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Comparing Today's Computers To 1995's 461

An anonymous reader writes "A look back at two articles from 1995, touting high end computers and 'must haves.' How times have changed... ...'Memory (RAM): We seem to have convinced most manufacturers to adopt eight megabytes as standard, compared with four megabytes in 1994. Don't buy less than eight. The difference in performance between an eight megabyte machine and a four-megabyte machine can be dramatic.'"
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Comparing Today's Computers To 1995's

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  • yup (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 24, 2012 @01:55AM (#39144651)
    Those were the days....when it took 30 minutes to load a porn site
  • Eh (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @01:56AM (#39144653)
    Eh. There's not much of a difference. We're still using the same hardware and architecture as 1995. Heck, I can run the same OS on a computer made in 1995, or in 2012. Yeah, hard drives are bigger, and Intel's chips are faster, and yeah, PC's have a bit more RAM, but other than that, it's just more of the same. If anything, I'm amazed at how little computers have changed in the past 18 years.
    • Re:Eh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Oxford_Comma_Lover ( 1679530 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:06AM (#39144693)

      it's just more of the same.

      Yes, but the difference has consequences. Capabilities have increased by a factor of a thousand or more in several areas. This has made certain things practical--such as effectively removing these resources as important limiting factors on most programs. In addition, it has made areas previously almost impossible because of these limitations--such as complex digital video editing on a normal microcomputer.

      Not to mention playing video of good quality on a normal microcomputer.

      • Re:Eh (Score:4, Insightful)

        by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @03:25AM (#39144981)
        Sure, there are some outliers in terms of improved capabilities, like video editing and even watching TV. But 90% of us are using PC's the 90% of the same way now that we did in 1995: Working with MS Office documents, handling email, web surfing, moving around files, etc. It may be prettier, easier, and faster, but it isn't dramatically different.
        • Re:Eh (Score:5, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 24, 2012 @04:20AM (#39145175)

          hahahaha "1995: ...handling email, web surfing..."

          speak for yourself but i think somewhat less than 90% of the people currently using a computer had access to email or the internet in 1995.

          • Me and nearly all of my neighbors did, but then again we lived in a suburb close to many large IT employers at the time. The internet was prevalent enough in 1995 for it be featured in popular media. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0113957/ [imdb.com]
          • Re:Eh (Score:4, Insightful)

            by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @07:37AM (#39145997) Journal

            I was doing both, but even there the differences are huge. For example, back then I would check my email once or twice per day. As in, people would send me an email and it would be stored on a server for a while, and then some time later I would get it. Downloading my mail often took a minute or two - and most of it was plain text. Now, my mail client is basically always connected to the server. I get notified as soon as mail is available and I read it as soon as I want a break from whatever I'm doing. If I wanted to send someone a picture, I had to upload it to some FTP or web space and then they'd download it (and I'd just hope no one guessed it was there).

            The web back then was purely static. There was no JavaScript (depending on when in 1995, it was either not released, or so new that hardly anyone was using it). Frames were all the rage - they reduced bandwidth, which was useful, but also broke the back button, which wasn't. Animated gifs and embedded midi tracks were the height of dynamic behaviour. Most companies had a little bit of marketing information online, if anything. Things like online shopping were pretty rare - Amazon existed, but I couldn't order groceries online, for example. I could get news from the BBC, but not very much.

      • Re:Eh (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Lazy Jones ( 8403 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @03:46AM (#39145051) Homepage Journal

        This has made certain things practical--such as ...

        Such as using unsuitable or bad algorithms, wasting enormous amounts of memory, disk space and bandwidth on trivial tasks, using layer upon layer of badly structured APIs and on top of that a browser with an interpreted language running software we use daily (like gmail). Who would have thought it possible back then?

        • Re:Eh (Score:5, Insightful)

          by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @05:32AM (#39145447) Journal

          Such as using unsuitable or bad algorithms, wasting enormous amounts of memory, disk space and bandwidth on trivial tasks, using layer upon layer of badly structured APIs and on top of that a browser with an interpreted language running software we use daily (like gmail). Who would have thought it possible back then?

          Either you weren't around back then or you are too young to remember but...

          The lavish 33MHz and 8MB RAM (compared to the older generations of 16 bitters and 8 bitters) allowed lazy programmers to write such terrible algorithms and waste vast numbers of cycles on interpretd languaes like Visual Basic etc etc. My god, I mean windows 95 wasted so much CPU just to look a bit prettier. Real programmers still did everything in DOS.

          Also, while some programmers have got lazier, others have not. Many algorithms have got much, much faster.

          • Re:Eh (Score:5, Insightful)

            by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @07:56AM (#39146103) Journal

            Also, while some programmers have got lazier, others have not. Many algorithms have got much, much faster.

            And those layered APIs that the grandparent complains about make this easier. Now we don't have everyone implementing searching and sorting themselves, someone does it once and it's shoved into a shared library. The same with more complex things like image compositing.

      • Re:Eh (Score:5, Funny)

        by KiloByte ( 825081 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @04:36AM (#39145237)

        Capabilities have increased by a factor of a thousand or more in several areas.

        What Intel giveth, Microsoft taketh away.

    • Re:Eh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by PsyberS ( 1356021 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:24AM (#39144783)
      True, things may be only a thousand or so faster/larger than 18 years ago. This might sound like slow progress, until you also realize that progress was made in other vectors such as physical size and power consumption. You do realize that the tiny smartphone in your pocket is significantly better than the humongous desktop PC of 1995, right?
      • by Tukz ( 664339 )

        This is actually want impress me the must.
        My smartphone (HTC Desire) have more computing power, than my PC I used back in 1994 did.

        If I were in one of those bad "time traveller" movies, and brought my cellphone, they wouldn't believe I only came from 18 years in the future with the amount of power my cellphone have.

        • by rvw ( 755107 )

          This is actually want impress me the must.
          My smartphone (HTC Desire) have more computing power, than my PC I used back in 1994 did.

          If I were in one of those bad "time traveller" movies, and brought my cellphone, they wouldn't believe I only came from 18 years in the future with the amount of power my cellphone have.

          They wouldn't believe you anyway. What can you do with a modern smartphone in 1994? No youtube, twitter, facebook, gmail, no 3G, not even GPRS, no not even GSM, and after three days (because you're battery last 3x longer because you don't use video and 3G) it goes dead because there is no usb to load the battery. The only thing left is to use it to sniff some coke from the smooth touchscreen, but that's it.

          • Nah, better than that.

            If you brought an iPhone back to 1995 they wouldn't believe you were from the future because it has an Apple logo on it, and everyone knew they were always just a few months from going out of business.

      • If I wanted to type a 10,000 word document or play a complex RPG I'd take that 1995 PC over a smartphone anyday. Sure , the smartphone has much better hardware but from a usability point of view it leaves a lot to be desired compared to PC or any era.

    • Between broadband internet, 3d acceleration, dual monitors, and a stable multi-tasking OS, I have NFI what you're talking about.

      -Sent from a smartphone that is far superior to the machine I had in 95

    • Re:Eh (Score:5, Interesting)

      by headLITE ( 171240 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @03:43AM (#39145045)

      The only reason you can run the same OS is that the x64 architecture supports emulation of the old 32 bit x86 architecture which supports emulation of the 16 bit architecture that came before it. Maybe you didn't notice these jumps, but they were there. There's another jump just happening, the move from magnetic hard disks to solid state disks. That's again one you don't notice unless you know about the technical difference, but it's still a pretty big difference. And yes we have more RAM, and yes that's even an example of something that's essentially still very similar to 1995 RAM, but even then, miniaturization is kind of a big deal. The chips may still work in the same way but there were huge advances in the technology that is used to produce them, which are hidden from most normal users. The basic idea of how a computer works is still the same, of course, but then, that hasn't changed in almost a century. And it probably won't change anytime soon - the next big change is probably the move to smaller, portable devices that require even less inside knowledge to operate. Maybe, ten years from now, you'll look at your phone and say "why this is so different from the computers we used to have to put up with- finally they changed something!" because the package looks different, but the overall architecture will still be the same.

    • Re:Eh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Darinbob ( 1142669 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @04:58AM (#39145315)

      Word has not sped up any either. If anything it feels slightly slower.

      • Re:Eh (Score:5, Interesting)

        by L4t3r4lu5 ( 1216702 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @06:32AM (#39145719)
        I have a Toshiba T1910 from 1994 on my desk; I found it in a cupboard after a clear out at work. 4MB RAM, monochrome screen, 200MB HDD, 486SX 25MHz processor, Windows 3.11.

        Boot time, from power on to ready-to-work (no HDD activity after boot), including a 3 second memory test, is 51 seconds. Yes, I can do a lot more with my 2GHz dual core 4GB RAM workstation (get prettier graphics, browse the internet) but this laptop has Word, Excel, Powerpoint, networking.

        I am amazed that so little has changed.
      • Really? Because I used Word 6 in 1995 on a machine with 5MB of RAM. It showed the splash screen for a well over 30 seconds before launching and I couldn't then run an image editor without exiting Word or the machine would thrash and become unusable. Saving a multi-page document would often take 5-10 seconds during which time Word froze. Word 2 was a bit faster (although saving was still slow). Oh, and Word 2 took about 15% of my total hard disk space just for a standard install...
  • A bit outdated (Score:2, Interesting)

    by ShakaUVM ( 157947 )

    The article is a bit outdated, but I mean that in the opposite sense of it reporting computer stats from 1995. It seems a bit a year out of date on its stats. Am I nitpicking? Sure.

    The 28.8 modem was introduced in 1994, and I recall it being in fairly wide use by summer 1994. Likewise, 17" monitors were not unusual or prohibitively expensive back then. I had a decent enough 17" that ran maybe $300 or so. The Apple repair tech knocked it off my table, and I ended up with a really nice 17" Sony CRT and a mass

    • Re:A bit outdated (Score:5, Insightful)

      by wvmarle ( 1070040 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:20AM (#39144761)

      I do recall that CRT monitors were for a very long time much cheaper than LCD/TFT screens. And for an even longer time faster (especially in refresh rates). Also CRT never really came down in price - stayed more or less the same, as materials/manufacturing/transportation are the bulk of their cost.

      Indeed back in the days 17" was not expensive, back in 1995 I was using 15" already. I got a cheap second-hand one, a few years old, excellent condition. And early 2000s switched to a flat screen one.

      A 24" CRT is still massive. Never ceased to be massive. I mean, ever tried to lift such a beast? You may have had to reinforce your desk before putting one of those on it! That huge chunk of glass just won't get any lighter, no matter what.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by PCM2 ( 4486 )

        A 24" CRT is still massive. Never ceased to be massive. I mean, ever tried to lift such a beast? You may have had to reinforce your desk before putting one of those on it! That huge chunk of glass just won't get any lighter, no matter what.

        I still have a 32" CRT TV, and one of the main things that's keeping me from getting a flat screen of some kind is WTF am I going to do with this beast? It's 150 lbs, but that's deceptive. It's 150 lbs of poorly-balanced, somewhat fragile dead weight. One person cannot carry it anywhere, at least nobody I've seen has figured out how. Two can manage, but I don't own a car. Funny how people are willing to deliver stuff for next to nothing, but you can't find someone to haul it back out again.

        • by darkonc ( 47285 )
          Grab it at the screen. Hold the screen against your chest, and your hands around the bottom of the screen. about 80% of the weight is in the glass in the front of the screen, and the rest of the monitor will balance properly. It's kinda counter-intuitive.but it works.

          I started moving 30" screens around in the late '80s when they cost a few thousand dollars. Never had to pay for dropping one.

          I still have a 32" CRT TV, ..... It's 150 lbs of poorly-balanced, somewhat fragile dead weight. One person cannot carry it anywhere, at least nobody I've seen has figured out how.

      • Re:A bit outdated (Score:4, Interesting)

        by JosKarith ( 757063 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @05:00AM (#39145319)
        I've worked in IT support for about a decade and a half now and the move from CRT to TFT is an absolute godsend.
        My personal favourite was when someone wanted their PC under their monitor to save desk space - you had to lift 50-odd lbs of monitor and then brace it with one hand to slide the desktop underneath cos' there was no way the desktop would slide into place with the monitor resting on the top.
        When we migrated to TFT's I wrecked my back for about a week lifting all the old monitors as we got rid of them but the pain was worth it to never see those b4stards again...
      • by na1led ( 1030470 )
        CRT's are great for playing Light Gun games. I have an old 26" CRT TV in my basement hooked up to my PS2, and it works great with my GunCon lightguns. The light guns they have for LCD are junk and not accurate.
  • by MrEricSir ( 398214 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:01AM (#39144667) Homepage

    Windows 95 came with a 3d capture the flag game and a Weezer music video. Windows 7? Nope.

    Therefore, computers in 1995 were better.

  • by martin-boundary ( 547041 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:02AM (#39144675)
    For me, the most dramatic example of the progress of hardware in the intervening years is Emacs.

    It used to be regarded as a heavyweight editing environment, comparable in scope and resource requirements to a full programmer's IDE. There was even a special server designed just to allow several editing windows (aka frames) to coexist.

    Now, it's so lightweight and fast to load up, my web browser launches a completely independent Emacs for each comment field in a web page, my MUA launches its own Emacs for writing mails, I have multiple independent Emacs processes for editing code, and another for writing LaTeX.

    • by philip.paradis ( 2580427 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:32AM (#39144807)

      "Emacs is a wonderful operating system. All it's missing is a decent text editor."

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • There's a perfectly rational explanation for my madness :)

        One of the things that infuriates people who like GUIs is when Cut'n'Paste doesn't work properly in some applications. Even when it works, the data transfers through cut and paste depend a lot on what an application will recognize or let you copy. E.g. you might copy an image from the web browser and yet you can't insert it as a background for your music player.

        I'm the same way with editing text. Nearly every application requires some text input

      • Technically I don't need the modern hardware to run emacs, but I can't find decent old hardware anymore.

        And really, the only reason I prefer the modern hardware is for resolution; I can stack up a lot more Emacs windows on screen with larger anti-aliased fonts.

        I'll forgive all you VI users. After all we'll be in the same rest home some day. IDE users though will feel my cane of righteousness upon their heads.

  • by AdamHaun ( 43173 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:02AM (#39144677) Journal

    My 486 only had four megabytes of RAM. I had to reboot and bypass CONFIG.SYS and AUTOEXEC.BAT to run Doom. The reason? My mouse driver took up too much memory. And this was in DOS, where you only had three or four drivers to begin with.

    (Before any other old folks ask -- I already had other drivers in upper memory so the mouse driver wouldn't fit there.)

    • by Zarhan ( 415465 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:08AM (#39144699)

      Doom used a DOS extender. As such, you could pretty much have all your drivers in base memory without any of that UMB mangling.

      Ultima VII and the Voodoo Memory Management (http://ultima.wikia.com/wiki/Voodoo_Memory_Manager) on the other hand....required a lots of base memory and you really couldn't run anything like EMM386 reliably. Was...interesting to get Ultima VII working with 2MBs of RAM.

    • Doom was a lot easier to run than games that used earlier DOS extenders.

      Remember Zone 66? Just to run Zone 66's crazy DOS extender I had to use a config.sys menu [rsvs.net] to boot into a separate configuration that only loaded my sound driver but not the memory manager. Total pain to set up.

    • by Dwedit ( 232252 )

      I think the real problem is that CuteMouse hadn't been written yet.
      Sometimes you may have been able to get away with another compatible mouse driver that used less memory.

    • As an Amiga user I used to laugh at stories like that from DOS users. Of course I didn't get the last laugh.

  • by GoodNewsJimDotCom ( 2244874 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:03AM (#39144683)
    I'm saying this not because the power was so good, but because nothing compares to Red Baron, Secret Weapons of the Luftwaffe, and Xwing. EA/Bioware could have scored big with SWTOR by using Xwing vs TieFighter style combat in an MMO context where you can upgrade your ship. Instead the space combat is a gimmick and the game is barely an MMO with so few people on each server.

    What if they brought back Stunt Island as Stunt Island 2? Allow people to autoshare videos on Youtube. Allow people to share/rate missions like they do on Little Big Planet. Have multiplayer with watchers/chatters. Have car racing too if you want to go all out.

    Maybe I'm not in the mix anymore, but when I played some modern flight sims they showed an out of cockpit view and you just flew around using the mouse. Maybe someone could point me to where the good competitive gaming flight sims are that I am not aware of?

    Another thing we're missing from the early/mid 90s is adventure games, but I don't miss them any further than I can get without the blue key.
  • by FrankSchwab ( 675585 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:05AM (#39144687) Journal

    8 MB then, 8 GB now
    1 GB then, 1 TB now
    33 MHz then, 3 GHz quad-core now
    0.0288 mbps internet then, 1-10 mbps now (only two orders)
    600 MB CD-ROM then, 45 GB BluRay now (only two orders)
    1.4 MB floppy then, 16 GB Flash drive now (four)

    Price: (not in TFA): Probably $2500 then, around $750 today.

    And yet, I'm betting that the 1995 machine boots faster than the 2012 machine...

    • by Daniel Dvorkin ( 106857 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:12AM (#39144723) Homepage Journal

      Yep. And if you go with the informal version of Moore's law, "X doubles every year and a half" where X is just about any measure of computer capability, we're still almost on track. 2^10 = 1024, as /.er should know by heart; strictly speaking, this should mean about a thousandfold improvement between 1995 and 2010 rather than 2012, but everything you list was available two years ago, if at a somewhat higher price. And yes, X may just as well be boot time as RAM or processing power. ;)

    • by six025 ( 714064 )

      And yet, I'm betting that the 1995 machine boots faster than the 2012 machine...

      For the average PC / Mac user, sure, but not with SSD for the system disk. Consistent boot times of about 15 seconds here on a 2011 MBP.

      Peace,
      Andy.

    • 32 GB flash drives are now pretty common and at roughly the same $/GB as 16 GB units . In the last month i have bought a 32 GB micro SD, and (2) 32 GB flash drives all at or below $1/GB. 64 GB and 128 GB units are also already available at retail., just not as common and the pricing scales fast.
    • Well...

      I just built out a 4 Ghz 8 core machine with 16GB RAM and a pair of 1.5TB drives for right about $600.

      I recall back in '91 my 486DX/33 with 4MB RAM cost somewhere in the ballpark of what you cited ($2,500).

      Boot times are relative. My Linux machine with everything I don't need removed boots faster than the 486 with DOS, Desqview, and a fairly dirty config.sys and autoexec.bat. :) You can make anything boot slow if you try hard enough.

    • by vrt3 ( 62368 )

      1024x768 then (IIRC), 1920x1280 now (from 0.78 megapixels to 2.46 megapixels, not even one order of magnitude!)

    • If you are talking about Windows 95, it booted fast and often! :-)

  • by wvmarle ( 1070040 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:10AM (#39144707)

    I noted the article still thinks a CD/DVD/BluRay player is normal. Aren't they obsolete already?

    It's been five years or more since I had a working DVD player in any of my PCs. Except my iBook which has one built in, and that's also some six years old now, and the DVD player in it has barely been used in that time.

    I used to burn CDs with photos and so - still have some, from many years ago, and really should copy them to a USB stick or so before I really don't have a CD drive any more. I used to burn CDs for Linux installation; now that's done from USB stick. I used to burn CDs as archive as my hard disk got full. Modern hard disks are so big, they don't fill up. And if they do, the capacity of a CD-R or even DVD-R doesn't do much to solve that problem. A bigger hard disk is the only reasonable solution.

    And monitor - well I still use 15". It's good enough, and my desk isn't that big. Those also didn't come down in price as drastically as the other components did.

    What I also noticed is that in the US just 85% of adults have a mobile phone, and 90% live in a household with at least one mobile phone. I think that's a really low number. Where I live there's close to a 200% (yes, that's two phones per person, not only per adult - many people have indeed multiple mobile numbers, and many are used by regular visitors) penetration of mobile phones.

    • I use one on a daily basis. Sure some people have phased them out or use them little, but I would never own a machine without one form of optical media.

  • by monzie ( 729782 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @02:22AM (#39144773) Homepage
    I was 14 years old in 1994
    I had a Macintosh LC 475 [everymac.com] back then. It had a 25 Mhz Motorola 68040 CPU [wikipedia.org] and had come pre-installed with Microsoft Virtual PC for the Mac [microsoft.com] which emulated x86 architecture on the Motorola 68040.
    A magazine called PCQuest [ciol.com] ( It was a geek-focussed magazine then; it's a CIO-focussed magazine now ) came out with Slackware on the CD. ( I cannot remember the version)
    I managed to installed Linux as a VM on my Mac 18 years ago using this. [slashdot.org] ( That's a link to my blog post with more details as to how I did it )
    Of course I did not know what Virtualization was. I did not have an internet connection even!
    It took me a year to get X running - just by reading the man pages and configuring modelines and hsync and vsync values
    My proudest moment was when I wrote my own man page using nroff ( IIRC ) and it showed me bold fonts in a terminal. I did not know even know what a terminal was, except that Jeff Goldblum destroyed the Aliens by uploading a computer virus through it ( Movie: Independence Day ) I am nostalgic
  • 33 mhz would have been low end back then, 66 mhz or 120 probably more likely in a new computer (in Late 1995 I got a pretty beefy 150mhz Pentium). While 4ghz is probably very high end by today's standard (people tend to get more cores rather than more hz). Soundcard, not many people get a high end soundcard like the one listed, the real equivalent to the SB 16 is probably the onboard sound cards. A highend Adlib soundcanvas or Roland could probably stand up to today's highend cards in terms of sound qualit
  • When i think back to 1995 i expected a machine/os, which has/uses *lots of cores and bandwidth to ram*, where everything is reasonably multi threaded and where programs can exchange data in a reasonable, transparent way.

    Nothing came true. Application still freeze when waiting for sth, a massive CPU still has to be running to do simple background operations, we still exclude Bitmaps is text documents because nothing else works, and my CPU is still waiting for the RAM, even longer than before.

    Web applications

  • I was probably still using a 386 SX/16 with 4mb of RAM. Installed OS/2 on it and it actually worked reasonably well. After a while I installed Linux on it. Early slakware. That also worked reasonably well except it didn't have enough graphics prowess to actually run X11 in VGA. I just used terminal mode. It was fine. Ran slirp for PPP off Florida's gate.net and did a lot of MUDDing.

    I eventually upgraded from that system to a dual 486/66 with 16 MB of RAM and an S3 video card. That thing was a beast. Ran X

  • I love the column on video, where the 1995 columns says "24-bit", and the 2012 column...oh wait, we're still 24-bit. Everything else has advanced by several orders of magnitude, but we're still limited to just 8 bits per color channel (RGB = 24 bits in total) going out over the DVI cable (and the display itself). Sure, now you can drop a few G's on a 10-bit (30 total) monitor (if your software can even make use of it), but it's kind of sad that progress has been so slow.

    • by Lehk228 ( 705449 )
      More than 8 bits per channel is simply not important for output, internal memory support for HDR matters but there just isn't a need for higher color, especially since things like color tempurature of the display mean no image looks the same unless on a fully calibrated system
    • I love the column on video, where the 1995 columns says "24-bit", and the 2012 column...oh wait, we're still 24-bit. Everything else has advanced by several orders of magnitude, but we're still limited to just 8 bits per color channel (RGB = 24 bits in total) going out over the DVI cable (and the display itself). Sure, now you can drop a few G's on a 10-bit (30 total) monitor (if your software can even make use of it), but it's kind of sad that progress has been so slow.

      What's worse, human vision is still limited to about 10 million nuances and can't even take advantage of 24 bits. Time for an upgrade!

    • You could just pretend it's 128 bit instead. Under normal conditions your eyes can't tell the difference.

    • Your eye can't resolve much more than that. You might as well ask why we can't have sound chips that can output 100Khz. Well what would be the point unless you're writing a game for bats?

  • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @03:00AM (#39144885)
    Of course computers have N times the speed and memory. Regarding computer science concepts and algorithms, where is the real progress in that field? Most of the concepts used today were designed before 1995 - and a lot of them even before the modern computers ever existed.
    CPU and memory is a confortable progress - but is not a revolution. Still to come.
  • might as well have another one of these threads, it's been a few years since the last one I think...

    Acorn Atom circa 1980 ish. 12KB of RAM with the expansion pack. No storage at all (you could link to a tape recorder to very slowly store and recall data). No display (it plugged via a PAL lead into a TV). BASIC language and operating system fitted into a 2K ROM module if I remember correctly. I still have it on my shelf but haven't been able to plug it into a power source or TV for years.

  • Comparing one of today's desktop boxes with a mainframe from way back, IBM 360

    30 M disk packs a room filling 1 M core memory rack and - 8" floppies

    Performance data compare would be interesting.

  • What about games? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday February 24, 2012 @03:33AM (#39145013)

    What surprises me is that most of the older games from around this era have yet to be rivalled even today. Nevermind the fact that games back then didn't have EULAs, DRM restrictions, or DLC. You got what you paid for, and that came in a full sized box adorned with awesome artwork- and on the inside, you got a CD in a jewel case and a manual as thick as your thumb.

    We had gems like Descent, Descent II, Command and Conquer, Warcraft 1, Warcraft 2, Tyrian, Raptor: Call of the Shadows, Duke Nukem 3D, Crusader: No Remorse and Crusader: No Regret, Mass Destruction, Wipeout (the original Psygnosis game was a MS-DOS release- it ran straight off the CD and had an absolutely awesome soundtrack from Cold Storage), Star Wars: Dark Forces, X-Com, SimCity 2000, etc.

    Just after that era we got gems like C&C: Red Alert, Total Annihilation, and Starcraft.

    Not a single game had any kind of grinding wankery in the form of "achievements" or "trophies". You bought a game, you got 10 to 20 hours of entertainment in a box. It was that simple.

    Today, you're lucky if: A) $69.99 gets you something even remotely worth playing (since demos and shareware are long forgotten), and B) maybe 2 hours of actual entertainment wrapped in 20 hours of fucking around in a giant sandbox to boost some stupid number so you can proceed with the main quests/missions. Oh, and you don't actually "own" games anymore. You're licensing them, they only work 5 times (if you're lucky), and the disks often come in paper envelopes publishers have gotten so goddam cheap.

    But hey, EA's releasing the next big version of MW or CoD! So whoopie! Nevermind the fact that they've driven Westwood Studios and Origin into the ground, and now they've done the same to Maxis and have focused their attention on Bioware. CRANK THAT FRANCHISE WHORING FACTORY TO FULL THROTTLE BOYS, WE HAVE CONSUMERS TO EXPLOIT!

    -AC

    • Yeah I remember Frontier: Elite 2 came with a manual, star chart poster and a booklet of short stories set in the Elite universe. Good times.

  • by bokmann ( 323771 ) on Friday February 24, 2012 @10:01AM (#39147435) Homepage

    When I started, I had 4K and saved programs I typed to cassette tape! The differences between then and 1995 are orders of magnitude greater than 1995 to now.

    I clearly recall the last three jaw-dropping moments:

    circa 2001, Seeing AMD beat intel to the market with a 1GHz processor
    circa 1997, being able to download a music file in less time than it took to play.
    circa 1991, seeing a postage-stamp video of the moon launch on Quicktime from the Apple Developer CD they distributed monthly.

    Other than that, its all more of the same, or far enough back in history as to be a blur.

    -db

  • I worked for the Computer Graphics lab at the University of British Columbia in 1992, and we had one machine we called Brutus. It had about 4 boards of memory (each larger than a desktop morherboard) in it for a total of 380Megabytes of ram. When I mentioned that I worked with a machine with 380Meg of memory, most people would go "ooooh, that's a really big hard drive!".
    Nevermind..

    (( The PC with 4Meg of ram, running OS/2 was considered a toy even though it was more than most normal people had on their desktop. ))

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