Old 8-bits are fun. All you need is a television generally and you're ready
to go. Power it up, drop into BASIC, and start doing stuff.
With a PC you need a keyboard, a monitor, a mouse probably, a desktop, some
software, etc. How cumbersome. And uninteresting. And boring.
Maybe not the greatest comparison but that's why I don't come to the
ClassicCmp maillist expecting PC discussions.
Sellam
On Tue, Dec 20, 2022, 11:22 PM Chris via cctalk <cctalk(a)classiccmp.org>
wrote:
   Ok for cbm and atari yes I'm familiar with most
of those. I meant in
 general. And specifically where would you go for server related discussions
 for pII through socket 771? Every classic/vintage forum seems to adhere to
 a classic in it's own right (but perhaps totally valid) definition of
 obsolete hardware and software. Remember before this stuff was classic it
 was overwhelmingly considered to be obsolete junk. Win98/2000/XP has been
 moderately collectible for a while. Don't care what category it falls into.
 Socket 775 stuff is more or less just obsolete junk. There's a grouping
 between and contemporary somewhat with those 2 and that's the early-ish
 server class, which no one may _ever_ care much about, because it's
 comparitively rare (few can relate) and lacks agp, so less then ideal for
 gaming. So where do I go for those discussions?
 As an aside 2000+\- beige boxes have become pretty collectible, and the
 larger server cases like an Inwin A500 has a chassis that slides out. Real
 nifty. It'll take a full size ssi-eeb mobo, and standard atx. If someone
 gets their hands on 1 they'll likely toss the serverboard and replace it
 with something more appropriate for gaming.
 On Wednesday, December 21, 2022, 01:49:24 AM EST, Jim Brain via cctalk <
 cctalk(a)classiccmp.org> wrote:
 On 12/21/2022 12:28 AM, Chris via cctalk wrote:
  I keep hearing allusions to many forums. I think
there are very few. I
 
 don't do FB.
 There are many web forums. Just for CBM, there's lemon 64, vcforum,
 atariage (yes, CBM on atariage), denial, Everything 64, and 
6502.org
 handles a few things. If you can grok German, there's forum64.de
 Mailing lists include cbm-hackers.
 Apple, TI, Atari all have similar. AtariAge handles all of them
 nominally. Retro Hackers also handles multiple.
 Jim