i remember my dad went out & bought a cd media kit back then. it had a single speed cd drive & a sound blaster card & i think it had some software in it as well. all this came in a big box.
mine needed a bump to initially read the cd. without, it would spin up and then slam on the breaks over and over again. it lasted a month and was replaced by a proper cd drive... playing dott from cd did not change the experience. the only two options were the freezes and studdering audio or jet engine levels of noise. there was once a hard drive filled with dott up to the last bit...
Can't believe I just got rickrolled by a computer history video.
i remember my dad went out & bought a cd media kit back then. it had a single speed cd drive & a sound blaster card & i think it had some software in it as well. all this came in a big box.
I'm wondering why you didn't install the 3.5" floppy drive into the 3.5" drive bay… cable too short?
I knew the first thing I'd see was T7G... That was *the* software to get when you had your first CD rom...
I thought you ran Linux? Personally, I dig seeing you installing and running OS/2 (OS/2 Warp 4.52!) at some point
It's a dual-boot. Next Linux-video is in two weeks!
mine needed a bump to initially read the cd. without, it would spin up and then slam on the breaks over and over again. it lasted a month and was replaced by a proper cd drive...
playing dott from cd did not change the experience. the only two options were the freezes and studdering audio or jet engine levels of noise. there was once a hard drive filled with dott up to the last bit...
I had that drive though it was rebranded for Tandy. Funny thing though I got it in 2003. I used it for a older DOS gaming build.
Funny how my smallest memory stick holds the contents of over 100 cds