m0nk3ys1ms
Active Member
I ran XP smoothly on my old system, Celeron 333Mhz, 384MB Ram, 128MB MX4000.
jp198780 said:i have 2000 on a couple pc's in my house, in the sig.
Ya 2k isn't that bad, how much would it be for a copy of like 98 se?AMD said:Win 2k isnt that bad,Actualy i prefer it than xp
You can check pricegrabber on that one, should be around $30-$40 for a sealed copy.bball4life said:Ya 2k isn't that bad, how much would it be for a copy of like 98 se?
Well there goes that idea, on price grabber its anywhere from $40 from a place I have never heard of to $140.SC7 said:You can check pricegrabber on that one, should be around $30-$40 for a sealed copy.
haha, seriously. Well I think I am just gonna stick with windows 95, gotta go get myself a cheapo keyboard and mouse for it still and figure out a display for it. The only thing good about it is it has some random decent games on it, like sonic . That is probably all the use it will get.SC7 said:Hmm, oh well. Just for the hell of it, who today would buy this.
bball4life said:Ya 2k isn't that bad, how much would it be for a copy of like 98 se?
IDK why, on some of them, Xp would slow it down. 2K is like Xp without the eye candy.jp198780 said:4 real? lol, damnn, i would deffinately have XP on all my pc's, if i could....
Really windows 2000 isn't that bad, its a lot better the ME at least. Its just more outdated thats why it doesn't seem as good.SC7 said:IDK why, on some of them, Xp would slow it down. 2K is like Xp without the eye candy.
bball4life said:Really windows 2000 isn't that bad, its a lot better the ME at least. Its just more outdated thats why it doesn't seem as good.
That presentation technology is included in Vista, IIRC.PC eye said:2000 Pro and XP Pro as well still need media capacity for presentations. Rather then being included in the default package the appropiate softwares are added later depending on the type of presentation like ad agency, sales dept. for a manufacturer, services industry, etc. while being initially geared for network rather then stand alone systems. Many still favor running the Pro editions of either 2000 or XP. Vista will see two versions for home namely the basic and premium editions while the other three are more business and network orientated according to the descriptions.
Ah, so the standard home and pro versions will technically no longer exist. So I am guessing the deluxe version is taking over for pro for home computers and stuff, while the pro will be mainly business?PC eye said:2000 Pro and XP Pro as well still need media capacity for presentations. Rather then being included in the default package the appropiate softwares are added later depending on the type of presentation like ad agency, sales dept. for a manufacturer, services industry, etc. while being initially geared for network rather then stand alone systems. Many still favor running the Pro editions of either 2000 or XP. Vista will see two versions for home namely the basic and premium editions while the other three are more business and network orientated according to the descriptions.