It was quite a chip. In the early 90's I had built a computer from scraps from school, a 386/40mhz IIRC. It was ok but a bit weak, at some point I came across a 486/40 and motherboard (both AMDs I think).
It was a beast in comparison, even complex calculations I printed just went off the screen faster than could be read. Screen became a blur, Turbo Vision Pascal and C++ just screamed on it. Instant response.
As mentioned on the site many times, my modern laptop doesn't feel appreciably faster, though the graphics are a lot prettier.
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[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 21.8 ms ] threadIt's only a 486SX (so no FPU), but it can at least run Linux (kernel 3.13.1 tested) and Windows 95.
It was a beast in comparison, even complex calculations I printed just went off the screen faster than could be read. Screen became a blur, Turbo Vision Pascal and C++ just screamed on it. Instant response.
As mentioned on the site many times, my modern laptop doesn't feel appreciably faster, though the graphics are a lot prettier.
Of course, me being 18 or so was mostly interested in FPS of games like Duke Nukem or Doom.