How many of us are PC users?
How many of us are PC users?
Post here if you're a PC user! (Then we can gang up and... say nice edifying things to each other and the mac users too (because PC users aren't violent, like those mac users...))
/parody
So seriously, if you've had a good/interesting/entertaining experience on your PC, feel free to share it here.
I'll go first. I've been a PC user since I was 5 years old and first started playing Reader Rabbit and gizmos and gadgets on my dad's old 486. I've owned and modified my own computers since I was 8 or 9; built my first computer when I was 14; and currently have 3 computers which me and my wife share (4 if you count my hacked Wii which currently serves as the main media player in my apartment.)
One of my favorite computers is the once I'm currently using - an eee 900ha. It weighs 2 and a half pounds, and has a 9 inch screen, making it the perfect ultraportable netbook for taking notes in class and hopping online anywhere I please. That doesn't mean that I'm held back though. With a built in 160gb hard drive, 2 gigs of ram, and an Intel Atom processor, I have the space to store all my music, movies, and games on my computer, and the power to play them. Plus with standard on-the-fly over/underclocking, I can automatically turn down my processor when I'm on battery power to make sure I squeeze all of the glorious 5 hours of life I expect out of my netbook.
Can you tell I'm satisfied with my PC?
How about you? What's been your experience?
P.S. I forgot to mention, my netbook cost under $300, so I could have gotten 3 of them for less than the cost of the cheapest mac.
/parody
So seriously, if you've had a good/interesting/entertaining experience on your PC, feel free to share it here.
I'll go first. I've been a PC user since I was 5 years old and first started playing Reader Rabbit and gizmos and gadgets on my dad's old 486. I've owned and modified my own computers since I was 8 or 9; built my first computer when I was 14; and currently have 3 computers which me and my wife share (4 if you count my hacked Wii which currently serves as the main media player in my apartment.)
One of my favorite computers is the once I'm currently using - an eee 900ha. It weighs 2 and a half pounds, and has a 9 inch screen, making it the perfect ultraportable netbook for taking notes in class and hopping online anywhere I please. That doesn't mean that I'm held back though. With a built in 160gb hard drive, 2 gigs of ram, and an Intel Atom processor, I have the space to store all my music, movies, and games on my computer, and the power to play them. Plus with standard on-the-fly over/underclocking, I can automatically turn down my processor when I'm on battery power to make sure I squeeze all of the glorious 5 hours of life I expect out of my netbook.
Can you tell I'm satisfied with my PC?
How about you? What's been your experience?
P.S. I forgot to mention, my netbook cost under $300, so I could have gotten 3 of them for less than the cost of the cheapest mac.
Not dead yet.
- Dr Ninja
- I should know what a double post is now
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Our family didn't get our first computer till I was 14...we were poorish LOL. I did t build my first computer till I was 18 P4 1.8ghz overclocked to 2.2witj 512MB ddr 333 40GB HDIrwin Springer wrote:Hooray, I was 12David O wrote: built my first computer when I was 14
- Irwin
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I always thought it would be fun to overclock, but isn't it illegalderekschroer wrote:Our family didn't get our first computer till I was 14...we were poorish LOL. I did t build my first computer till I was 18 P4 1.8ghz overclocked to 2.2witj 512MB ddr 333 40GB HDIrwin Springer wrote:Hooray, I was 12David O wrote: built my first computer when I was 14
Not illegal - it just (usually) breaks your warranty. There's a big difference between those two things. In my eee pc's case, that doesn't even happen, as the overclocking feature came pre-installed from the manufacturer.Irwin Springer wrote:I always thought it would be fun to overclock, but isn't it illegalderekschroer wrote:Our family didn't get our first computer till I was 14...we were poorish LOL. I did t build my first computer till I was 18 P4 1.8ghz overclocked to 2.2witj 512MB ddr 333 40GB HDIrwin Springer wrote:Hooray, I was 12David O wrote: built my first computer when I was 14
(BTW, I wanted to build my own computer before I was 14 - I just didn't have the money until then. )
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- Trent DeWhite
- Former Mayor
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PC + MSDOS 5.0+ (specifically 6.22) = Happiness!
I remember the days of Win 3.1, Win 95, 98SE, ME (*rofl*), and 2K!
I remember the days of Win 3.1, Win 95, 98SE, ME (*rofl*), and 2K!
ToO siblings: Donna Blackbeard, Perron, Evil Chick, American Eagle, Stubborn, Shadowfax, and thelordismyshepherd (aka Anna), but StrongNChrist is my twin!
StrongNChrist, deceased 03-25-11, requiescat in pace
I remember having a blast playing old school games in elementary school on an Apple II....wait....nevermind. *leaves thread*
Also, does anyone remember those PC learning games where you were the guy in a blue jacket and you had to answer questions to get parts to build stuff like a blimp and such? And there was another one where you had to take pictures of the evil robots or something.
Also, does anyone remember those PC learning games where you were the guy in a blue jacket and you had to answer questions to get parts to build stuff like a blimp and such? And there was another one where you had to take pictures of the evil robots or something.
The Learning Company's "Gizmos and Gadgets." The pictures of evil robots were in "Midnight Rescue" I think.Tyler wrote:Also, does anyone remember those PC learning games where you were the guy in a blue jacket and you had to answer questions to get parts to build stuff like a blimp and such? And there was another one where you had to take pictures of the evil robots or something.
ToO siblings: Donna Blackbeard, Perron, Evil Chick, American Eagle, Stubborn, Shadowfax, and thelordismyshepherd (aka Anna), but StrongNChrist is my twin!
StrongNChrist, deceased 03-25-11, requiescat in pace
Definitely pulling for Gizmos and Gadgets here. G&G was fun and it made you smart, so that physics in high school was that much easier. Together with Super Mario Bros., those two games were the main early forces that got me into gamingTrent DeWhite wrote:I was a happy PC user for the majority of my life.
My earlier memories using a PC include the classics such as Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing for Kids, Reader Rabbit, and Gizmos and Gadgets. Good times!
As was already mentioned, the game you're thinking of was Gizmos and Gadgets and you got to build a blimp and a drag racer, and an airplane, I think. (Checked it on wikipedia, and apparently the races fell into three categories: "automotive, alternative energy, and aircraft".)Tyler wrote:Also, does anyone remember those PC learning games where you were the guy in a blue jacket and you had to answer questions to get parts to build stuff like a blimp and such?
I think that when I have kids, Gizmos and Gadgets is going to be the first game I let them play, and I won't let them know that there are other, far more advanced, games out there until they beat G&G first.
Not dead yet.
Crayola art was back in the day when you used FLOPPY DISCS... I'm like the only one of my friends who knew what those were, all because of Crayola art!Shadowfax wrote:I remember those!!Anna><> wrote:I played all the reader rabbit games, and then I played the 3rd grade adventure game and before those two I played Crayola Art on our family's PC.
Those were the best games ever.
- King Butter Turtle
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Haha, I remember Crayola Art!Anna><> wrote:Crayola art was back in the day when you used FLOPPY DISCS... I'm like the only one of my friends who knew what those were, all because of Crayola art!Shadowfax wrote:I remember those!!Anna><> wrote:I played all the reader rabbit games, and then I played the 3rd grade adventure game and before those two I played Crayola Art on our family's PC.
Those were the best games ever.
Lisa Hammit - 1991-2011 - Forever strong in Christ
Do you want to discuss floppy disks? I recall "Marvin the Moose" on 3.5- and 5.25-inch disks!
ToO siblings: Donna Blackbeard, Perron, Evil Chick, American Eagle, Stubborn, Shadowfax, and thelordismyshepherd (aka Anna), but StrongNChrist is my twin!
StrongNChrist, deceased 03-25-11, requiescat in pace
- Trent DeWhite
- Former Mayor
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Gizmos and Gadgets was one of those educational games packaged in a wildly entertaining (not to mention addicting) format. That and Treasure Mountain were mostly to blame for getting me hooked onto computer gaming. Operation Neptune was pretty good, too, although I don't think I ever beat it.David O wrote:Definitely pulling for Gizmos and Gadgets here. G&G was fun and it made you smart, so that physics in high school was that much easier. Together with Super Mario Bros., those two games were the main early forces that got me into gamingTrent DeWhite wrote:My earlier memories using a PC include the classics such as Mavis Beacon Teaches Typing for Kids, Reader Rabbit, and Gizmos and Gadgets. Good times!
Age of Empires II and its expansion were awesome, but they really botched it when they created the third edition.Chandler wrote:I'm a PC user! There is an old PC around here that I've made use of whenever I want to play Age of Empires or games like Sherlock Holmes or Nancy Drew... but now I just play them on a Mac.
Ah, the good ol' days when one could spend hours on Paint! I remember discovering video conferencing and instant messaging for the very first time. Windows Netmeeting or Windows Messenger, anyone?Taq wrote:I remember being so excited when our family got our first PC when I was in the 6th grade. Earliest memories include using Paint, playing solitaire, getting my first email address.