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Gosh, I'll bet it's been a year or more since I last did a Retro Junk article. Well, I guess my silence is over, haha. Also, this will hopefully be the first of an article series known as 'Retroputing', where we will take a look at vintage computing. Ever since I was 5 years old, I have always loved computers. It all started sometime around the summer of 1995 when my aunt introduced me to her Gateway 2000 running MS-DOS 6.22 & Windows for Workgroups 3.11.
There was something extremely moving about this thing called a 'computer'. I had heard the term before, but never knew what it was. Was it a machine that would eat me alive? (I seriously did think that). Boy, was I obviously wrong. Windows xp sp2 dengan serial number free. At age 5, I was just shocked at how amazing this computer thing was.
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I couldn't get over how you could just press a button on something called a 'mouse', and the computer reacted to the click. That screenshot, by the way, was taken on my copy of the 'DOSBox' emulator, a multi-platform DOS emulator I have on my Windows 7 computer. My aunt and I played various computer games such as Sierra's Mixed Up Mother Goose, Freddi Fish, and a Microsoft game known as 'SkiFree' where a monster would randomly eat you as you ski down a mountain.
Look at those graphics! World of Warcraft, eat your heart out. In the fall of 1995, shortly after I started kindergarten, my dad decided it was time we needed our own computer. I remember him doing a lot of research on computers, since he had never owned one before. In early December 1995, my dad finally found the perfect computer. It was a little pricey, nearly $3,000, but he really liked this one. I remember that rainy Wednesday he bought it.
I had just turned 6 and I desperately wanted to go with my dad to pick the computer up. But I was bedridden with a stomach bug and was stuck in bed watching reruns of The Flintstones on Cartoon Network.
Okay, maybe it wasn't so bad, haha. That evening, my dad returned home from Best Buy with tons of heavy boxes with the Packard Bell logo plastered all over them. It was a Packard Bell Legend 822CDTW Multimedia Minitower Computer. I vividly remember getting up out of bed every 10 minutes or so to watch my dad set the computer up.
Well the magic moment arrived. The computer was all set up, ready to be turned on at any moment. It looked so new and beautiful.
Little did I know how much of an affect this computer would have on my life. The above picture is from a February 14, 1996 home video of my original Packard Bell. It was now time to finally fire this beast up. Keep in mind that up until this point, the only OS I was familiar with was Windows 3.11 on my aunt's Gateway 2000.
So when the desktop popped up, I was shocked at the completely revamped interface. What's a 'Start Menu' and 'My Computer'? This was also the evening I was introduced to my friend. So this is that new version of Windows known as 'Windows 95' I've been hearing so much about? It took some time for me to get used to the new interface, but pretty soon, I became a Windows 95 fan for life.
To this day, Windows 95 has remained my favorite 'Old School OS'. One of the coolest things about these old Packard Bell computers were the ton of software that came packaged with the computer. A lot of people criticize Packard Bell for doing this, but I think one of the things that made Packard Bell computers a Packard Bell was the unique software that came with them.
Some of the software titles included on this computer were. My Compaq Presario desktop only had 2 software programs on CD-ROM (AOL 9.0 SE Optimized and Microsoft Works & Money 2004). I expand my CD-ROM software library with everGirl, Rockett's New School, American Girls Premiere, Microsoft Office 97 (I couldn't find the CD key for it), Barbie Diaries (made by the same people who did Earthworm Jim), Barbie and the Three Musketeers (also made by the same people as a DVD-ROM game), Princess Fairytale Adventure (DVD-ROM game by Disney Interactive), SI Multimedia Almanac 1994, Microsoft MSB CD-ROM #1, some custom made CD-ROM games, Cluefinders, BSC CD-ROM games, Zoo Tycoon, Battlefield 1942, Sid Meier's Civilization IV, Girl Game Trio and a demo of Bee Movie game. I switched out computers 24/7 until I asked my Mimi to have her old Acer mini laptop (while Acer acquired Packard Bell in 2008, Active Imagination went along with it).
For a few years now, I have been searching everywhere to find out the name of a game I used to play on my old Packard Bell PC. This is the closest I've found!