all i see is a little white square about 10 pixels big with some coloured shapes in it.
EDIT, slow browser, i see know, and yes, i do vaguely remember it. God im old.
my first memory of computers was an old mac OS (no idea which, was on a laptop, didnt have proper colour) which sang a wee song "i love trashhhh" and the icon danced about when you put something into the trash can. was brilliant.
okay, actually researched this, was mac OS 7 apparently, it was awesome.
The first PC I had was given to us by my aunt & uncle. The CPU was Pentium Family 100MHz, it had a 1GB HDD and, I believe, 16MB of RAM. It ran Windows 95. At the time I knew pretty much nothing about PCs (not much has changed then... ) so when I ran out of hard drive space I did a Windows search for all the files on the drive, sorted by biggest filesize first and started deleting them. I got more free space, but next time I rebooted the machine it failed to start properly...
Luxury. I still have my first one, the old faithful Panasonic "portable" 8088 with two DD floppy drives, naturally no hd, green monochrome and built-in matrix printer. Dos 2.11. and 512kb ram. Damn hard to drive full lap without crashing in Indy500, but doable.
I do love how the forum has totaly ignored the supposed own and is making something useful out of a rickroll thread
My first IBM Compatible had twin floppies, an 8mhz CPU, and the latest Herculese >>>graphics<<< card, yes mine actually did graphics! It had a daisy wheel printer that was louder than my stereo.
Haha, I remember this! I always used to use the Packard Bell Navigator software instead of the Windows UI at first because it had a cool whistling cartoon guy
btw, the file manager and graphical interface of Windows 3.1 were still shipped with Windows XP, they were removed since XP SP2. start -> run -> progman for the graphical interface, and start -> run -> winfile for the file manager.
Hehe classic. Directly above me on my bookshelf now is the Windows 3.1 User guide, and the MS-DOS 5.0 User guide, still as mint as the day I got them. God knows why they're still on my shelf.