90s & Y2k computer games
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from Malaysia

seen from Spain

seen from Australia

seen from Spain
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Japan

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Bosnia & Herzegovina
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from Argentina
90s & Y2k computer games
🖍️ Clay - Disney Playhouse (2002-2007)
ibm thinkpad x61t (2007), a tablet laptop
Goodnight!!!
Happy Birthday, @xerothecrt
I got a working computer from the thrift store for $6.25 USD (including tax)
specs for nerds:
Intel Core 2 Duo E6750 @ 2.66GHz
1 GB DDR2-800 SDRAM Non-ECC RAM
256 GB HDD
Windows 7 Professional (according to the sticker on the side, it originally has Windows XP Professional)
CD/DVD drive
Intel DG33FB motherboard (I found a manual for it on the CIA website)
things that don't work:
CD/DVD drive (wasn't plugged in, the sata cable going to it was plugged into another sata port on the motherboard) (when trying to open the tray, makes two clunks then gives up)
Audio (doesn't detect any speakers)
Network (no WiFi antenna, my USB TP-Link refuses to work, I haven't any ethernet cables)
CMOS battery (thinks it's currently 2006)
The Cobalt Qube was a computer server appliance product line, meant to be web servers, developed by Cobalt Networks, Inc. (later purchased by Sun Microsystems) from 1998 to 2002 featuring a modified Red Hat Linux operating system and a proprietary GUI for server management. The original Qube systems were equipped with RM5230 or RM5231 microprocessors but later models used AMD K6-2 chips. NetBSD operating system has been ported to both the Cobalt Qube and RaQ.
The Qube 2700 was the first product released by Cobalt Networks in 1998.[2] Mark Orr, one of the Cobalt Networks' CEOs, came up with the cobalt color. The green LED in the front was Bill Scott's idea. The 2700 was not a development version number but came from the atomic number of cobalt, 27. The Qube 2700 used the RM5230 microprocessor.
The next product was called the Qube 2800 before being sold. But, released in 2000, was eventually called the Qube 2, leaving the 2800 to designate the system type. The Qube 2 used the RM5231 microprocessor.
Under an OEM arrangement, the Qube 2 units were also produced by Gateway in the form of the Gateway Micro Server. The casing featured on these units was black instead of cobalt blue.
The Qube 3, released in 2002, used an AMD K6-2 CPU at either 300 MHz or 450 MHz and was the last product in the Qube line.
A fourth Qube model was in development but was never released.[3] However, several models were released in the data center-friendly Cobalt RaQ product line after the Cobalt Qube was discontinued.
Cobalt Qube - Wikipedia
Remember Dollz Mania & Dollz palace?