Oh neat, I'm glad this got to you! (I'm the one who sent it in). I forgot to get the tracking number from FedEx, and I think I missed seeing it in the unboxing video around Thanksgiving, so I was unsure its fate. Glad to see it featured. :)
Thanks for sending it in, I was given one, couldn't figure out how to open it (lazy or stupid, you decide) but now I know (because of this vid). So yeah lol thanks again
I had almost this exact one in black! I remember it like it was yesterday because it was my first "real" PC I ever owned! It was a 2162, with a 233Mhz Pentium II, 32MB of memory and 4.2gb Western Digital hard drive! Thanks for the huge nostalgia factor!
@@LGRBlerbs I have a Power pc Macintosh 7200/78 from 1995 with the monitor, it worked fine last time I tried it and idk if your looking for a computer like this atm.
For real though. That stupid stormer program on here _never_ actually finished loading and only bogged it down until I forcefully removed all traces of it
@@LGRBlerbs Not surprising, it's a 2004 garbageware running on a 1996 PC with a hard drive that was slow even by 1996 standards, is almost filled up and undoubtedly fragmented to hell and back.
Same. I bought an old Pentium 4 laptop running XP, and had AVG running on it (a surprisingly recent version, too! 2015 I believe). And the thing was slow as molasses, unbearable to use. I wiped it and installed a fresh copy of XP SP3 and it absolutely flies.
as cool as the "10,000.00" vintage PC's are, I kinda enjoy when you revisit every day machines that a lot of us grew up with.. we had these at a hotel I night clerked for & it was good enough to play Diablo over LAN with the clerk next door at the motel 6 xD
I love extremes! The best, the worst, most expensive, least expensive. They're each memorable in different ways, often lusting after one while actually living with the other.
My favorite part of getting an old PC is when the HDD is included. It's like opening a time capsule and bringing me back to my childhood. Yes show the restoration process!
I do wonder how many long forgotten programs will be lost if he does that. Also if the original owner was one of Mike's relatives he might like to see the poetry etc. If you don't happen to have a suitable monitor etc browsing an old computer is more difficult than browsing a notebook or phot album.
Yeah, I bought some old Amiga floppies off eBay 2 years ago. Of course they were sold as "empty", but we all know that there's still data on it. From the files I could reconsruct that a brother and sister used to share an Amiga, and not only did they use it to play games but also made some lists of CDs they owned (and yes, it was CDs, not vinyl. So I think they used the Amiga well into the 90's, when CDs became the dominating format) and wrote some other text files. For example, the sister called her brother "dumb like a piece of sh*t" in one file, lol (ohh, the love siblings share... I might have typed the exact same thing about my brother as well, haha) I could even reconstruct their names, and found out the brother now is a used car salesman. I thought about contacting him on Facebook, but decided against it. Because if I would receive a message like "hey, I found your old floppy disks" I would think the other person was a creep.
yeah, recently got an old pentium pc with windows xp and STILL software like old chrome versions, windows live messenger, it looked like it hasnt been used since way back then, an absolute time capsule
@@JPX64Channel Similar deal when I got a pizzabox-format HP Pavilion 3260. Featured a Pentium 200mhz with I think 16MB of RAM and onboard video when I got it, including the original CRT but no speakers, mouse or keyboard when I got it. It actually had Simcity installed on the original HDD with Windows 95 on it, but sadly the original drive was dying and needed replacement quite soon. It still does work last I touched it, but would need to be immediately imaged and then cleaned up before preservation of the data on it.
I got a ton of old smartphones that are their own time capsules. Never updated, all apps stuck in their respective years (2007-12) it's amazing how far we've come. Somewhere I got a P4 HP Pavilion with an unmodified Windows 98 SE that still works put away somewhere. Kinda useless today unless I come across some old game discs.
Holy crap, I had this exact computer (my first PC). I bought it at Office Depot and I think I paid around $1200 dollars for it back in 97. So many memories. I kept the hard drive from it for years as it was rock solid. What a trip down memory lane.
This looks *very* close to the IBM Aptiva that our family upgraded to in late 1997. Ours had a Pentium 200 MMX in it, pretty sure an original Intel one. Other than that it's nearly the same; same case, same ATI Rage video chip, same Crystal audio chip, same horribly slow and loud Quantum Bigfoot 5.25" hard disk drive. I really enjoyed this PC, it was such a huge upgrade from our 486 and allowed me to play Quake and Duke Nukem 3D properly for the first time. It's also the first PC that I performed upgrades on myself; first basic stuff like RAM, later it would receive my first 3D accelerator in the shape of a Voodoo 2. It's also the PC that carried me into the internet age. A true classic and what a nostalgia trip.
yes, jump from old 386-486 types of computers and DOS maybe windows 95 , without 3d acceleration, and barely running modern 3d 1996-1997 games, was HUGE step to Pentium 1 MMX system, that was presented as multimedia PC. thanks to MMX instructions, even video playback at low resolutions were possible. And also 3d acceleration. And also smoked Quake and late DOS games quite good. Particullary 166-233 MMX was up to 6-8x faster than 486 DX2 66. Something like that, in upgrade, we stoped to see past 2000, it was barely 2x (200%) usually from that time, and from boring Nehalem (first core I generation) , it was usually barely +10-20% in performance
@@warrax111glad we both saw nehalem as boring.. Sandy bridge blew my socks off though as amd rooter and the situation they had been in since conroe I really hurt seeing that 40% IPC increase with sandy but I was in awe of it also they hold up well . The Q9650 gave Nehalem a good run for it's money which says everything
WOW, the very first PC I ever had in my bedroom as a kid in the late 90s was an Aptiva. Literally, my dad was one of those "techie nerds" who at the time, much to the annoyance of my mother who hated computers, INSISTED that I needed it to help me grow up to be tech literate (And to play Total Annihilation with him)
Man, this takes me back. This was my first PC, I think we got it around 1999. No internet connection, but I remember getting PC game demos from cereal boxes and playing them on this system. Simpler times.
Man, this was my very first PC growing up. Some seriously fond memories of playing Myst and the Descent II demo that came with it! Thanks for the unexpected nostalgia!
There's usually a sense of contending with one's own mortality when dealing with old computers - the last two Windows 98 computers that I handled which weren't mine were to recover copies of deceased or elderly family members' documentation.
Things are going to get worse with passwords etc. Several years ago I read about a boy who inherited his grandfathers iPad. Despite being a named beneficiary in the will, Apple wouldn't unlock it for him.
@@MrDuncl You can just create another user account on Windows 9X easily if there’s a reason you didn’t want to restore (has the original install with included goodies, too lazy to track down drivers and all that gunk, etc.)
I have my late uncle's old laptop that he used to write sermons on. I've been meaning to back it up... but it's too old to have USB or wi-fi and I don't have any floppies laying around anymore...
@@ChocoHearts I just bought a cheap IDE to USB adapter off eBay to transfer data off of an old laptop I bought, I used Disk2VHD to convert the entire drive into a partition that can later be restored to with VHD2Disk but you can always just pick files out individually
There's something nice about firing up a machine like that that hasn't been touched or used in years and having a browse, it's like opening up a time capsule.
My first PC was an IBM 2176! It was somewhat similar but had the mega cool "stealth" front panel that had a cover that slid up and down to cover the front bays.
I had one of those! I worked IT support back then an my office had one that was only about 6 months old and they didn't want it because they had standardized on some locally built system. I remember it came with a huge binder of software and games. I was in my early 20's then and hadn't moved out yet. My mom thought I was nuts when I loaded NT4 Back Office Server on it and set up a domain and LAN in the house. When cable internet came I was even running my own Exchange Server for a time off of it. Great little machine that lasted a long time.
I still have mine. 2176. P166 , ATI 2mb 3d chip. 2GB HD. And the worst design ever: MWave Modem/Soundcard. I modded it by throwing in an Evergreen 333 AMD chip and I drilled holes on the front grill and changed out the fan with faster fan with LED’s Added WIN 98. The folder with a ton of software is still intact.
Love the content. My father had a Aptiva desktop like this(but ran Win95). We would spend hours playing Flight Sim 95 and Star Wars Monopoly. He sadly passed in 2016. Thanks for bringing back wonderful memories. and please restore this Aptiva!!
Awesome video. I was really touched by the fact there was so much information on the previous user before they passed. Would it be possible for you to pass the photos and poems onto possible relatives of the user, as you said there was emails etc. I just think this kind of data shouldn't just be deleted but given to surviving friends and family.
@@LGRBlerbs Thanks for the reply clint. I knew you would of thought about that. Youve always been super respectful when dealing with stuff like this. You never know, someone may even recognise all that lovely bloatware
@@MyMyMicah32 thank you for raising this point Micah, I was also hoping her poetry wasn’t just sent to the ether, even though it’s of course obviously not appropriate to upload an archive or show in a video.
@@JoshuaPaulKing exactly. Normally its not so blatant and personal, but I love discovering little things about the previous owners of tech, like what games and applications they used. There is always that line between a persons privacy and also appreciating a life lived through a shared connection (it being this heavily used machine) It nice to know others felt the same.
Nice this complete machine wasn’t recycled. Pretty cool how clean it is just as it sits. Man those quantum hard drive! Me and a friend used to call those drives “the rock crushers” because of the sounds they made!
Nice one. Apple was fond of using them back in the day as well. They must have been cheaper than the competition. My Performa 6214CD had 1 gig Quantum Fireball and, yep, it was a noisy little bugger. Seemed slow as well, but then that might have been the machine itself..
I'd watch a restoration video of this machine! I think this is from around the same time when I built my own PC for the first time after having owned a Shi-tec 386 and an HP Vectra pentium 1. Good times
Oh wow, this was a nostalgia trip - that exact model was my first ever totally brand-new pre-built PC I ever had, which I got just before heading off to college.
There's just something with IBM computers. They definitely knew how to design their computers to look good IMO and they were generally well built as well.
Agreed. This Aptiva design looks very industrial - so was a simpler one my family bought back in 1996. I liked on the simpler towers that it had an actual handle you could use to both left the entire computer and assist with removal of the casing.
Brings so much memories. IBM aptiva was my first own computer 😄 my dad got bunch of computers from some library or something. All of the computers were dead so I had to mix and match those three aptivas to get one working 😂 so in a way it was my first pc and a first self build one at the same time. All that I can remember from it that it had like pentium 3 in a slot 1 socket and some kind of 64mb ATI graphics card so I could play games. Have to get me one of those aptivas just for nostalgic sake.
Oh and for the record Clint. The flap on the under side the case in the front opens the case. Just pull from that towards you and the case opens much easier 😄
I advise you to install a Windows 3.1 or Windows 95 emulator on your modern computer. This fully satisfies the natural feeling of nostalgia, but is much cheaper than buying a rare computer.
@@MiskaKarvonen Oh yes, you're probably right. Is it more correct to put an old record on a gramophone, and not look for an mp3 record? I am writing this without any irony, but with great respect for a true enthusiast of the right retro👍
Late model E series Aptivas were apparently made by Acer. Wouldn't surprise me if this one was; it definitely shares Acer's design language of the time. EDIT: Okay, yes, this was definitely made by Acer. The motherboard has an ALi chipset (Acer Labs, Inc.) and the label on the BIOS chip clearly says "Acer Inc." on it.
I had almost this exact one in black! I remember it like it was yesterday because it was my first "real" PC I ever owned! It was a 2162, with a 233Mhz Pentium II, 32MB of memory and 4.2gb Western Digital hard drive! Thanks for the huge nostalgia factor!
I had one with the 400MHZ K6-2 CPU and it still seemed like a dog. I didn't care at the time because it was my first computer and I used the hell out of it. Ahhhh... the BSOD fond memories haha
@@brucewrigleysgumchewz4667 a lot of prebuilts don't get the performance you'd think they would for the specs they have. I'm not sure how they manage to screw them up like they do. I only know that's what happens. Enthusiast motherboards are just better somehow.
This was my second PC, a Pentium 200. Nostalgia hit me when someone offered a 2158 (AMD K6-2) with an original monitor, keyboard, mouse and speakers. It has a front panel which opens as a door. It had been in an attic for years and was as new. Instant buy.
I had almost this exact one in black! I remember it like it was yesterday because it was my first "real" PC I ever owned! It was a 2162, with a 233Mhz Pentium II, 32MB of memory and 4.2gb Western Digital hard drive! Thanks for the huge nostalgia factor!
I’d love to see another restoration video. Doesn’t need to have a deep story behind it… just something short putting a lovely PC like this back to factory stock. Then maybe further videos with various upgrades. Great stuff!
Seeing the case on this bad boy makes me wish for a video going over PC cases still being produced that have this type of design. I've always dreamed of building an uber high-end PC with a case in the same vein as an SGI workstation or, well, this. Tickles my fancy a lot more than the RGB-riddled glass-paneled beasts that I see all too often.
Yeah, they were stylish & "sexy" because they were so clearly different from the comparatively "boring" boxes that defined conventional PC system cases ... & then it seemed like *everyone* had to come up w/ funky new designs for their system cases. IBM itself may have achieved the height of nonstandard case design lunacy: one of their hi-end Aptiva models came in an all-black color scheme only -- system, keyboard, mouse & monitor, which was still unusual @ the time -- & the system was split up into 2 sections! There was a main tower unit -- containing the power supply, motherboard, CPU, memory, hard drive -- & a "desktop pod" -- housing the CD drive plus the PS/2, video & other I/O ports -- connected together by a fat "umbilical cord". From a user-convenience perspective, this system layout offered 1 clear advantage: the tower unit can sit on the floor while the relatively smaller "pod" sits on the desktop underneath the video monitor, providing easy access to the CD drive & device connectors. From a technician's (or a DIY enthusiast's) perspective, however, the system design was a nightmare on steroids; the CD drive, for example, wasn't mounted normally -- it was housed in a "popup/ hideaway" drive bay located on top of the "desktop pod" as I recall. The techie in me gets annoyed @ any system case design that creates headaches, like when the top of the case is shaped so that it won't sit level if U flip the case over, but in this instance the case has an early-Mac-style carry handle which is a rare but nice feature.
This was one of our first family computers in the 90's... after our TI994/A back in 82 of course ;) I begged my Dad to buy us this and I played Space Cadet on it to my hearts content! I actually still have my Aptiva HD, got it from my Dad's closet when he passed away back in 2019. I can't wait to explore what's on the HD back when I was 20 or so! Probably junk. I remember having an issue with the HD after a bit, tho, perhaps a virus. We got our Aptiva before AOL was big, so I dialed into BBS's on mine, my first was Argus BBS in Arlington TX where I created my handle which I still use today (now on YT) Ballistik Coffee Boy ;) Great memories! I miss meeting up with the old crew all around the DFW area and getting drunk at bars, having a good time. Cant wait to see how mine runs in 2023. My case design is actually different and I have the Aptiva original red and blue IBM folder with discs along with it. I threw out the monitor long ago and keyboard, huge speakers. ugh. i dunno why. Thanks LGR
My aunt had this exact family PC when I was young. I remember it having Windows 98, then was upgraded to Windows 2000, and before she got rid of it it was upgraded to XP. It was fun at every Christmas seing the upgrades they did year after year. Eventually she bought a laptop. I wished I could have kept it.
Oh sure, I'd love to see this Aptiva restored. The department store I worked at used Aptivas (among other systems) back in the late 90s-early 2000s for their everyday stuff. They were kept up on the third floor where the local chain's computer shop was. I can remember when me and a co-worker was watching them work, and one of the tech guys decided to show us what else was on the system. That's right, nude images in all their monochrome glory! Sure bet the management would have loved seeing those along with their sales figures :) And the Cyrix brings back memories...back in 1998, when my eldest brother sent me parts he had left over cross-country I used them, including the Cyrix 6x86 120+, as the backbone for the first computer I ever built on my own. In fact, I still have that original processor, as well as the mobo manual for that first Frankenstein!
I waited months and months for the Aptiva 2168-M71 to come in stock in 1995. I called Best Buy every day. The day they finally said they were in stock I was shocked. Great machine, minus the Mwave combo modem and sound card that would choke if you connect faster than 14.4 and use the sound at the same time. Had a more prominent carrying handle and sliding front cover. Also having a built in DVD decoder in 1997 on this one -- not bad.
Oh man what memories. I remember my dad having one of these, I think back in '98 the E5D "high-end" model with a Pentium 2 400Mhz, with speech recognition software Via Voice. We thought it so was cool at the time. It held such sentimental value to him that he kept the case and turned it into a sleeper PC.
There's something about IBM computers from this time that takes me back to junior high, kind of like how the PowerMac G4 gives me that alternate nostalgia feeling. I would definitely love to see a restoration video on this PC.
I just so happen to have an Aptiva coming in the mail myself. It’s the kind with a door that slides down slowly to reveal the drives and has a “Multimedia “ sticker. I’ve always loved the Aptivas for some reason. I had the exact one you are showing but regrettably sold it a year ago. Thanks for the great videos Clint!
This was my families first computer. I still remember going with my grandparents to best buy when they bought it. I couldn't even remember how to get the the Games section of the start menu and had to have the sales guy show me, while my grandparents were being shown around. Now I've got 15+ years in IT. I absolutely don't need one of these computers, but man, for the memories, I need one of these computers.
I used to have an IBM Netfinity workstation-server thing some years back, it shared a similar design, but the side panels were ribbed plastic (for your pleasure), came with the duck feet and had the same style carrying handle, cos of course you'd want to carry a big ol' heavy dual-CPU SCSI HDD-equipped machine like it was portable... :P
Holy wow. My grandmother had this exact setup, and it was my first experience with computers that I can remember. Playing MsDos games and the Jumpstart series. Truly a blast from the past for me
This is almost the same model as my first computer that I got when I was 12 (and it was indeed 1997). It taught me a lot of the base knowledge that I now use daily as a computer engineer. I haven't watched the vid yet, but I'm amping myself up, this is gonna be a treat! 😃
I would love a game where you're in charge of cleaning up all computers and you're reading through files and end up uncovering a conspiracy or something. They've been games close to this concept recently, but I love that kind of stuff.
instead of uncovering a conspiracy, I'd like if it were more about finding the necessary info to contact the next of kin or people in the pictures to send a copy of the personal data to. Bringing closure perhaps, but also dealing with fallout from the others finding out how the person really thought about them.
This was the first computer that was purchased for me when i was a kid in 1998 and it had Windows 95 on it. Nostalgia overload with this video. Thanks for the amazing video.
19:15 Somewhere around the mid 90's, with the shift going from DOS to 9x, most video card manufacturers opted to remove mode 16 (8x14 font) from the video bios. Unfortunately it broke text support for a lot of dos programs that used this mode, IE SimCity for DOS. There were various TSR's that restored mode 16 but trying to list them here would be trifling.
Oh man I'm so jealous, that was the first computer my family ever owned, I'd kill to have that exact model so jealous. This is one of the models sold through Radio Shack, I remember that because my dad kept taking it to them to fix because it kept breaking. He also paid for them to install a 4x CD-RW drive in it sometime in 1998.
Hey Clint, As a person who likes to keep history alive, I sure hope you at least made a back up of this ladies stories and photos and are looking into passing it along to the family.
God, these old towers are so cool and as a person born in the late-2000's, I so want to get one if possible! I have a Intel Celeron that was one of those cpu cards from a scrapped PC (not like the pentium ones, it's the "socket on a card" thing) and I really want to build a machine out of that.
hey, late 2000's means 2007-2009. You were born in the era, where the cases were obsolete, in 2007-2009, most of the people were moving to typical huge black cases. Some even to aluminium one. Personally I didnt know almost noone, who had typical baige case in 2010. I had some mid 2000 silver one, definately old school model, but not so old school like this one (late 90's ). Even I moved to typical black case in 2011. I search so long for some baige old school design, with cool cooling, and 12CM fans, but nothing existed. I was dissapointed, so had to take black one. Just saying, you probably cannot remember baige ones from childhood, as when you grew up a little, it was already 2012.
I'm a little younger than you, Clint, so my nostalgia for PC's starts a little later than yours. My dad worked at IBM in the 90's and had an IMB PC. I don't know which one it was, but it looks just like the Aptiva when I was kid. My earliest memories of gaming where on that computer. I was about 4 or 5 and played stuff like Rouge Squadron, X Wing vs Tie-Fighter, and Age of Empires.
I remember when I first got my Aptiva 2162 (very similar to this model), I was JUST getting into Linux (Slackware Linux 3.1/96 to be specific) and I CAN'T TELL YOU how much hardware growing pains I had to experience to discover what a WinModem was (had to dumpster dive a hardware modem before being able to connect to the internet under Linux) OR the fact that my onboard ATI Mach64 chipset was HATED by X-Windows for the longest time (until I ended up finding a S3 ViRGe graphics card in the same dumpster). The memories, my god!
Ha I think the only bug I ever reported to Linux kernel mailing list was for Rage128 to fix a problem where X driver would not work with it correctly! That was like 2002 omg
@@greatquux ATI never worked with Linux too well. I had to recompile X Window because of the Permedia bug. Someone forgot to put an 0X in front of a hex number in the code. That only took 4 hours to build.
I had an Aptiva growing up with a Pentium MMX and embedded ATI Rage II, it had MPEG-2 decoding which was the DVD part. The computer came bundled with MechWarrior 2 ATI 3D Rage edition. And a PC gamer was born!
Dude you should give the old lady's stories to an author and see if they're worth publishing. SO many authors get published posthumously like that and go on to become classic
Contact the family! It's sad if her poems/history get lost! Edit: imagine if your lifes story were stored on an old spinning 5 and something inch hard drive..😱
I love the design of these machines. They shared them with the Netfinity servers (in Black) as well as the 300GL tower units. Although, I still prefer the design of the generation of Aptivas before this one, the one with the door that slides down.
I had almost the exact Aptiva that you have there. I got married in 95 and I think in 96 or 97 we decided to buy our first PC. We went to the local Circuit City here in Richmond, Virgina and it felt like half the store was PC’s, so the era was in full-swing! The one we had was an AMD K6 233mHZ model with the same style hard drive as yours. A Christmas or two later my wife got me a Monster Fusion video card and I started on my journey of absolutely loving PC gaming. My first and favorite from that time was Dark Forces II, Jedi Knight. In 99 I got a job with Media One and got to experience high speed internet in all its glory. 22 years later I still work there (now Comcast). Unfortunately that Aptiva was replaced by several other PC’s so I no longer have it. But this one you have brings back all the feels. Thanks for sharing.
We had an Aptiva with an identical chassis from 1999. Had an Athlon K7 @ 550 MHz, a ±24x CD-RW, a DVD-ROM, 20 GB Maxtor HDD, 64 MB RAM, and an 8 MB ATi AGP video card. Lots of memories with her. This machine is what I started to learn computer hardware with. Wound up upgrading the RAM to 768 MB, a 52x CD-RW, and a 40 GB HDD. We had the matching Monitor as well, a nice 15" CRT. She also perform "file server" duty for a number of years as well. I very much regret recycling her, she would be great for retro gaming!
One thing I've been looking for for years is the audio software that came with these Aptivas. Mine came with a YAMAHA MIDI player software and a bunch of MIDI songs - and I really wanted to hear those MIDIs again! If anyone knows where to find it let me know!
Great vid! In my youth my family had the IBM Aptiva with the sliding door on the front that smoothly slid down to reveal the CD-ROM and floppy disk drive. Loved that machine! Put in hundreds of hours of Mech Warrior 2. I don't have the computer anymore however I do still have the CD-ROM software binder full of the original disks.
I owned an Aptiva E34 with 32MB of RAM that I doubled to 64. The ATI video card that was embedded on it was great for a few years and it was no problem upgrading it. I bought an internal ZIP-100 drive. I loved that computer and I gave it away to someone who needed one. It was my last pre-built computer. After that, I built mine and I'm forever hooked.
This was my childhood PC! So many good memories with this, I even took up the handle Aptiva64 in my early online presence. So awesome to see this again.
My family bought the Aptiva with the sliding front door. My parents signed up for a predatory Radio Shack credit card and ended up paying thousands. I remember it came with a copy of Mech Warrior 3 which was awesome back then. The PC lasted for 4 years then completely died.
I worked at Radio Shack for a few months in 1996 and o remember the Aptiva we had there. I loved watching it go through itsself running demo. It had about a 15 to 20second clip of the mudic video Good by Better than Ezra as part of it and it blew me away thst full motion video was on a PC.
The first PC as a child, absolute love it, the case is so cool, had with the old CRT monitor with the speakers that you could hang on the sides and the round subwoofer :D
This was my first computer ever. Bought it in the spring of 1998 in Vacaville, Ca. That was also my first introduction to high interest store credit cards; fresh out of the Navy, I garnered a robust deal of 19% interest. I stayed on an inflateable mattress for the term of the loan. Still loved it, wrote a ton of Macromedia Director Apps because of this first PC. Curt Hayward, Ca
My Dad's old PC. I rescued it from the garage. Had to replace a bunch of stuff. But I put OS/2 Warp 4 on it. EVen though it's an IBM product, OS/2 is a tough install. I recommend those interested to take up the challenge. It's a fun puzzle.
These IBM Aptiva's were scattered all over my high school in Australia during the early 2000's there actually pretty decent pre built's had a lot of fun on these playing space pinball
I had an Aptiva growing up. Mine had a sliding door on the front, though. Been very tempted to buy one for nostalgia's sake.. but I don't think I'd do much with it besides stare at it occasionally, lol.
I have a similar one! A 300pl? Something like that, it's in storage awaiting a restore and showing off. Nice to see these late 90s IBM's getting some love
My family's first brand new PC was an IBM Aptiva. It cost like $1699 AUD with keyboard, mouse and monitor. It *might* have had windows 98 on it and had a Pentium 100. I remember the 5-1/4" bays being covered by a swinging door.
Am I the only one imaging Clint talking to himslef, narrating all the part that he removed when looking into the personal stuff, even when knowing that he would cut it away, he kept narrating it)) anyway loved this video, so much nostalgia!) and awesome chilled presented))) and yeah would love to see more like this, and a restoration with this))
listened to this with headphones and when you shut it off at the end it took me wayyy back, i used to run my pc in my bedroom 24/7 so the hdd noise is like white noise, soo soothing and feels empty when no there lol i totally forgot how that felt!
I recognized it immediately on the thumbnail. The exact model I used in Tech School where I learned Powerpoint. Which I don't really use for anything anymore. lol
I had a black IBM Aptiva from this era! Very similar design except the case was black and the monitor had a special cable that handled USB1, audio, and some communication channel to the monitor. That’s what one of those blank slots were for. There’s special restore discs available for these machines. When you first get if it’s a solid vanilla windows 95 install (green background and all) but if you yelled “Aptiva!” at the mic it would do a full install of all the extra apps and functions (the keyboard had all sorts of extra functions). Loved that machine.
Now that brings memories, the first PC we had home was an Aptiva 95, I remember the day we bought it from a big box retailer, came with a bundle of programs including the Encarta Enciclopedia, Netscape navigator and several games including Ceasar 3, the game that ignited my love affair with city builders, strategy games and classical history, good stuff
I didn't have one exactly like this, but my first PC was an IBM Aptiva 2176 from 1996 (the model with the cover that slides down), and this definitely brought back some memories
I have a IBM Aptiva amd k6 333 Mhz. It was not used much at all and had all recovery disk and documentation. I would upload the Recovery but my upload speed is slow. I love the case design of those.