Absolutely! I remember that in 2005 working in Russian bank I had 1GB Pentium 4 PC. And back then it seemed to be crazy RAM amount. Even though I worked with heavy Excel tables.
@@mad_mario_ Definitely more. Most people did not have 2GB of RAM when Vista came out in 2006, and that OS sucked up ~1GB of RAM, leaving you with only 1GB of RAM left for applications. It was a disaster, especially when manufacturers were still selling laptops with 1 to 1 1/2 GB of RAM. Those machines quickly turned into stuttering messes.
I think our Schoolcare? Branded machines had 512Mb of RAM at most and that would have been around the same time. Given we were still rocking 300Mhz PII machines running 98se for doing the registers and only one computer room had XP machines anything was an upgrade!
I have a pentium 4 system that's capable of 4GB of ram as it's designed more as desktop server than consumer or school PC. Also, these school PC's by RM are actually built better compared to few consumer grade multi-media PC's that came out during the Vista & 7 days.
Most DDR1 boards were able to take 2GB to 4GB and DDR2 boards 4GB to 8GB depending on how many slots they had. But of course normally you would have paired the P4 3.0GHz with 512MB or 1GB RAM.
Just like mobile and smart phones. Progress was rapid in the 2000s and then the 'OS wars' of early 10s, now it's very incremental with barely any exciting innovation left.
@balkloth Yeah you could have said the same about the traditional computer back in the 40s and 50s. Super big, expensive, impractical and had no real use outside of niche tasks that likely wasn't worth the cost at the time. And yet, look at where they are today.
Honestly, if the web tech stack wasn't a bottomless pit of uncontrolled bloat, a 20+ years old computer would be perfectly usable to this day, on a slightly trimmed down OS. TH-cam's video stream would be perfectly watchable on it in 720p, if not full HD, in something like VLC, if the megabytes of Javascript and all sorts of fancy layering crap wouldn't grind it to a halt. This isn't just true for early 2000s PCs, but G4/G5 Macs, and the like. Almost all of the extra horsepower and hardware acceleration, and multiple cores in a modern system is just used up to deal with the web bloat. Almost anything that has native code (not you, Electron "apps"), works just fine. This kind of experience is pretty well known from the Raspberry Pis, as you also mention it... I'm very appalled by the modern software. The future we were promised was so much better...
Truth. Going to a typical forum, with its top, side, and bottom floating ad viewers will spin up the fans I hardly realized existed on my Mac Mini 2018, and make the back of my phone hot to the touch. Everything else, including 3D CAD and multichannel audio applications -- no problem at all.
Experienced the same issue with RPis😅. It's the same with my 20 year old laptop as well. Perfectly fast machine with only 512 megs of ram and a single core, slow internet browser. To get around that I actually link it up with a more powerful laptop and just browse the web over remote desktop. Can watch HD videos with sound, perfectly.. order pizza, etc etc etc. I'll say though: period-correct software from the old days makes all the difference in speed(at least - .on the old laptop)
The Pentium 4, especially the later 64-bit ones, are like a magic number for newer software. It's the oldest you can go and still be able to run most programs and OSes from today.
They're also the newest you can go for some old software - I've a Pentium D machine, so a tiny bit newer, running BeOS that can also run Windows 10 (if I breach BeOS's RAM limit)
I like that this '04 PC is running a legit copy of win 10/11, yet people out here with multi thousand dollar PCs have the reminder to register their copy permanently emblazened in the lower right corner of their screen. 😂
if we are talking about youtubers, usually the PC's are temporary builds, best not to lock the windows key to a system thats gonna get changed 30 times over with new video card, motherboard, cpu, ram, or ssd on a constant basis
AGP cards will run in PCI fallback mode on newer versions of Windows following the removal of actual AGP support. Nvidia cards will still work with 3D acceleration, but crippled performance. ATI cards become nothing more than basic display adapters, which is what you're seeing here. Early versions of Windows 10 are the endgame for meaningful 3D performance on AGP cards, unfortunately. Of course, you're still going to be fairly limited even then by the fact that the HD 3850 is the most powerful AGP card out there anyway.
OH MY, I never realized the "Tamiya" wrench fit PC parts. As a life long RC car and PC builder guy I cannot believe this never occured to me before! You learn something every day. Great video as always.
having an HDD that old and not imaging it first makes me a little sad; but this is such a cool project! I had no idea RUFUS actually allowed you to customize windows 11 installs to skip TPM requirement!!
Not sure why people worry about using "period correct" HDs. Just use an SSD and save a few hours of your life. Bonus you can see how usable a PC when it's not tied down to a HD.
Agreed. But even with an SSD, systems that old are not really usable running Windows 10 or 11. I know, I've tried it and it still was painfully slow and effectively unusable.
You already know how it would run on an ssd, why not check how painful slow it would be on an hdd? Its not as if he's going to daily drive the thing, so make it slower just for giggles.
If this PC supports SATA, it'll probably be SATA I, which is not that much faster than a HDD. And also, even with SATA III, the CPU would still not perform enough to use all of it's theoretical speeds.
My high school had probably one of the earliest: RM 380Z: (blue & white case) 16K, cassette tape BASIC ... upgraded 1 year later [1978] to 380Z 48K dual 5.25 SS-SD floppies : 72K per disc :)
If you did want to try going ham with as many upgrades as possible for this it's worth mentioning that PCI is technically forwards compatible with PCI Express if you use an adapter with a bridge chip. The bridge chips were designed for using PCI cards on PCI Express but the chips are bidirectional so reverse adapters do exist. You could put a modern GPU in it.
Brilliant. I have upgraded 3 older PCs to Windows 11 using this method and very easy it was too. Now just waiting for 24H2 to see how if they impose any restrictions
All Pentium 4 CPUs are based on the NetBurst microarchitecture. The Pentium 4 Willamette (180 nm) introduced SSE2, while the Prescott (90 nm) introduced SSE3 and later 64-bit technology. Later versions introduced Hyper-Threading Technology (HTT). The first Pentium 4-branded processor to implement 64-bit was the Prescott (90 nm) (February 2004), but this feature was not enabled. Intel subsequently began selling 64-bit Pentium 4s using the "E0" revision of the Prescotts, being sold on the OEM market as the Pentium 4, model F. The E0 revision also adds eXecute Disable (XD) (Intel's name for the NX bit) to Intel 64. Intel's official launch of Intel 64 (under the name EM64T at that time) in mainstream desktop processors was the N0 stepping Prescott-2M. Intel also marketed a version of their low-end Celeron processors based on the NetBurst microarchitecture (often referred to as Celeron 4), and a high-end derivative, Xeon, intended for multi-socket servers and workstations. In 2005, the Pentium 4 was complemented by the dual-core-brands Pentium D and Pentium Extreme Edition.
@@ctrlaltrees Also quite a bunch of PCI sound cards will work, like even the ones starting at price of £ 9 or a bit more, being based on CMI (C-Media) / HT 8738 chip (up to 4 audio channels, 24 bit 44.1 kHz), for example, newly-built or second-hand.
I don't use Windows at all, unless compelled to due to some script kiddy's ineptitude and laziness. However, I appreciate your efforts. It just shows how anticonsumer M$ has become by artificially and prematurely rendering obsolete the majority of working PCs globally. Having said that, streaming aside, I could probably still do all of my computing under Windows 3 without missing a beat. I certainly can't type any faster now than I did 30 years ago.
There is a windows vista driver for the radeon 9600 you can install that one by extracting the package and then installing the driver through device manager
Thanks Rees, and to Dave Velociraptor for pointing me here on a twitter post. Apart from just being fun, this video is also relevant to me as I have a hp laptop that's a 2017 model 7th gen i5, that's works brilliantly. And yet I get that tpm message when trying to update to Windows 11. The computer is great and I dont want to have to replace it, so good to see there are workarounds to this.
I remember in 2016 i was in a basic IT class and one of our labs was installing windows 10 on multiple machines. Some newer than others. Most older and still running XP. Some of us finished in an hour. Others about 2-3
I still use my 2010 two cores Toshiba notebook for watching TH-cam and online movies in my summer country house. But it runs not Win11 off course :) Linux mint actually. In 2020 changed HDD for SSD and added RAM up to 4GB. Works just perfectly and very responsive. Thanks 4 brilliant videos. Looking forward for new ones! Good luck!
I still daily a 2009 quad core HP, running Windows 11 off an SSD and with 8GB RAM. It basically runs like a brand new product, really fast and fully functional!
With Rufus I plug the drive from the machine I want to install on into one of those USB adapters. I then tell Rufus I want to make a "Windows to go" version and tell it to write to the USB drive. After it gets done I remove the drive from the USB adapter and install it back in the machine. It bypasses the "boot from USB, install, reboot, and finish install" steps and goes straight to "...and finish the install". You can take advantage of Rufus doing the install part on a faster machine and save time.
I was in primary school in the mid-80s, and we had an RM Nimbus 186! There was no internal storage. Everything ran from floppy disk. There was also a BBC Micro. We used to play Repton on it! And yes, I played the original Doom when it released
Huh, I thought I'd read somewhere that the current version of Windows 11 requires at least a core-i-whatever CPU, dropping support for the Core-2 -Duo for example; guess that was wrong! Congrats on getting this to work! An SSD would probably be a big help, especially with the swapping, as you said. On one of those old premium systems with 4GB of RAM it might not be bad.
@@jensputzlocher8345 Ah, yeah; I was thinking of the FIRST incompatibility 24h2 will include, the "PopCnt" instruction, which excludes core2duos. Now there's a new requirement they added for SSE 4.2; sounds like that was introduced with the i7. Found this on tomshardware; I'd link articles, but TH-cam always deletes my comments when I do that :( Be curious to see that happens with this PC when Windows Update tries to force that update on it later this year.
@@catriona_drummond Yes, thanks to Rufus you can modify Win 11 23H2 to boot on an Core2Duo from 2007, but Win 11 24H2 will require the SSE4.2 instruction set (?) - this will require a Intel 8th gen core CPU or equal.
@@jensputzlocher8345 No, on Intel's ark site you can do an advanced search that filters by instruction set, SSE4.2 is supported by 1st gen Core i series CPUs. AMD doesn't have a search like this, so it's a pain to search for SSE4.2 support.
Interesting video and kudos for all the effort you put on it. I have an intel quad Q9550 socket 775 running very well Windows 10 LTS (youtube 720p very smooth). So on 10 years older hardware. Back in the day, even on the first Pentiums, you could NOT run WindowsXP (the 10 years gap). Indeed, the progress was bigger, faster until year 2000. It is sad.
I have Windows 10 on a Q9650, SSD, 8 GB DDR3 RAM, it's actually surprisingly usable & decent for older light gaming. Everyday tasks are feel as fast as my 9700k
Thank you Rees, I really enjoyed this one - I have the 3.4Ghz variant of this as part of my collection that was running Windows 10 at one point (albeit in a later motherboard with 4 gigabytes of ram) and was suprised at how well it was doing! 😊
Quick tip: For TH-cam (or any video site for that matter) go into settings of the browser and turn off Hardware Acceleration. This will make a huge difference on the default Windows driver.
I know what you mean about the rate of progress. I remember the 90s when it was hard to go a whole year without having to upgrade something. But my current desktop PC is one I built in 2012 with a 3rd gen Core i7 CPU and it's still in daily use doing software development, CAD and office tasks under Windows 10 and it definitely doesn't feel old even though it is 12 years old. I gave it an SSD and better graphics card about 4 years ago but that's all that's been done to it.
Apparently, for Windows 11 24H2 and above you'll need an Intel Nehalem architecture CPU or newer, due to the POPCNT instruction. Still quite old though...
im using tiny10 on my old sony viao 2008 which originaly came with vista.... over the years i had xp and win 7 running on it. then 2014 i bought a new laptop and kind of forgot about the sony viao. this year there is lots of videos on youtube about reviving old pc. Since its a 32bit unit 2gb ram and 2 partitions of 128g.. i had only 1 windoows option and that was tiny10 or a dozen linux distros. So i installed tiny10 and was blown away that its actually works ad pretty fast browser with edge working really well...i even install bodhi linux OS on the second partition, i installed a VM and Rrun Bunsenlabs OS. All works perfectly wirhout reeplacing any hardware...i havent touch my 2022 windows 11 hp laptop...for a while. Those linux distros are insane
Damn. If this can run windows 11 THAT WELL, then I wonder how many such low end systems from like, 2007 and later can... Like this will likely save loads of e-waste getting dumped as we find a way to run such modern OSes on these!
This is your first experience with windows 11? Hilarious. I also cant stop thinking about some nerd at microsoft parsing through the telemetry data and finding this outlier.
U surely pushed the limits here further ! I made a Toshiba laptop with c2d t6600 4gb ddr2 ram 800mhz +ssd run win11 Intel gma gfx 256mb but this is x treme 🤩
i wouldnt even be upset if you used a modern hardrive for thsi system it would be cool to just get it working haha. awesome video loved it. you gain a sub from me
no way man are you a fan of stepmom too? just saw them for the second time not too long ago! i was so confused when i saw them pop up in your youtube feed lol i thought it was my feed
It's installing like that because the Ethernet drivers are generic from the windows 11 and well it won't give you 100% of full power. And CPU and chipset drivers are as well very very important because you lose a lot of power there to. Ssd connection actually my friend an external ssd or actually an m2 that can connect through usb with an adapter that is more faster than sata 1. But yes ssd with sata 1 will increase the speed not much for like me that has an normal hdd but yours 50gb definitely better performance. But looking at this ngl it's impressive thank you for doing this 😊 you made my day better. Some drivers are still on the internet try writing the motherboard name and try your luck. If not reddit and discord communities usually can help you find or give you some drivers. Ohh vga driver is as well very important thing. Windows 7-11 creates a generic we can say a bad copy of the original driver so that it makes the machine usable but far from perfect.
Yeah, had similar issue running windows 10 even with a 600 series pentium 4 with 64 bit support (670). processor not only needs 64bit support but also lahf/sahf support which was introduced with the cedar mill pentium 4 models. It was interesting seeing windows 10/11 running on 8gb ddr2 800mhz, a gtx 1070, and a pentium 4 651 overclocked to roughly 4.2ghz and a 128gb sata ssd, gonna be doing some more testing on it to see how various software runs on it.
My main desktop PC (I use my new Notebook most of the time though since 3 years) still is a Pentium Core2 Quad Q6600 (also LGA775) I bought in 2007. I've replaced the main HDD with an SSD few years ago, but besides this, it happily runs Windows 10 and works perfectly fine for me. I won't upgrade to Windows 11 though. I'm still stunned it works so good. It ran for hours every day from 2007 to 2020 and I used it a lot for video recodring/encoding, software development (web, embedded), running VMs (until VMware decided to require a CPU instruction it doesn't support).
I was running one of these running Debian with XFCE from ~2012 up to 2016 with zero issues. That only had a gig of RAM, but it did what I needed it to do.
Our school was full of Core 2 era RM computers until about 2018, and they fully upgraded all of them to Windows 10 and then replaced them by 2022. Had a similar computer in the DT block to this, absolutely ancient, for years - the oldest one in the school. If this computer was made before September 2004, it's older than I am.
re: the IBM 5150 vs. the P4: now hold up one of the new generation mini PC`s, and not only compare how much things have miniaturized but also show graphs featuring benchmarks and pricing. That`s kind of the mind-blowing thing. My first Wintel machine was a 286 with 2Mb memory, 9" monochrome VGA monitor and a 20Mb hard drive worth about $1500 in 1990 dollars. My current rig is a Lenovo Ryzen SFF machine with 16Gb and 2Tb SSD, hooked up to a 22" Viewsonic OLED display. The machine itself is about the size of a USB DVD-ROM and cost me about $300. That price:performance ratio is pretty amazing to me!
Funnily enough I just became the owner of a machine with the same motherboard in it. Installing W11 wasn't the OS on it is something I have thought of. VIA boards are a good choice for Windows XP and also 98. It's fascinating just how far you can go into the past or the future. x86 hardware is the very definition of versatility. Someone could install an old OS plus W11 on different drives and have a dual use retro + modern experience on the same machine. The latter isn't great of course. But you have shown it works 👍
I modified the cooler that is in your pc to fit any socket by filing out the holes, i took the plastic pins off, i filed it down, and it can now fit my socket 1700 :p and it keeps my i5 10400f at 35 degrees celcius, which is nuts :p and i love what you are doing, i try stuff like this as well.
Great idea, like this very much! Also, when put next to the very old IBM, I started to actually like the mix of beige PC and black 5.25" drive (even if a optical one in this case😂). Totally forgot that this was pretty much the norm back in the days, even on CBM stuff. Don't remember when I started feeling that was an odd look on PCs and had to have beige drives on beige PCs or black drive on black PCs. Hm. Well, just a note on the side 😅 Cheers!
I used that exact monitor as one of my side monitors for the past 2 years. Overclocked it to almost 100hz, but idk how much of that I was getting over VGA, LOL. I just sold it with a budget build recently, to afford my ultrawide. You wouldn't think it was useful because of the size, but it was perfect for either watching a TH-cam video or to keep Spotify open etc. It also was where I relegated all of my desktop icons and folders too, lol. Kept my Desktop looking tidy.
This reminds me of the Pentium 4 PC I got my hands on some years back that was an office PC at my aunt's job, that got shelved in 2005-2006 for being slow, with each new Windows it was brought out, updated to the latest, then thrown back in for being slower and slower. I put W10 on it, it was horrible, now it's used as a storage PC by a friend who removed that pile of rust from my house, he put some Linux on it(Lite, or Puppy, I don't know) and it runs 24/7 keeping up a few SSHDs and SSDs up with IDE-SATA adapters, it's cursed. Seeing how far the system requirements of Windows has come is really nice, it showcases why putting stricter limitations on hardware for Win11 isn't as bad as it was first cried out to be.
I can’t wait to try this on my 12 year old system that still pretty much plays most of the latest games (with a 6 year 8GB GPU) and is running 10 but can’t officially support 11. I’ll get a few more years out of this old system yet!
Great necromancy work, mate! So, I have an idea. Hear me out on this.... Low-Profile PCI raid card. Compact flash cards with adaptors. Raid 0. yes, a complete abomination, but it would be interesting to see how much snappier it would be.
There are a few things you can do to improve your experience with Windows 11 on that old machine. One of them being is changing your visual appearance settings to "adjust for best performance", as well as looking into community made drivers that support Windows 10 and 11 for those AGP cards
Beleive it or not i had thay exact monitor with my first home built machine. I was 12-13. It was 2013 and i had an a6 6400k- 8gb radeon ram- stock cooler- a reman hd7770 from newegg- and a wd blue 500gb with a copy of windows 7 installed via not so legitimate ways. But after all that my allowance only gave me the opportunity for the 15$us monitor from goodwill. I play so much minecraft and planetside 2 on that monitor. And I would put a paycheck on the fact my performance issues 100% spawned in the fact that monitor was so akward with a low refresh. It brought back a ton of good memories seeing that monitor again
The most important question though, did you apply the perfect amount of thermal paste. First the hand blocking the view and then the cooler doing the same, it felt deliberate :)
Well, I might just set up an old Pentium 4 I have laying around... my family could use a gaming PC! For running Sega Saturn, Genesis, and NES games... probably on Debian or Mint. It's nice to know that my plan B should in theory work.
yeah we had RM Nimbus computers at my school but that was 1994-1996, i remember playing Simcity on one of the computers back in the day during lunch times, as at one point the computer room was also our form room.
Windows 10Pro runs fine on my 2007 Dell D630 notebook. Not yet 20 years old but it will be soon enough. The most difficult part was getting it to boot and run the Windows 10 installer. Easy after that. The notebook usually runs Mint these days but switching to Windows 10 is a matter of swapping the SSD for a second one. On the D630, this is barely more difficult than swapping SD cards.
I love how you basically have to shove windows down the throat of an old PC to get it to work, but you could throw almost any Linux distro on it no sweat
This is an world of busines, imagine if microsoft dind´t try to make difficult and didn´t upgrade the windows versions, all to make you spend money on new equipmentt???!!! But people start get tired of every season to by a new hardware. Thank´s to people like you there is always one way to go around this shit, me and for shure thousands around the world we are very grateful for this videos. Thanks a lot.
I feel like LTSC would be a better improvement than actually debloating stock Windows. At least I've found more success with it. Also disabling Windows Defender's Real Time Protection improves system responsivenesss heavily!
Honestly the pentium 4, as gimped of a processor as it was, does have its perks, it pioneered the early XP days before it got replaced by the core 2 line. It really does have its unique place in computing history!
You may improve performance of the older Intel processors by turning off "enhanced halt state" - also known as "C1E". You can do this in the BIOS settings (if the setting is available), then save and exit the BIOS. It's just a power saving feature.
It's honestly surprising that the Pentium 4 can still run Windows 11. Initially, I thought the cut off point was either Windows 8 or Windows 10, but it seems that I stand corrected.
socket 775 systems are probably the oldest platform that still commonly sold here where I live (SE Asia regioin), slightly overkill for legacy software but adequate for modern ones. once everything else, graphics, storage, memory was beefed up to the best the chipset/motherboard can handle. Core 2-based systems are the most common though, but I doubt unless it's Celeron D, I don't really think Prescott Pentium 4s would be that slow in single-thread tasks either. also that big hunk of stock Intel heatsink is still a treat to see. mine from the Wolfdale Celeron is much smaller.. and louder. and I tend to snap the clip, which ended up being annoying enough for me to scavenged some OEM machines for screw mounted coolers.
Yup, had RM machines in my primary school IT room, maybe even that same case design, not sure. Though, by the time I was in high school they had Dells, got Lenovo Thinkcentres by the time I was in my last year, and then back to Dells for college.
My advice with those stock cooler 775 is to take it out of chasis and then plug the cooler so you see if the white lid made contact then you can press the black ones without breaking it. In the case of broking there are replacements but also you can use parts from broken zip tires the plastic is the same and same wide.
I would like to see a follow-up video showing what difference an SSD and compatible graphics card does make. My guess is that it would turn out to be a "usable" lab machine for light browsing and watching stuff on TH-cam.
The "P4" from 2004 was more like a Pentium 5 iirc. It had undergone significant architectural changes by 2004 and was only a Pentium 4 in name. Same as today's 14gen core i7 is related in name only to the first gen core i7.
2GB RAM in 2004 for a classroom PC definitely wasn’t standard!
Having 2GB RAM in 2004 PC is like having a 32GB RAM on today's PC
@@sihamhamda47 Maybe even more 😅
Absolutely! I remember that in 2005 working in Russian bank I had 1GB Pentium 4 PC. And back then it seemed to be crazy RAM amount. Even though I worked with heavy Excel tables.
@@mad_mario_ Definitely more. Most people did not have 2GB of RAM when Vista came out in 2006, and that OS sucked up ~1GB of RAM, leaving you with only 1GB of RAM left for applications. It was a disaster, especially when manufacturers were still selling laptops with 1 to 1 1/2 GB of RAM. Those machines quickly turned into stuttering messes.
I think our Schoolcare? Branded machines had 512Mb of RAM at most and that would have been around the same time.
Given we were still rocking 300Mhz PII machines running 98se for doing the registers and only one computer room had XP machines anything was an upgrade!
2 GB of RAM would have been an absolute shit-ton in 2004.
I have a pentium 4 system that's capable of 4GB of ram as it's designed more as desktop server than consumer or school PC. Also, these school PC's by RM are actually built better compared to few consumer grade multi-media PC's that came out during the Vista & 7 days.
my 2007 pc had only 512mb and i got it for *gaming*
Most DDR1 boards were able to take 2GB to 4GB and DDR2 boards 4GB to 8GB depending on how many slots they had. But of course normally you would have paired the P4 3.0GHz with 512MB or 1GB RAM.
And with Asus K7V and athlon 800 Mhz with 1.5Go is it possible? 😂
@@xtxo PLEASE be: 2x256MB Dual-channel...then?
You have a point. Progress the last 20 years is much less and more incremental then the period 80s and 90s which was revolutionary.
Just like mobile and smart phones. Progress was rapid in the 2000s and then the 'OS wars' of early 10s, now it's very incremental with barely any exciting innovation left.
@am_pm.17 the cutting edge at the moment is in quantum computing IMO and not in average consumer desktops.
@@Zuerst93so cutting edge it has no real consumer purpose
@balkloth Yeah you could have said the same about the traditional computer back in the 40s and 50s. Super big, expensive, impractical and had no real use outside of niche tasks that likely wasn't worth the cost at the time. And yet, look at where they are today.
Honestly, if the web tech stack wasn't a bottomless pit of uncontrolled bloat, a 20+ years old computer would be perfectly usable to this day, on a slightly trimmed down OS. TH-cam's video stream would be perfectly watchable on it in 720p, if not full HD, in something like VLC, if the megabytes of Javascript and all sorts of fancy layering crap wouldn't grind it to a halt. This isn't just true for early 2000s PCs, but G4/G5 Macs, and the like. Almost all of the extra horsepower and hardware acceleration, and multiple cores in a modern system is just used up to deal with the web bloat. Almost anything that has native code (not you, Electron "apps"), works just fine. This kind of experience is pretty well known from the Raspberry Pis, as you also mention it... I'm very appalled by the modern software. The future we were promised was so much better...
Truth. Going to a typical forum, with its top, side, and bottom floating ad viewers will spin up the fans I hardly realized existed on my Mac Mini 2018, and make the back of my phone hot to the touch. Everything else, including 3D CAD and multichannel audio applications -- no problem at all.
Amen. Good luck educating the average airhead on web bloat though!
couldn't have said it better myself
@@nickwallette6201adding a Pi 3 or 4 to your router could help. I recommend PiHole for filtering Ad Trackers from my entire network.
Experienced the same issue with RPis😅. It's the same with my 20 year old laptop as well. Perfectly fast machine with only 512 megs of ram and a single core, slow internet browser.
To get around that I actually link it up with a more powerful laptop and just browse the web over remote desktop. Can watch HD videos with sound, perfectly.. order pizza, etc etc etc.
I'll say though: period-correct software from the old days makes all the difference in speed(at least - .on the old laptop)
The Pentium 4, especially the later 64-bit ones, are like a magic number for newer software. It's the oldest you can go and still be able to run most programs and OSes from today.
They really are, it's amazing how modern they still are. I guess that's why there's no real love for them from the retro crowd.
@@ctrlaltrees You should do a low level format first.
It's that SSE2 support that most modern software NEEDS, the Pentium 4 had it first in 2000.
@doomer37 Bingo. I never realized just how much stuff needed it until I tried running newer stuff on my Pentium 3 machine.
They're also the newest you can go for some old software - I've a Pentium D machine, so a tiny bit newer, running BeOS that can also run Windows 10 (if I breach BeOS's RAM limit)
“The mean-time to Clint” I like that benchmark. 😂
I had the Pentium D, which was the dual core variant. It required its own small power planet to run.
Oof. The Pentium D was not a very good CPU and the single core Athlon 64 CPUs were crushing it. Intel lost the crown temporarily until the Core 2 Duo.
Nothing changes with intel
I like that this '04 PC is running a legit copy of win 10/11, yet people out here with multi thousand dollar PCs have the reminder to register their copy permanently emblazened in the lower right corner of their screen. 😂
Definitely the most legit way to run Microsoft's latest OSes 😅
KMSAuto is on GitHub there is no excuse for the watermark besides a skill issue/fear of disabling the game performance destroying windows defender
And? You really don't need to use a key anyway.
@@geofftottenperthcoys9944 Git 'im! 🏃♂️ 💨
if we are talking about youtubers, usually the PC's are temporary builds, best not to lock the windows key to a system thats gonna get changed 30 times over with new video card, motherboard, cpu, ram, or ssd on a constant basis
I'm amazed AGP graphics worked on this because as far as i know MS officially dropped the AGP card support since the 2018 version of Windows 10
it's a generic VESA driver running it
@@龗
| No AGP driver for Windows 10 & 11? Tried some but with no driver no real support to help CPU...
Just get the drivers up 😅
@@Documenting_Life_8619
| No AGP drivers up to Windows 8.1 in my tests...
AGP cards will run in PCI fallback mode on newer versions of Windows following the removal of actual AGP support. Nvidia cards will still work with 3D acceleration, but crippled performance. ATI cards become nothing more than basic display adapters, which is what you're seeing here. Early versions of Windows 10 are the endgame for meaningful 3D performance on AGP cards, unfortunately. Of course, you're still going to be fairly limited even then by the fact that the HD 3850 is the most powerful AGP card out there anyway.
OH MY, I never realized the "Tamiya" wrench fit PC parts. As a life long RC car and PC builder guy I cannot believe this never occured to me before! You learn something every day. Great video as always.
Yeah. 30 years and Today I Learned
I always used one for this! I figured it was better known.
having an HDD that old and not imaging it first makes me a little sad; but this is such a cool project! I had no idea RUFUS actually allowed you to customize windows 11 installs to skip TPM requirement!!
Not sure why people worry about using "period correct" HDs. Just use an SSD and save a few hours of your life. Bonus you can see how usable a PC when it's not tied down to a HD.
Agreed. But even with an SSD, systems that old are not really usable running Windows 10 or 11. I know, I've tried it and it still was painfully slow and effectively unusable.
I agree. Even if you have a decent CPU, Windows 11 will run painfully slow on a HDD. These days SSD is simply mandatory.
You already know how it would run on an ssd, why not check how painful slow it would be on an hdd? Its not as if he's going to daily drive the thing, so make it slower just for giggles.
@@SummonerArthur As I stated previously, I've already done that.
If this PC supports SATA, it'll probably be SATA I, which is not that much faster than a HDD. And also, even with SATA III, the CPU would still not perform enough to use all of it's theoretical speeds.
RM!! My primary school had these absolutely everywhere, what a flashback 😄
My high school had probably one of the earliest: RM 380Z: (blue & white case) 16K, cassette tape BASIC ... upgraded 1 year later [1978] to 380Z 48K dual 5.25 SS-SD floppies : 72K per disc :)
If you did want to try going ham with as many upgrades as possible for this it's worth mentioning that PCI is technically forwards compatible with PCI Express if you use an adapter with a bridge chip. The bridge chips were designed for using PCI cards on PCI Express but the chips are bidirectional so reverse adapters do exist. You could put a modern GPU in it.
Brilliant. I have upgraded 3 older PCs to Windows 11 using this method and very easy it was too. Now just waiting for 24H2 to see how if they impose any restrictions
24H2 is a Problem. MS make a hard Cut for old CPU's. SSE4.2 is Minimum. With First Gen Intel i-Serie you are save.
All Pentium 4 CPUs are based on the NetBurst microarchitecture. The Pentium 4 Willamette (180 nm) introduced SSE2, while the Prescott (90 nm) introduced SSE3 and later 64-bit technology. Later versions introduced Hyper-Threading Technology (HTT).
The first Pentium 4-branded processor to implement 64-bit was the Prescott (90 nm) (February 2004), but this feature was not enabled. Intel subsequently began selling 64-bit Pentium 4s using the "E0" revision of the Prescotts, being sold on the OEM market as the Pentium 4, model F. The E0 revision also adds eXecute Disable (XD) (Intel's name for the NX bit) to Intel 64. Intel's official launch of Intel 64 (under the name EM64T at that time) in mainstream desktop processors was the N0 stepping Prescott-2M.
Intel also marketed a version of their low-end Celeron processors based on the NetBurst microarchitecture (often referred to as Celeron 4), and a high-end derivative, Xeon, intended for multi-socket servers and workstations. In 2005, the Pentium 4 was complemented by the dual-core-brands Pentium D and Pentium Extreme Edition.
a usb sound card is an option for sound on it
Oh, good call! I hadn't considered that. 😁
@@ctrlaltrees Also quite a bunch of PCI sound cards will work, like even the ones starting at price of £ 9 or a bit more, being based on CMI (C-Media) / HT 8738 chip (up to 4 audio channels, 24 bit 44.1 kHz), for example, newly-built or second-hand.
That stock cooler is better than current intel coolers
I don't use Windows at all, unless compelled to due to some script kiddy's ineptitude and laziness. However, I appreciate your efforts. It just shows how anticonsumer M$ has become by artificially and prematurely rendering obsolete the majority of working PCs globally. Having said that, streaming aside, I could probably still do all of my computing under Windows 3 without missing a beat. I certainly can't type any faster now than I did 30 years ago.
You've given me hope that my old Core2Duo machines might have life left in them, at least with a hefty dose of de-bloat.
That comparison you made with the 5150 truly is amazing. Loved the video, Rees!
There is a windows vista driver for the radeon 9600 you can install that one by extracting the package and then installing the driver through device manager
Top video Rees, was surprised a machine that old was able to run Windows 11! I'm a fan of longer videos, so please don't apologise.
Thanks Rees, and to Dave Velociraptor for pointing me here on a twitter post. Apart from just being fun, this video is also relevant to me as I have a hp laptop that's a 2017 model 7th gen i5, that's works brilliantly. And yet I get that tpm message when trying to update to Windows 11. The computer is great and I dont want to have to replace it, so good to see there are workarounds to this.
I remember in 2016 i was in a basic IT class and one of our labs was installing windows 10 on multiple machines. Some newer than others. Most older and still running XP. Some of us finished in an hour. Others about 2-3
I still use my 2010 two cores Toshiba notebook for watching TH-cam and online movies in my summer country house. But it runs not Win11 off course :) Linux mint actually. In 2020 changed HDD for SSD and added RAM up to 4GB. Works just perfectly and very responsive. Thanks 4 brilliant videos. Looking forward for new ones! Good luck!
I still daily a 2009 quad core HP, running Windows 11 off an SSD and with 8GB RAM. It basically runs like a brand new product, really fast and fully functional!
Poor 20+ old computer. "Y U do dis to me?"
Also, poor old Matt's vintage internet collection. All those crunchy skin pix-n-flix, gone for good...
20 years ago being 2004 and not 1994 hurts me
29:11 "go away why is all this crap poping up all the time" welcome to modern MS Windows and Office, constant interruptions.
'Mean time to Clint' - didn't realize this was a benchmark. 🤣🤣🤣
With Rufus I plug the drive from the machine I want to install on into one of those USB adapters. I then tell Rufus I want to make a "Windows to go" version and tell it to write to the USB drive. After it gets done I remove the drive from the USB adapter and install it back in the machine. It bypasses the "boot from USB, install, reboot, and finish install" steps and goes straight to "...and finish the install". You can take advantage of Rufus doing the install part on a faster machine and save time.
I was in primary school in the mid-80s, and we had an RM Nimbus 186! There was no internal storage. Everything ran from floppy disk. There was also a BBC Micro. We used to play Repton on it! And yes, I played the original Doom when it released
21:00 Find some 2004 USB speakers.
Huh, I thought I'd read somewhere that the current version of Windows 11 requires at least a core-i-whatever CPU, dropping support for the Core-2 -Duo for example; guess that was wrong! Congrats on getting this to work!
An SSD would probably be a big help, especially with the swapping, as you said. On one of those old premium systems with 4GB of RAM it might not be bad.
Someone told me Win 11 24h2 will require a 8th gen core-i. The older versions you can modify by Rufus ore something equal to run in older hardware.
@@jensputzlocher8345 Ah, yeah; I was thinking of the FIRST incompatibility 24h2 will include, the "PopCnt" instruction, which excludes core2duos. Now there's a new requirement they added for SSE 4.2; sounds like that was introduced with the i7. Found this on tomshardware; I'd link articles, but TH-cam always deletes my comments when I do that :(
Be curious to see that happens with this PC when Windows Update tries to force that update on it later this year.
Currently you can still patch these limitations out with Media creation tools like Rufus, when you make the install stick for W11.
@@catriona_drummond Yes, thanks to Rufus you can modify Win 11 23H2 to boot on an Core2Duo from 2007, but Win 11 24H2 will require the SSE4.2 instruction set (?) - this will require a Intel 8th gen core CPU or equal.
@@jensputzlocher8345 No, on Intel's ark site you can do an advanced search that filters by instruction set, SSE4.2 is supported by 1st gen Core i series CPUs. AMD doesn't have a search like this, so it's a pain to search for SSE4.2 support.
I Love This 20 Year Old Computer Hardware With Windows 11!
Interesting video and kudos for all the effort you put on it. I have an intel quad Q9550 socket 775 running very well Windows 10 LTS (youtube 720p very smooth). So on 10 years older hardware. Back in the day, even on the first Pentiums, you could NOT run WindowsXP (the 10 years gap). Indeed, the progress was bigger, faster until year 2000. It is sad.
I have Windows 10 on a Q9650, SSD, 8 GB DDR3 RAM, it's actually surprisingly usable & decent for older light gaming. Everyday tasks are feel as fast as my 9700k
Thank you Rees, I really enjoyed this one - I have the 3.4Ghz variant of this as part of my collection that was running Windows 10 at one point (albeit in a later motherboard with 4 gigabytes of ram) and was suprised at how well it was doing! 😊
Quick tip: For TH-cam (or any video site for that matter) go into settings of the browser and turn off Hardware Acceleration. This will make a huge difference on the default Windows driver.
I know what you mean about the rate of progress. I remember the 90s when it was hard to go a whole year without having to upgrade something. But my current desktop PC is one I built in 2012 with a 3rd gen Core i7 CPU and it's still in daily use doing software development, CAD and office tasks under Windows 10 and it definitely doesn't feel old even though it is 12 years old. I gave it an SSD and better graphics card about 4 years ago but that's all that's been done to it.
8GB HDD in 2004?? Man, I had 320Gb HDD running raid 0 back then
You mean 2014 🎉
@@pyeltd.5457 umm no 2004
320GB in 2004 is like having 16TB in this time
@@S-1_24-25yea he is full of it.
@@pyeltd.5457 umm really troll?? It was a $2000 PC then, and no it was NOT like having a 16TB HDD, shows what YOU KNOW
Apparently, for Windows 11 24H2 and above you'll need an Intel Nehalem architecture CPU or newer, due to the POPCNT instruction. Still quite old though...
im using tiny10 on my old sony viao 2008 which originaly came with vista.... over the years i had xp and win 7 running on it. then 2014 i bought a new laptop and kind of forgot about the sony viao. this year there is lots of videos on youtube about reviving old pc. Since its a 32bit unit 2gb ram and 2 partitions of 128g.. i had only 1 windoows option and that was tiny10 or a dozen linux distros. So i installed tiny10 and was blown away that its actually works ad pretty fast browser with edge working really well...i even install bodhi linux OS on the second partition, i installed a VM and Rrun Bunsenlabs OS. All works perfectly wirhout reeplacing any hardware...i havent touch my 2022 windows 11 hp laptop...for a while. Those linux distros are insane
Not sure how many times you've heard this but I absolutely adore your Labyrinth mouse pad
Damn. If this can run windows 11 THAT WELL, then I wonder how many such low end systems from like, 2007 and later can... Like this will likely save loads of e-waste getting dumped as we find a way to run such modern OSes on these!
It would probably need to have at least 8gb of RAM though unlike the 2gb in this video.
First gen i5 with 8gb and gt 240 is ok but for your own sanity use linux on older harware
@@janekkrawiecki4654 I agree with that too...
@@JPS13Laptop Yea, 8 GB is recommended for WIndows 11 to run smoothly... But the fact that it can run okay on 2 GB ram is an interesting thing...
@@SamCoder. Yeah, but no one should ever be doing that 😅
This is your first experience with windows 11? Hilarious.
I also cant stop thinking about some nerd at microsoft parsing through the telemetry data and finding this outlier.
U surely pushed the limits here further ! I made a Toshiba laptop with c2d t6600 4gb ddr2 ram 800mhz +ssd run win11 Intel gma gfx 256mb but this is x treme 🤩
Interesting and neat video Rees!
You could try something like a western digital raptor hard drive. WAY faster than what is in there, but it is more period appropriate than a SSD.
i wouldnt even be upset if you used a modern hardrive for thsi system it would be cool to just get it working haha. awesome video loved it. you gain a sub from me
no way man are you a fan of stepmom too? just saw them for the second time not too long ago! i was so confused when i saw them pop up in your youtube feed lol i thought it was my feed
It's installing like that because the Ethernet drivers are generic from the windows 11 and well it won't give you 100% of full power. And CPU and chipset drivers are as well very very important because you lose a lot of power there to. Ssd connection actually my friend an external ssd or actually an m2 that can connect through usb with an adapter that is more faster than sata 1. But yes ssd with sata 1 will increase the speed not much for like me that has an normal hdd but yours 50gb definitely better performance. But looking at this ngl it's impressive thank you for doing this 😊 you made my day better. Some drivers are still on the internet try writing the motherboard name and try your luck. If not reddit and discord communities usually can help you find or give you some drivers. Ohh vga driver is as well very important thing. Windows 7-11 creates a generic we can say a bad copy of the original driver so that it makes the machine usable but far from perfect.
Yeah, had similar issue running windows 10 even with a 600 series pentium 4 with 64 bit support (670). processor not only needs 64bit support but also lahf/sahf support which was introduced with the cedar mill pentium 4 models. It was interesting seeing windows 10/11 running on 8gb ddr2 800mhz, a gtx 1070, and a pentium 4 651 overclocked to roughly 4.2ghz and a 128gb sata ssd, gonna be doing some more testing on it to see how various software runs on it.
Those videos give me the power to learn more about computers ❤
I'm impressed that 11 worked at all, should see if there is a upgrade for my dad's old P4 PGA system.
My main desktop PC (I use my new Notebook most of the time though since 3 years) still is a Pentium Core2 Quad Q6600 (also LGA775) I bought in 2007. I've replaced the main HDD with an SSD few years ago, but besides this, it happily runs Windows 10 and works perfectly fine for me. I won't upgrade to Windows 11 though. I'm still stunned it works so good. It ran for hours every day from 2007 to 2020 and I used it a lot for video recodring/encoding, software development (web, embedded), running VMs (until VMware decided to require a CPU instruction it doesn't support).
I was running one of these running Debian with XFCE from ~2012 up to 2016 with zero issues. That only had a gig of RAM, but it did what I needed it to do.
Our school was full of Core 2 era RM computers until about 2018, and they fully upgraded all of them to Windows 10 and then replaced them by 2022. Had a similar computer in the DT block to this, absolutely ancient, for years - the oldest one in the school. If this computer was made before September 2004, it's older than I am.
re: the IBM 5150 vs. the P4: now hold up one of the new generation mini PC`s, and not only compare how much things have miniaturized but also show graphs featuring benchmarks and pricing. That`s kind of the mind-blowing thing. My first Wintel machine was a 286 with 2Mb memory, 9" monochrome VGA monitor and a 20Mb hard drive worth about $1500 in 1990 dollars. My current rig is a Lenovo Ryzen SFF machine with 16Gb and 2Tb SSD, hooked up to a 22" Viewsonic OLED display. The machine itself is about the size of a USB DVD-ROM and cost me about $300. That price:performance ratio is pretty amazing to me!
Funnily enough I just became the owner of a machine with the same motherboard in it.
Installing W11 wasn't the OS on it is something I have thought of. VIA boards are a good choice for Windows XP and also 98. It's fascinating just how far you can go into the past or the future. x86 hardware is the very definition of versatility. Someone could install an old OS plus W11 on different drives and have a dual use retro + modern experience on the same machine. The latter isn't great of course. But you have shown it works 👍
I modified the cooler that is in your pc to fit any socket by filing out the holes, i took the plastic pins off, i filed it down, and it can now fit my socket 1700 :p and it keeps my i5 10400f at 35 degrees celcius, which is nuts :p and i love what you are doing, i try stuff like this as well.
When 11 came out I played around with getting it running on an old Dell. I put a Core 2 Quad in it and it was quite usable.
Great idea, like this very much! Also, when put next to the very old IBM, I started to actually like the mix of beige PC and black 5.25" drive (even if a optical one in this case😂). Totally forgot that this was pretty much the norm back in the days, even on CBM stuff. Don't remember when I started feeling that was an odd look on PCs and had to have beige drives on beige PCs or black drive on black PCs. Hm. Well, just a note on the side 😅 Cheers!
the level of backwards compatability that windows has can be quite amazing - even 30+ year old printers will work on it etc
I used that exact monitor as one of my side monitors for the past 2 years. Overclocked it to almost 100hz, but idk how much of that I was getting over VGA, LOL. I just sold it with a budget build recently, to afford my ultrawide. You wouldn't think it was useful because of the size, but it was perfect for either watching a TH-cam video or to keep Spotify open etc. It also was where I relegated all of my desktop icons and folders too, lol. Kept my Desktop looking tidy.
What a flashback. Those machines were everywhere.
in 2004 our schools had 1ghz coppermine pentium 3's with 512mb of ram. a few years later they upgraded to 2.8 and 3ghz pentium 4's with 1-2gb of ram.
Mean Time to Clint really does look like a good benchmark for real world PC performance
This reminds me of the Pentium 4 PC I got my hands on some years back that was an office PC at my aunt's job, that got shelved in 2005-2006 for being slow, with each new Windows it was brought out, updated to the latest, then thrown back in for being slower and slower. I put W10 on it, it was horrible, now it's used as a storage PC by a friend who removed that pile of rust from my house, he put some Linux on it(Lite, or Puppy, I don't know) and it runs 24/7 keeping up a few SSHDs and SSDs up with IDE-SATA adapters, it's cursed.
Seeing how far the system requirements of Windows has come is really nice, it showcases why putting stricter limitations on hardware for Win11 isn't as bad as it was first cried out to be.
I can’t wait to try this on my 12 year old system that still pretty much plays most of the latest games (with a 6 year 8GB GPU) and is running 10 but can’t officially support 11. I’ll get a few more years out of this old system yet!
Great necromancy work, mate! So, I have an idea. Hear me out on this.... Low-Profile PCI raid card. Compact flash cards with adaptors. Raid 0. yes, a complete abomination, but it would be interesting to see how much snappier it would be.
There are a few things you can do to improve your experience with Windows 11 on that old machine. One of them being is changing your visual appearance settings to "adjust for best performance", as well as looking into community made drivers that support Windows 10 and 11 for those AGP cards
8:09 i didn’t think I’d see a Tamiya hex wrench being used on an IT related project 👍 A simple touch is all it takes 🙂
Just felt old as hell...
I have the same processor in both my towers. Pentium 4 HT 3ghz Prescott. Still a great option even for today
I like the drive garage door on these!
I can't even install Win 11 on a 2013 HP Z820 workstation. A list pops up with the items that don't meet the installation criteria! BTW Great video.
Beleive it or not i had thay exact monitor with my first home built machine. I was 12-13. It was 2013 and i had an a6 6400k- 8gb radeon ram- stock cooler- a reman hd7770 from newegg- and a wd blue 500gb with a copy of windows 7 installed via not so legitimate ways. But after all that my allowance only gave me the opportunity for the 15$us monitor from goodwill. I play so much minecraft and planetside 2 on that monitor. And I would put a paycheck on the fact my performance issues 100% spawned in the fact that monitor was so akward with a low refresh. It brought back a ton of good memories seeing that monitor again
The most important question though, did you apply the perfect amount of thermal paste. First the hand blocking the view and then the cooler doing the same, it felt deliberate :)
People do tend to say "You should use this amount in xyz pattern 🤓" after all. So yes, 100% deliberate.
That a RM F Series from 2003 that was the replacement to the RM C Series from the 1997.
Did you try to install the radeon 9000 driver ? It should improve performance as the generic driver uses the cpu for rendering.
Well, I might just set up an old Pentium 4 I have laying around... my family could use a gaming PC! For running Sega Saturn, Genesis, and NES games... probably on Debian or Mint. It's nice to know that my plan B should in theory work.
I remember seeing those in class when they were new. They were much faster than the 2001 RM machines that we had in other rooms at the time!
A cheep USB sound card would probebly be the easiest way to get some sound out of it. You could even wire it internally if the mood took you.
yeah we had RM Nimbus computers at my school but that was 1994-1996, i remember playing Simcity on one of the computers back in the day during lunch times, as at one point the computer room was also our form room.
Windows 10Pro runs fine on my 2007 Dell D630 notebook. Not yet 20 years old but it will be soon enough. The most difficult part was getting it to boot and run the Windows 10 installer. Easy after that. The notebook usually runs Mint these days but switching to Windows 10 is a matter of swapping the SSD for a second one. On the D630, this is barely more difficult than swapping SD cards.
I love how you basically have to shove windows down the throat of an old PC to get it to work, but you could throw almost any Linux distro on it no sweat
This is an world of busines, imagine if microsoft dind´t try to make difficult and didn´t upgrade the windows versions, all to make you spend money on new equipmentt???!!!
But people start get tired of every season to by a new hardware.
Thank´s to people like you there is always one way to go around this shit, me and for shure thousands around the world we are very grateful for this videos.
Thanks a lot.
Great videos keep them coming :)
I feel like LTSC would be a better improvement than actually debloating stock Windows. At least I've found more success with it. Also disabling Windows Defender's Real Time Protection improves system responsivenesss heavily!
Honestly the pentium 4, as gimped of a processor as it was, does have its perks, it pioneered the early XP days before it got replaced by the core 2 line. It really does have its unique place in computing history!
You may improve performance of the older Intel processors by turning off "enhanced halt state" - also known as "C1E". You can do this in the BIOS settings (if the setting is available), then save and exit the BIOS. It's just a power saving feature.
It's honestly surprising that the Pentium 4 can still run Windows 11. Initially, I thought the cut off point was either Windows 8 or Windows 10, but it seems that I stand corrected.
socket 775 systems are probably the oldest platform that still commonly sold here where I live (SE Asia regioin), slightly overkill for legacy software but adequate for modern ones. once everything else, graphics, storage, memory was beefed up to the best the chipset/motherboard can handle.
Core 2-based systems are the most common though, but I doubt unless it's Celeron D, I don't really think Prescott Pentium 4s would be that slow in single-thread tasks either.
also that big hunk of stock Intel heatsink is still a treat to see. mine from the Wolfdale Celeron is much smaller.. and louder. and I tend to snap the clip, which ended up being annoying enough for me to scavenged some OEM machines for screw mounted coolers.
Yup, had RM machines in my primary school IT room, maybe even that same case design, not sure. Though, by the time I was in high school they had Dells, got Lenovo Thinkcentres by the time I was in my last year, and then back to Dells for college.
My advice with those stock cooler 775 is to take it out of chasis and then plug the cooler so you see if the white lid made contact then you can press the black ones without breaking it. In the case of broking there are replacements but also you can use parts from broken zip tires the plastic is the same and same wide.
This is insane!
I put windows 11 on my tiny form Lenovo m93p and it works perfect on it I was surprised.
I would like to see a follow-up video showing what difference an SSD and compatible graphics card does make. My guess is that it would turn out to be a "usable" lab machine for light browsing and watching stuff on TH-cam.
Very impressive how this 2004 computer could run Windows 11 without any significant issues if used for basic tasks.
The "P4" from 2004 was more like a Pentium 5 iirc. It had undergone significant architectural changes by 2004 and was only a Pentium 4 in name. Same as today's 14gen core i7 is related in name only to the first gen core i7.