounds never heal...

    • @naota3k
      @naota3k 4 роки тому +8

      Good man. LapLink IV was a classic.

    • @offrails
      @offrails 4 роки тому +4

      LapLink 3 was great for copying Doom files between a pair of 486s. Never got to try LapLink 1 and 2 though, maybe I should.

    • @ericmdk
      @ericmdk 4 роки тому +3

      lmfao Tony = )

  • @ariana-is-ok
    @ariana-is-ok 4 роки тому +191

    Ah, blood sacrifice has been made. Very standard.

    • @cujoedaman
      @cujoedaman 4 роки тому +3

      The fact that it happened with the box and not the knife makes it more enjoyable :D

  • @falken_gt4
    @falken_gt4 4 роки тому +60

    When I started my IT career I soldered my own lap link parallel cable together, it was a right of passage for my job and everyone made one and got a copy of Laplink on a copied floppy. I still have the cable complete with letter and number stickers from a blank TDK cassette tape!

    • @SimonQuigley
      @SimonQuigley 4 роки тому +5

      LOL, yep, I made mine out of 2 printer cables that I hacked the Centronics ends off. I stripped all the wires, and taped the insulation to a bit of paper, so then I could use a continuity tester to work out which wire was connected to which pin on each end, only 50 wires to work out.. I was using interlnk and intersvr though.

    • @TheDrunkenMug
      @TheDrunkenMug 3 роки тому +1

      Cool story 😀👍

    • @TheDrunkenMug
      @TheDrunkenMug 3 роки тому +1

      @@SimonQuigley very cool story aswell ! 😮😀

    • @oz_jones
      @oz_jones 3 роки тому +1

      Cool!

    • @falken_gt4
      @falken_gt4 3 роки тому

      @@SimonQuigley yeah, something similar, chopped the end off a printer cable and we had some male DB25 connectors to strip and solder to.

  • @johnsimon8457
    @johnsimon8457 4 роки тому +56

    That “initiate a transfer on a schedule” feature in the manual makes me wonder if someone built an ersatz backup solution out of a whole web of these null modem cables in an office in the late 80’s.
    I remember trying to transfer a hundred megs via one of these and never got the connection to work in windows. Instead I wound up transferring it one floppy at a time. This was when individual CD-Rs were like $15
    ....Flash memory changed so much.

  • @oglack6137
    @oglack6137 4 роки тому +90

    I can just imagine Stewart Cheifet being blown away by this on some dusty old episode of The Computer Chronicles

    • @DyslexicChris
      @DyslexicChris 4 роки тому +39

      Stewart: "So, tell us how this works Clint."
      Clint: "Well, all we need to..."
      Stewart: "(interrupts), Thats it for this week's Computer Chronicles - I'm Steward Cheifet, see you next time"

    • @brandonupchurch7628
      @brandonupchurch7628 4 роки тому +16

      He was so pushy, although they had a fairly tight time slot to fit a lot of information in and they had a budget to work in, while I liked how Gary could ramble all day, it wasn't necessarily the best fit for a TV show.

    • @JackBandicootsBunker
      @JackBandicootsBunker 4 роки тому +3

      @@brandonupchurch7628 The upside of that was that it would cut short any attempts of marketing, it tried to be objective that way. I think Stewart did talk about it as well.

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 4 роки тому +4

      “Have you ever wished there was an easy way to synchronize files from your laptop to your desktop? Maybe you’re at a user’s group meeting and would like to pirate some software, but you didn’t bring any floppy disks. Well a new product from Traveling Software might be just what you need. Wendy Woods has the story.”

    • @fluffycritter
      @fluffycritter 4 роки тому +6

      @@JackBandicootsBunker They probably also had to avoid marketing attempts what with being on PBS and having very strict guidelines around sponsorship and product placement.

  • @Kosackk
    @Kosackk 4 роки тому +57

    I remember this "teacher" installing DukeNukem on one of the PCs we had at the leisure center i went to for kids, showing it to us kids in secret, we kids had to be really lowkey about it so other teachers would not find out that teacher installed it on one of the two computers we had there, this was around 1999, i was 9 years old! Good times! It was so exciting watching him play, we also got to try it ofc!

    • @Toonrick12
      @Toonrick12 3 роки тому

      Which one? 1, 2, or 3D?

  • @SabretoothBarnacle
    @SabretoothBarnacle 4 роки тому +56

    I use Laplink 3 too sometimes... just for nostalgic reasons as it was the school administrator's tool of choice on our 186/286 based network... I miss the old days💻💻💻💻

    • @chrisfratz
      @chrisfratz 4 роки тому +11

      @Wang Dong Hey, as a 20 year old I approve the use of old software

    • @hazel2409
      @hazel2409 4 роки тому +2

      @Wang Dong shut up. I’m a zoomer and even I approve

    • @sketchesofpayne
      @sketchesofpayne 4 роки тому +2

      @Wang Dong I wish people realized how stupid this phrase makes them sound. Especially when the person they're saying it to wasn't complaining about anything.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 4 роки тому +2

      @Wang Dong that'd be genX

  • @marquiis
    @marquiis 4 роки тому +20

    6:50 "by breaking this seal you accept to Terms and Conditions" - break the sleeve without touching the seal

  • @BigboiiTone
    @BigboiiTone 4 роки тому +8

    So glad you included the "enjoying" bit to the title. Enjoyment is the biggest part of videos like this. I LOVE this stuff and i ENJOY it!!

  • @lwispe
    @lwispe 4 роки тому +5

    I love old software designed for ultra-specific needs like this. Especially since it came in a fancy box with a 300-page manual. Made it feel special, ya know? It wasn't just a simple utility bundled with an os without even a proper readme file. It commanded respect.

    • @ericmdk
      @ericmdk 4 роки тому

      Faq > readme?

  • @Scorpious187
    @Scorpious187 4 роки тому +5

    Wow... this takes me back. Back to the days when I read through Scott Mueller's "Upgrading and Repairing PCs - 2nd Edition" cover to cover in less than a week because I was super interested in learning how computers worked... Those were much simpler times, but also much more difficult times. lol.

  • @dfjelddalen
    @dfjelddalen 4 роки тому +2

    LapLink solved so many file transfer problems for me in the nineties. The special cables were superb and really impressed my fellow nerds at the time.

  • @TheJonathanc82
    @TheJonathanc82 4 роки тому +10

    Oh the days before everyone had a home network. You don’t get this level of excitement from a network share anymore.

  • @thedungeondelver
    @thedungeondelver 4 роки тому +7

    I remember at my IT job in the mid/late 90s - we had a washing-machine sized crate full of laplink cables, due to how many copies of that the company bought!

  • @KenMrKLC
    @KenMrKLC 4 роки тому +5

    I love seeing these old items that were out of range of price as a youngin' ... Especially a sealed box ....Its like double special because you fill the "I wanted and could afford" wants and the nostalgia of it... Fun stuff

  • @fluffycritter
    @fluffycritter 4 роки тому +2

    Well, this brings up some nostalgic memories for a thing I had no idea I was nostalgic for.
    Back in the day this made me really excited for the future of home networking.

  • @Ned47628
    @Ned47628 4 роки тому +7

    I really could have done with this back in the 90s when I wanted to try the Quake demo on my 486DX. The PC didn't have a cd drive so I copied it from another pc using spanned zip files. Seam to remember I didn't have enought disks so was having to reuse them. It took a long time and the results were disappointing.
    Quake on a 25mhz 486 is basically turn based.

  • @loughkb
    @loughkb 4 роки тому +2

    I remember using that back in the day. It was very handy from time to time. I was a service tech at a mom and pop computer store, laplink was one of my 'tools' for sure!

  • @dos4gwexe
    @dos4gwexe 4 роки тому +2

    This one brings back some fun memories! I used LapLink to copy Photoshop 4.0 from one of the computers at my school to my laptop. I just put all the files in the right place on my own computer and it worked perfectly

  • @casualretrocollector
    @casualretrocollector 4 роки тому +2

    Back in 92 I remember watching my dad use laplink to dial via modem into his computer at work.

  • @electrofreak0
    @electrofreak0 4 роки тому +2

    I would absolutely watch a long transfer. No talking, just the sounds of the computers working away. And watching that progress bar slowly work through the files.

  • @TheBigBentley911
    @TheBigBentley911 4 роки тому +4

    When I got ahold of my first copy of laplink as a kid, I thought it was the most amazing thing ever.

  • @ExtendedJet8
    @ExtendedJet8 4 роки тому +2

    That Packard Bell monitor/keyboard combo sure brings back memories.

  • @LMacNeill
    @LMacNeill 4 роки тому +1

    Back in the '90s when I was doing on-site repair of computers, this was an absolute *requirement* to have in the tool kit. I still have those blue and yellow cables in a box somewhere around here...
    And, yes, connecting the 9-pin serial on one end and the 25-pin serial on the other end will work perfectly well. Did it lots of times back in the day.

  • @MusicFanatical1
    @MusicFanatical1 3 роки тому +2

    I was impressed how each PC knew the "name" of the other (Packard Bell / Thinkpad). I didn't realize parallel/serial port protocols supported precise hostname identifiers before USB.

  • @crescentfreshsongs
    @crescentfreshsongs 4 роки тому +6

    "LapLink" would have been a great name for the portable Zelda games.

  • @safetinspector2
    @safetinspector2 4 роки тому

    Used Laplink many times in my early twenties to migrate data from old to new computers during upgrades. Lovely software that I include in the category “elegant solutions to problems we don’t have anymore,” along with parallel port Zip drives and CDRom towers.
    Thanks for making me feel old, LGR

  • @offrails
    @offrails 4 роки тому +20

    "Look behind you - a four headed cable!"

    • @mvl71
      @mvl71 4 роки тому

      You link like a cow

  • @offrails
    @offrails 4 роки тому +1

    My family was a multi-PC household for most of the 90s, and LapLink 3 was a big part of that. Around 1996, we had two PCs in the kids bedroom and we had them linked with a null model cable (for Doom of course), but LapLink and the parallel cable we had (and I still have) were useful for quickly transferring Doom WADs, other game files, and things that my youngest brother "accidentally" deleted.

  • @Henchman1977
    @Henchman1977 4 роки тому +1

    We used to make our own "LapLink" cable back then... Serial connectors, telephone wire and a pirate copy. Mostly we'd use the cable to play Descent head-to-head.

  • @TheStevenWhiting
    @TheStevenWhiting 4 роки тому +1

    Ah Laplink. Loved it back in about 94 when started college. The lecturer showed us it and how to use it. It turned out to be an engineering course but once I knew how laplink worked, I may have grabbed all the software off the network required for the computer course. All on Windows 3.11. Long story short, I was successful apply for the computer course the 2nd year at college, all because I had the software required :)

  • @dragicianryudo595
    @dragicianryudo595 4 роки тому

    Thank you for showing this off. I had no idea such a thing existed and there was a time where I’d have loved this option.

  • @witeshade
    @witeshade 4 роки тому

    I used Laplink 3 for years when I was a kid, for backing up and for transferring from an older computer to a newer one. It felt super futuristic

  • @TheDrunkenMug
    @TheDrunkenMug 3 роки тому

    I still have one of these !
    😀 your unboxing took me back to the 90's where I found such a box in a 5$ crate at a local computer dump market here in the Netherlands.
    Ah, computer dump markets... Good memories... 😊✌
    Thanks for sharing this blerb 👍

  • @davidinark
    @davidinark 4 роки тому +1

    Haha, I think I still have one of those yellow cables in one of my PC Stuff boxes around here. Loved the look back. Used LL a lot in the old days.

  • @theowinters6314
    @theowinters6314 4 роки тому

    What I always liked was that LapLink had the ability to copy itself to a machine that didn't have it using a mode and copy command in DOS. It would just stream the binary over the com port and the receive machine would just copy the com port output to disk. It was a really clever use of DOS commands.

  • @stevec00ps
    @stevec00ps 4 роки тому +3

    Look at that at 6:28 - last resort "through the mouthpiece" - that's just brilliant!

  • @pglennon1978
    @pglennon1978 4 роки тому

    Wow! I remember copying files from my Compaq Contura Aero 4/25 to my desktop back in the late 90s with this software! Worked amazingly well!

  • @AndyD070568
    @AndyD070568 4 роки тому

    When I first started working Laplink 3 was an essential part of your toolkit. I actually won my copy at an Epson seminar when Epson were making PCs and laptops. The double header serial cable did allow DB9 to DB25 connections.

  • @aner_bda
    @aner_bda 4 роки тому

    I don't think I've ever seen this software, but it would have blown my mind back in the 90s. Really cool utility.

  • @Tigerskunk
    @Tigerskunk 4 роки тому

    Back when I got my first PC job, we used Lap Link to transfer the Dos 6.22 and Windows 3.1 files to the systems we built. Used an AT clone as the main PC. Used a boot disk to partition and format the hard drive with boot files. Then ran lap link to copy the preconfigured files for both over to the new system while building the next. Saved lots of time and hassle.

  • @johndoe1909
    @johndoe1909 3 роки тому

    Ah, worked alot with laplink in the late 80ies. Setting up breadboxes with demos, factory terminals and so forth. Oh the memories

  • @acmild
    @acmild 4 роки тому

    Underwhelming would be too under appreciated it, it’s a kind of lovely nostalgic feeling seeing someone using this “bleeding edge” tech in 2020 while the last time I was using it was in around 98/99. Thanks Clint!

  • @DanielKuhne1976
    @DanielKuhne1976 4 роки тому

    mid 80's to late 90's - golden age of massive manuals :-)

  • @pazzieanneknexx809
    @pazzieanneknexx809 4 роки тому

    Thank you for making all of this for us! Older computers are so interesting.

  • @MelsvanWees
    @MelsvanWees 4 роки тому +10

    Wow you lost blood for this blerb... respect!

  • @andylaauk
    @andylaauk 3 роки тому

    I used this when I was working for a software developer back in mid nineties. We used it to tranfer files to and from remote customer sites via modem.

  • @dionelr
    @dionelr 4 роки тому +1

    Woah! I forgot this even existed. Yeah, in college, my brother and I used this to transfer files between us before we updated to token ring. Don’t forget your 30Ohm terminators.

  • @oswaldjh
    @oswaldjh 4 роки тому

    I used this program a lot back in the 90's. I would build PCs in batches of 5 and use my own computer to install the OS and other software.
    Most of my customers were engineers and required AutoCad or similar software. The time to install these huge programs was cut by over an hour thanks to LapLink.

  • @Tarukai788
    @Tarukai788 4 роки тому

    I remember getting a copy of "LapLink PC Mover" back in 2006 when I bought my first self-bought Windows XP laptop. I planned to use it to move stuff from my old Win2K Pro laptop over, and I think it was somewhat successful, but seeing this here it makes more sense back in that era especially.

  • @Martin_from_SC
    @Martin_from_SC 4 роки тому

    Wow, I remember using this in the early 90's... thanks for the flashback!

  • @sterby1
    @sterby1 4 роки тому +2

    I vaguely remember using Laplink for something way back...
    Then it hit me. It was a summer job in during high school when I built a telex system for transmitting results from a lab to the production site at a factory based on Laplink. It was a hack job but soldering and cable management was good and they used it for 10 years!

  • @MattPula
    @MattPula 3 роки тому

    The graphic design on the front of that Accessories booklet is incredible.

  • @TheOtherBill
    @TheOtherBill 4 роки тому

    I remember LapLink well. I used it at work to update the data files on our notebooks (the common name for laptops because they were 8.5"x11" and fit in your briefcase) for business travel. A newer version came out and I got the company to buy it and took the old one home. This was the start of my home network, 2 PC's permanently connected by LapLink cables. Eventually replaced by 10Base2 then 10BaseT.

  • @philsbbs
    @philsbbs 4 роки тому

    This brings back memories. Thanks for the trip down memory lane.

  • @FatNorthernBigot
    @FatNorthernBigot 4 роки тому +1

    Laplink? My nostalgia bone has been tickled. I remember the revered "null printer cable". I've never owned a null printer.

    • @LKRaider
      @LKRaider 4 роки тому +1

      Null modem, I don’t remember null printer

  • @frozendude707
    @frozendude707 4 роки тому +7

    Oh, yeah, I think I still have the 3rd party nullmodem and parallel laplink cables I bought and used for computer repair stuff (sometimes having to use creative solutions to get it to a laptop that had no floppy drive), and the cables also work with Interlink, and you can use them for streaming stuff between old Linux machines as well, like a terminal or PPP or Kermit or whatever.
    I am not sure, memory fails me here, but I think Midnight Commander or some similar file manager could use nullmodem (but not parallel)?

  • @RandomInsano2
    @RandomInsano2 4 роки тому +2

    I’ve used a LapLink cable with Windows 95 to copy files a few times and as a null modem to rescue some servers. I’ve NEVER seen the software. That’s kind of amazing. I wish I’d used it more and saved the floppy swapping with WinZip.

  • @Wazoox
    @Wazoox 4 роки тому +5

    Doesn't the "Link" in the name, the font, the colors evoke a special version of Zelda to you all? :)

    • @IngwiePhoenix
      @IngwiePhoenix 4 роки тому

      Ouch... Get your coat mate. :P
      (I laughted way harder than I should've...)

  • @Koutsie
    @Koutsie 3 роки тому

    Man, the colour scheme on those cables looks sooooooooooo good.

  • @NukeJockey
    @NukeJockey 4 роки тому

    It never gets old watching you play Duke 3D Clint

  • @radioactivekitty9174
    @radioactivekitty9174 4 роки тому +1

    5:05 - That Server Technology power thing -- they still exist today! It's now a part of Legrand, and they still do switching power controls and datacenter power solutions.

  • @ctoforhire
    @ctoforhire 4 роки тому

    LapLink over Parallel was a life saver back in the day!

  • @Spellfork
    @Spellfork 4 роки тому

    I love how almost every video LGR does and on whatever subject we always somehow end up playing Duke 3D!

  • @oopszie
    @oopszie 4 роки тому +1

    I used a legit copy of laplink V and laplink remote access daily back in the 90s. The serial cable was great for multiplayer Warcraft II without having to try and configure a network in DOS.

  • @fabio03171
    @fabio03171 4 роки тому

    I've owned the origin lap link 5 for over 20 years and the best part of the cables is because of there color you know what and were they are regardless which bucket hey are in !

  • @Rivenworld
    @Rivenworld 4 роки тому

    Used to use this many years ago, brilliant piece of software.

  • @DownwithEA1
    @DownwithEA1 4 роки тому

    Man this Packard Bell monitor was the same one my family had after our Commodore 64 PC. I kid you not my parents used that same Packard Bell monitor till about 2 years ago. Ah the memories. So much Red Alert played on that monitor.

  • @alliejr
    @alliejr 4 роки тому +1

    We used this ALL THE TIME when we were "on the road" with our Compaq and Toshiba luggables. We often travelled as a team. No portable network (WiFi was decades away). It was LapLink or "sneaker-net" (upload files to floppy and walking them over to another portable computer to download).

    • @Cutest-Bunny998
      @Cutest-Bunny998 4 роки тому

      Sneaker net still exists, even today. It's hard to beat the bandwidth of a box full of multi TB drives. Google Cloud let's you import via delivered/mailed drives for example.

  • @Thagarr
    @Thagarr 4 роки тому

    A very cool program! I used LapLink as well as a couple of other transfer programs. It is pretty cool to watch it bootstrap it's self over a cable to another PC. It came in pretty handy if your floppy drive controller died. I built my own Null modem serial and parallel cables, it's a good way to learn how to solder. It was a lot quicker to transfer a 20 meg hard drive backup over a parallel cable than to wait for it be written and read from 20 plus disks using a floppy drive!

  • @thejabberwalker
    @thejabberwalker 4 роки тому +1

    The power of L. Making sharp cardboard fun to watch!

  • @el_yemo
    @el_yemo 4 роки тому

    Nice. I have flashlights about me using this laplink back in the days. Cool!

  • @johneygd
    @johneygd 3 роки тому

    Wooow those yellow & blue parallel cables along the 9 pin cable really looks appealing.

  • @capnchaosdk3452
    @capnchaosdk3452 4 роки тому +1

    I use LPTDOS for Total Commander, easy server tool for all DOS machines and then the possibility to connect directly in Windows 10 is amazing.

  • @mbp1646
    @mbp1646 4 роки тому

    I used Laplink regularly back in the 1990s. It was essential whenever you got a new computer and wanted to transfer everything over. The fact that it came with cables was essential in order to avoid RS232 hell (9 pin or 15 pin? male or female? null modem or cross over? parity y/n? number of stop bits? baud rate? etc etc etc. .....)

  • @ejunkempire2459
    @ejunkempire2459 4 роки тому

    I used to use this all the time in high school as well. Also borrowed it from the school quite a few times when I needed to re install windows on my Sony Vaio laptop because I didn’t have the external cd rom for it.

  • @TheBandy01
    @TheBandy01 4 роки тому

    I come home from a 12 hr shift at work, turn on my computer, and see a new video from LGR. A perfect way to begin my well earned, albeit late, weekend.

  • @grahammales
    @grahammales 4 роки тому

    Was a huge user of Laplink back in the 90s. Still have the blue (serial) and yellow (parallel) cables somewhere.

  • @fragglet
    @fragglet 4 роки тому

    Fantastic piece of software, and version 5 is wonderfully polished too.

  • @bf0189
    @bf0189 4 роки тому +3

    My high school IT guy was super competent and by the time I was in high school they were using Windows2000 (best version of windows ever IMO) so no DOS shareware :( This was between 2004-2008 and everything was well networked.
    However in 11th and 12th grade I helped out with IT and had my own computer with unlimited privileges so I still gamed a bit!

    • @kbhasi
      @kbhasi 4 роки тому +2

      This reminded me: the primary and secondary schools* I attended used Windows XP at the time, and even though they used Windows security policies to block access to lots of things, I was able to use "FreeCommander" to bypass the blocked system drive access and copy files for applications the school installed, so I could take them home on my external hard drive and run them on my Acer Aspire 5050, or later, my ThinkPad X200 Tablet. Sadly, that 30 GB external hard drive died, so I lost all of the primary school files and most of the secondary school files, before I was able to get larger 500 GB and 1 TB external hard drives, and from there, a NAS.
      *they switched to Windows 7 in 2012

    • @eDoc2020
      @eDoc2020 4 роки тому

      @@kbhasi Yes, most Windows "policies" are basically elective choices by the Microsoft programs. For example, a disable Task Manager policy is implemented by taskmgr.exe checking for the policy key on startup. By using an alternative program I was able to kill some unwanted background programs like a remote screen monitor. Same with setting the background, Display Properties was disabled but I could still change the background using Paint.
      Later I was able to gain local Administrator access on most of the PCs so I could delete the policy keys. I automated this using a batch file which also set up many preferences and settings to my liking.

  • @TheClockUpOnTheWall
    @TheClockUpOnTheWall 4 роки тому

    I'm only 39 but feel old as remember making my own laplink cables with parts from Radio Shack and soldering up the wires to the connectors. Both parallel and serial.

  • @Josh.V
    @Josh.V 4 роки тому

    This is truly cutting edge technology.

  • @SeishukuS12
    @SeishukuS12 4 роки тому

    Don't remember if we ever used Laplink, but back when I was a kid, I made my own serial and parallel cables for DOS's interlink software. Good times, I remember waiting all day for stuff to copy. lol

  • @ernstoud
    @ernstoud 4 роки тому

    Got those cables in a drawer. They always mingle with other stuff and makes closing the drawer difficult. Memories! The time that hooking up two systems took ages and gave lots of frustration with breakout boxes, CTS, DTR etc...

  • @u4ia420
    @u4ia420 4 роки тому

    Went to Interop/Webworld Expo in Atlanta in 1998. Won a copy of PC Anywhere.. Coolest piece of software I had seen at the time.

  • @jd31068
    @jd31068 4 роки тому

    No self-respecting computer nerd / IT department dared be without LapLink!! What a revolution for us at the time. 😁 Nobody shoots down my ride and liiiivvvesssss

  • @ParoxyDM
    @ParoxyDM 4 роки тому

    Growing up my best bud and I played Doom deathmatch via a null-modem serial cable all the time. I remember using this app to transfer WAD files between our computers. Fun times. Simpler times.

  • @skideric
    @skideric 4 роки тому +1

    Got several Versions of LL SW & Hardware!
    Love the Dos Version,even for use without cables,as file manager!

  • @tehlaser
    @tehlaser 4 роки тому

    The bootstrap mode of Laplink blew my mind back in the day.
    I kind of miss the way you used to be able to tell what a computer was "doing" by listening to the noise the drives made.

  • @usptact
    @usptact 4 роки тому

    Really cool! I remember seeing Laplink option in some software but never seen it in action.

  • @thereallantesh
    @thereallantesh 4 роки тому

    Back in the '90s I had an office job at a large company. I used LapLink fairly regularly with my coworkers. I'm pretty sure I had an older version. I had both the blue and yellow cables, but my blue serial cable did not have the multiple connectors like yours as far as I can recall.

  • @BlameThande
    @BlameThande 4 роки тому

    I always wanted a programme like this in the 90s but never knew what it was called... also looking forward to that Packard Bell video, I had that exact monitor for my second computer.

  • @Anaerin
    @Anaerin 4 роки тому

    Way back when, and I was working for a company that would build and repair computers in the 386/486/pentium era, our office used a parallel port network card to connect new machines to our 10-base-2 network to load Windows 3 and our standard test suite.

  • @MichaelEhling
    @MichaelEhling 4 роки тому

    Vaguely recalled Laplink. Then I saw the blue and yellow cables. Yuup. These were always in my computer bag as I traveled 'round the country doing tech things.

  • @DavidRibera
    @DavidRibera 4 роки тому

    You brought me back to my computer infancy. Thanks!!

  • @034G63EVO
    @034G63EVO 4 роки тому

    My frst 486 PC was a Packard Bell Legend 10CD 486 SX-2 50Mhz.. Man that brings back the memories.

  • @pj0t
    @pj0t 4 роки тому

    Wauw, now that is a program I've almost forgotten. It's been a long time since I've seen it, thank you for the parallel ride

  • @JBuster941
    @JBuster941 4 роки тому

    When I played around with old dos/win9x machines for fun, I frequently used a similar program called parcp. It could make use of regular laplink/interlink cables as well as a special cable to increase bandwidth (which I put together myself from two old parallel printer cables). I also sometimes used interlink because it allowed you to run programs like antivirus externally to scan a machine that is itself not capable of running that program.

  • @ztormentedz
    @ztormentedz 4 роки тому

    It has been so long since I've seen one of those. They use to be great! I used them a bunch.