Computers back in the day had trouble editing colored pictures, so no wonder that they struggled with videos, thus making you vm crash multiple times lol. Nice vid!
great video man! certainly much better than the TheFakeitRealm's attempt at it! Loved how there were so many blue screens too hehe btw I loved your change in editing, looks great!
I don't want to sound too harsh, but this is an impure way of achieving the challenge (using another OS as middleman). Don't know which is the latest _non-Chromium_ Opera KernelEX'd 95 can run (as 98 programs have been ported probably around eight years old or so), but I think that should work with TH-cam, especially with some add-ons and a spoofed user-agent. Edit: Chromium never worked on Windows 9X; oops.
@@laglife Are you sure? I'm not calling BS, but I know many Windows 98 apps (including lower-level stuff) have been ported to 95 by some TH-camr and 98 is a minor kernel revision iIrc. Also sorry, I meant Opera _before Chrome_ as Chromium was never supported on 9X.
It might be possible to upload a video to TH-cam from 95 directly using the TH-cam Data API. But you wouldn't be able to login, you'd probably have to register the API key and bring in the OAuth token from another computer. Also would have to figure out TLS/HTTPS. Safer bet than trying to run a "modern-enough" browser tho lol
@@3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7 But then it would at least be ‘pure’ which I though was the whole point. In this way it's basically a more favorable way of ”running remote access software to an operating system at least a few years newer“. Pretty sure you could find some obscure software that worked with both 98 and XP and do the challenge that way. But you could also grab a token from a barebones login screen rendered in actual Windows 95… at least I think. VMWare is broken for currently, I'd need to fix it first or just use another hypervisor.
Technically you didn't upload the video directly from Windows 95, you did it using the server OS that runs Browservice. The Windows 95 browser was just a client.
It’s impossible to run modern websites on ancient windows versions, since they don’t have the latest certificates. Also, internet explorer 5 is not capable to display these modern html5 pages…
another banger from the man himself LAGLIFE!!! keep it up. You'll beat the top windows youtuber soon!
True he WILL BEAT ENDERMAN in fact you votes i should diss or expose him?
@@WindowsDestroyer ddos
no
Computers back in the day had trouble editing colored pictures, so no wonder that they struggled with videos, thus making you vm crash multiple times lol. Nice vid!
great video man! certainly much better than the TheFakeitRealm's attempt at it! Loved how there were so many blue screens too hehe
btw I loved your change in editing, looks great!
With the power of Open-Source.
Most BSODs I've even seen in a video in a while lmao
Either way, great video! I've been a viewer since You had like 600 subs. Keep up the great work!
Another W Video! (Also congrats for 3k subs man, keep pumping out more videos!) :)
Great job man!
no way, great job bro
The old browser combined with the modern youtube, is just cursed.
W video like 3 BSOD's
there were WAY more than that, I edited out most of them since they were just repeats
oh 1 Video = ANNOYING BSOD'S
I don't want to sound too harsh, but this is an impure way of achieving the challenge (using another OS as middleman). Don't know which is the latest _non-Chromium_ Opera KernelEX'd 95 can run (as 98 programs have been ported probably around eight years old or so), but I think that should work with TH-cam, especially with some add-ons and a spoofed user-agent.
Edit: Chromium never worked on Windows 9X; oops.
KernelEx does not run on Windows 95. That’s why I had to use Browservice to accomplish this.
@@laglife Are you sure? I'm not calling BS, but I know many Windows 98 apps (including lower-level stuff) have been ported to 95 by some TH-camr and 98 is a minor kernel revision iIrc.
Also sorry, I meant Opera _before Chrome_ as Chromium was never supported on 9X.
@whohan779 Last time I checked, it didn’t work. Will try again, though I doubt anything has changed
It might be possible to upload a video to TH-cam from 95 directly using the TH-cam Data API. But you wouldn't be able to login, you'd probably have to register the API key and bring in the OAuth token from another computer. Also would have to figure out TLS/HTTPS.
Safer bet than trying to run a "modern-enough" browser tho lol
@@3lH4ck3rC0mf0r7 But then it would at least be ‘pure’ which I though was the whole point.
In this way it's basically a more favorable way of ”running remote access software to an operating system at least a few years newer“.
Pretty sure you could find some obscure software that worked with both 98 and XP and do the challenge that way. But you could also grab a token from a barebones login screen rendered in actual Windows 95… at least I think. VMWare is broken for currently, I'd need to fix it first or just use another hypervisor.
What about making a video in windows 3.1?
NICE video :)
LagLife can you please remember me when you become famous?
Yes!
Is it possible to do this on windows xp? If so, how do you modify the address bar to look like xp?
Supermium works on XP, which is essentially the latest Chrome. No need for Browservice on there (unless you want to use IE)
@laglife is their a customization tool for supermium? Just asking.
now try with 3.1 and be happy
Next: Webone Proxy, trying https browsing in Windows 9x, 3.x, NT 3.51 & 4.0 retro
i never know that laglife have soo many vm
Technically you didn't upload the video directly from Windows 95, you did it using the server OS that runs Browservice. The Windows 95 browser was just a client.
It’s impossible to run modern websites on ancient windows versions, since they don’t have the latest certificates. Also, internet explorer 5 is not capable to display these modern html5 pages…
@@rage4win_120and this is the closest we can get.
meow
Nice
Win....dows 3.1?
This is possible if you install IE 5
Try Windows NT 3.51
possible when you install ie5
Already did it
th-cam.com/video/1Ss2EqTeQpI/w-d-xo.htmlsi=X3FmcvWf25SYw9e5
+1 sub
Early