No matter how much people wanted to ignore it or considered it a stigma....PC gaming is what caused the home computer market to explode. We carried it into the 21st century.
VGA was a much improved graphics card. EGA video, as I see it, was an under powered and overpriced card. For example, it included a 64 color palette, but the medium resolution (160x200 and 320x200), could only produce the CGA 16 color palette. You had to use high resolution (640x200 and 640x350) for any of the 64 colors.
Did she just say that apple computer was $3,769.00, no wonder we couldn’t afford a computer in the 90s. Me and my brother stuck with the Commodore 64 until the late 90s.
We had an LC II in '94 as a kid. First ever home computer. It was relatively 'cheap', but somewhat useless as the internet appeared - a 16MHz '030, a chip launched seven years prior. Although it was a 'low cost' machine it's amazing to think it was sold as something new. But the 90s generally sucked in general as a time for buying a computer, anything one or two years old was already hideously outdated despite high cost.
The toys r us computer spot brings back a lot of memories. As a kid in the mid 80s, I remember going into that store and just being amazed at the commodore 64 and amiga computers. We had an 8088 pc at home but it was cga and just felt old compared to the commodore and amigas. It's like I can almost smell the buttered popcorn that they had at our local toys r us. It was so magical to a 10 year old kid in 1985. I would stand in front of the action figure aisle and just dream of taking home He-Man and Battle-Cat. Takes me back.
God I remember DeskMate. Junk. Tandy trash. Ripped me off with a EGA monitor telling me it was VGA. Got home and couldn't run god damned Tank Wars which required VGA. I cried.
Still pretty amazing considering it's 8 years old at that point. If 2000 outlets were doing that then it was still selling 10,000 per month just in the US
The Magnavox Headstart 500CD was the first new computer I bought. Wooff it was about 3000 bucks with the monitor and speakers and math Co pro and memory upgrade. I had to mow so many lawns and fix a lot of computers to afford it. It had so many cool games that came with it, Lotta good memories!
Another thing is America was hit with a recession in 1990-1992. People were laid off and we just didn't go out and buy a Windows (and definitely a Macintosh) computer. 1993 was the year when home PC purchases took off.
To me it wasn't until the 486DX2-66 had not just rolled out but was in the prime market spot, that was 1993. The dx2-66 had a lot of power and could do amazing things in windowed type environments, plus was a requirement for Doom in its full glory.
@@BlownMacTruck MacOS is awesome. I hate that I have to use Windows 10 on my gaming machine. I much prefer MacOS it's just so much nicer and sleeker and designed better aesthetically. Started out on PC's in 1999 with Windows 98 and have used all Windows since, but I got a Mac in 2008 and fell in love with the OS. Specially back then in 2008 with Snow Leopard is was just sexy af compared to windows at the time. Based on Unix too ofc. so you get a really nice terminal
@@rooneye I switched from MacOS to Linux Mint because i found the interface not very intuitive. I guess i am somewhat too attached to the old Windows XP interface
DRAM was very expensive in those days. And the reason why is that the Japanese had control of the DRAM chip market and was flooding them for peanuts. So in order for American chip companies to take back the market, which was impossible, the Reagan Administration put out a No Dumping Policy. This made DRAM chip prices to rise quickly, and none of the American chip companies had plans on producing them due to the expense on production and planning. A 386 machine with 2 MB of ram and VGA graphics with Windows 3.0 would cost $2,000+. Way too much for the average home user to afford.
I bought an Atari 800XL back in the early 1980s which was the chief rival of the Commodore 64 back at the time. Later on during the mid 1990s I bought a Pentium MMX Windows 95 PC for greater graphics and sounds as well as a lot more capabilities.
Today, Apple computers are dedicated to design and creative art; while the Windows computers are dedicated to business productivity applications that are all left out of the digital software market.
Back in the early 80’s i bought myvfirst computer to write magazine articles. Used WordStar on a CP/M machine. Still write articles today with my PC. Only difference is that I now use Microsoft Word or Apple Pages.
Imagine, if you will, a guest on the show that Stewart doesn’t feel the overwhelming urge to cut short, and talk over, time and time again. That guest, simply does not exist.
The thumbnail of this shows the photo & his name at the bottom of "TIM WHITE". For a split second, I thought it said "I'M WHITE". Which makes sense lmao. Chronicles was a show I regularly watched back in the day & I remember this episode on TV.
Totally ridiculous how the Amiga was never even mentioned! 1990 was a rocking period for the A500/2000. Made the PC and Mac graphics look as primitive as did the C64 they quote in this segment.
Yes...its only in retrospect that The Amiga is seen to be the great system it was. Back then it was regarded as a toy by 'serious users". However, the Amiga 3000 was the subject of another episode that year(1990)
are you from the US or UK? Amiga is not mentioned because the A500 was never as popular as in the UK, and PAL games had issues on NTSC machines, so in US home computing meant the tandy 1000 instead of the amiga in the late 80s...
Yep. But the progress of the 1990s never ceases to amaze me even though I was born in 98. Just 3 or 4 years later, Pentium-based PCs with Windows and later 3DFX cards blew all competition away and Amiga took a nosedive faster than a meteorite.
Amiga graphics were actually pretty underwhelming in 1990. The Mac had 24 bit true color and flicker free higher resolutions than it for years at that point. VGA offered greater color depth on the PC side as well. Though it really depended on what you might want do the Amiga was arguably still a better choice for animation work compared to Mac or PC but that's about it.
18:13 Did he say 20MB hard drive?? System $1698 yikes!! Programs and files must not have taken up a lot of space then. I wasn't as into computers back then but looking at where they are now it's hard to believe those specs were optimal.
+Light 1988 irk haha..at the rate technology is progressing now I wouldn't doubt it. SSDs are quickly becoming the new wave now though and blow HDDs away as far as speed although you pay a lot more for the storage but they are quickly starting to come down in price now.
Ken Gevon and looking at these vids, lowering of prices makes them available to the wider market, and consumers is what pushes the market. so, a few years from now we'll have 500gb SSDS for $bucks as standard :D
In 1990 we got a brand new 386sx 33 and it had a massive 120 MB HDD which we partitioned into 3 40 MB sections cause ... No one would ever need more than 40 MB.
DRAM was very expensive in those days. And the reason why is that the Japanese had control of the market and was flooding DRAM chips for peanuts. So in order for American chip companies to take back the market, which was impossible, the Reagan Administration put out a No Dumping Policy. This made DRAM chip prices to rise quickly, and none of the American chip companies had plans on producing them due to the expense on production and planning. A 386 machine with 2 MB of ram and VGA graphics with Windows 3.0 would cost $2,000+.
Lmao. Well, they stopped selling C64s in '88 so it wasn't that old. Plus, the games were still decent, abundant and cheap. You gotta remember that not even the SNES was out yet in 1990
That's why the Macintosh revolutionized the PC market. It wasn't priced cheaply and it was still monochromatic, but that Graphic OS and the mouse made it easy for the normies lol
Besides Apple, all these "GUIs" sucked. Even IBM's was terrible. Maybe this was filmed before Windows 3.0 came out? Or was Win3.0 too pricey for home users?