I set my parents up with an old P3 650MHz @ 866. Seems to run YouTube videos pretty well, but I haven't tested anything other than that. At stock I think it was a bit choppy, though.Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Does anyone use flash on these old machines?
Good question... anyone?
Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Does anyone use flash on these old machines?
Good question... anyone?
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
I set my parents up with an old P3 650MHz @ 866. Seems to run YouTube videos pretty well, but I haven't tested anything other than that. At stock I think it was a bit choppy, though.Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Does anyone use flash on these old machines?
Good question... anyone?
OP's 20 years is unrealistic IMO (do you know anybody running a computer from 1989?), but especially if it's only basic usage, 10 year old PCs can still be usable. Using a light OS like PuppyLinux can breathe new life into outdated hardware. The P3 mentioned above was pretty pokey in XP, but is very fast in Puppy.
Originally posted by: betasub
C'mon ochadd, you yourself say that we can't use developments since 1989 to predict 20 years into the future - and it's obvious that we don't know what the future holds 20 years from now. Furthermore, most of us don't have the imagination to dream anything like the technology we'll be using in 20 years time (that used to be field of visionaries like Philip K. Dick).
Originally posted by: EXman
this was written on a Celery 766 that was just as fast as your Core 2!
Originally posted by: JackMDS
The topic and the way the post is presented have an Oxymoron aspect to it to begin with.
The world existed for very long time without Cars, TVs, Computer, etc. There are Millions of people and do not have them even today.
I can give a list of things that enable my friends and family to do that they cannot do with 20 years old computers, most of them are Not power users, gamers, or use the computers for HTPC.
What the OP is basically saying, I know people that their current use of computers is so that if their use and needs would not change they probably can use the same computers in 20 years too.
Yes you are right there are people that if what they do today works well and they are not going to change (and current outside services that they use will not drop) there is No reason to upgrade their computers.
However making over swiping statement from a specific rather narrow population into a general technical rule is Not valid.
Originally posted by: frostedflakes
I set my parents up with an old P3 650MHz @ 866. Seems to run YouTube videos pretty well, but I haven't tested anything other than that. At stock I think it was a bit choppy, though.Originally posted by: Jeff7181
Originally posted by: Infohawk
Does anyone use flash on these old machines?
Good question... anyone?
Originally posted by: VeryCharBroiled
I have seen some folks currently happily running a P2-450 w/ 192 RAM, win98 and dial up, and a P3 700 celly with XP, 384 RAM and broadband. they are happy enough with it. but still thats what about 12-15 years old tech?
Originally posted by: Zap
P2-450 was a Deschutes core, dating back to around 1998.
Celeron 700 was a Coppermine core dating back to 2000.
Hardly 12-15 year old tech.![]()
Originally posted by: MrX8503
Dude have you ever done any video work?
Not even a Core i7 can do standard def video in After Effects very well. Wait until High Def becomes mainstream, it will utterly destroy your computer.
But if you're talking about grandpa checking his email and probably most all consumers, a core 2 duo is overkill. Most consumers can probably stick with a pentium 3/4.
Up to now, computers have just (really) been getting faster and faster more than anything else. When you reach fast enough (as this thread implies maybe we have), you see a change in the application of that speed, which is what I think we will get in the coming years
