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I remember back in high school doing LAN parties with friends on the weekends, and this one guy would sometimes bring a second computer. This second machine had some special motherboard that had like six IDE controllers, and he just loaded the thing with hard drives, and would hook it up to the LAN to serve as a sort of local FTP so we could all share our And how much storage space DID this beast have? 750 GB
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# ¿ Jul 17, 2012 21:04 |
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# ¿ May 4, 2024 12:51 |
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Oh, I just remembered something I think my aunt used to have around - DIVX! It was some sort of weird video rental/video purchase hybrid thing around 2000 that I think was proprietary to Circuit City. The deal was that you had to have this special player that played these DIVX discs, which I guess were similar to DVDs (or VCDs, I'm not really sure). Once you played them once, the disc would expire after like two or three days, and then became unplayable unless you paid a renewal fee to your DIVX account. The player was associated with your account through a modem connection, so if you paid again, the player would know to let you play the disc.
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# ¿ Jul 17, 2012 21:50 |
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m2pt5 posted:Well, that's a little different. I meant legal documents like contracts and such. For a check you obviously need the original (not necessarily so much anymore with some banks able to deposit checks through smartphone apps via photo) but for other things it's usually fine. I routinely deposit checks to my bank with my scanner through a browser.
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# ¿ Jul 18, 2012 18:27 |
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Unfortunately (fortunately?) I never experienced Microsoft BOB, but I was wondering if anyone here did? All I know about it I learned from Wikipedia, though I do have vague memories of ads for it when I was a kid, and may have seen a demo computer with it at a CompUSA or something. Does anybody have stories about BOB, or a computer squirreled away somewhere with BOB still installed?
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# ¿ Jul 18, 2012 19:58 |