Butiki: (when I'm online, can be accessed as butiki.ath.cx, courtesy of DynDNS.Org
- Power supply and casing: AT mini tower, circa 94/95. Swapped AT power supplies recently with a similar AT mini tower
- AMD K6-266MHz w/ MMX
- Asus SP97-V with on-board VGA (SiS 5597)
- S3 Savage4 PCI Video card, 32 MB VRAM
- Aureal Vortex PCI Sound card (now unsupported, AFAIK)
- Motorola SM56 PCI Internal SoftModem/WinModem
- Asus 50x CDROM drive
- Fujitsu 8.4GB HDD, recent. Primary Master. Serving Win98 and Linux
- Seagate 1GB HDD, circa 94/95. Secondary Master. Hasn't crashed yet; only contents right now are MP3s
- OS: Linux kernel 2.4.20-ck4 (Slackware 8.1 w/ patched 2.4.20); Win98 SE. Linux performs beautifully, and is my preferred OS; I keep Win98 around for my dad's and sister's use.
Dirty Old Bastard
(AKA: that old 486DLC)
- Power supply and casing: AT mini tower, circa 96. Currently doesn't have a working power supply
- Texas Instruments (!) 486DLC 80486-clone (I haven't checked if it were the 40MHz or 33MHz one)
- Mobo is unknown brand; no on-board IDE controller
- Combo I/O board; IDE and floppy controller, as well as serial port controller
- ?? 500MB hard disk —dead; hard disk crash; data massively corrupted
- OS: Win95 (the older one). Currently, the whole thing is corrupted. You can boot into a safe-mode command line prompt, but can't do anything (heck, even Edit is corrupted). I've pronounced the disk a goner. Will probably want to resurrect the damn bastard one of these days.
Spare parts, Miscellania
- I got an old 500MB hard disk off my friend Lester. Currently no use for it though. Might use it on the older 486 DLC, install Linux on it or something. Don't know yet. Should be interesting.
- A spare, very old PCI video card (an Avance Logic, if I'm not mistaken), 1MB on-board VRAM
- A non-functional Genius NetScroll+ mouse. I really liked this mouse— usefull and nifty for browsing stuff.
- Got a generic 6-button game pad from my cousin. I actually borrowed it and forgot to return it. *Sheepish grin*
Previously: Geek: Power supply transplant