Receipt from my family’s first PC 28 years ago.

    by Fun2Forget

    43 Comments

    1. That was a fuck ton of money in 1996.

      My dad bought our first PC in 1986. It was an IBM. I remember it being a DOS based system. We had to “park the heads” before we turned the computer off. Internet was not a thing. He also bought Microsoft Word which came in a folder of floppy discs.

      Dad also bought 13k of Microsoft stock in 1987. LOL.

    2. Out of all that the Altec Lansing speakers hit me right in the nostalgia. Had ACS45.1 as my first setup

    3. Our family’s first computer (and only my parents bought us ) was a 486 2500$ can
      My parents had to borrow the money from my older brother. Wild times

    4. fancy pants over here with a 17″ monitor. I think I had either a 12 or 15″ monitor in the mid 90’s

    5. The Pentium 90 computer cost my dad $3000, his entire TV fund he’d been saving. A few months later, I think the P 100(?) came out and our computer was already outdated. 

    6. My parents got a complete dog shit, base model, garbage Compaq PC in the year 2000, with a monitor and cheap speakers. It was $1200, which is $2162.55 in today’s money. In 2024, $1200 alone gets you a very nice office PC setup, and $2162 gets you an upper mid-tier gaming PC, a nice IPS monitor and a good set of speakers.

    7. Living_Lie_8773 on

      Had a dell dimension 2400 tower that came with monitor speakers and mouse and keyboard paid almost same price for it

    8. 1.6GB? I was juggling two 250MB drives on a hand me down PC at around that time. (My first new PC for when I went off to uni had 10GB.)

    9. AnotherDrunkCanadian on

      Our first family computer was an ‘8088’ which cost about 8000 Canadian in 1986 or so. Completely DOS based, everything came with the enormous floppy disks. Fun times

    10. i got a gateway around the same time with a 2gb hard drive. i couldn’t tell you how many people were convinced i’d be set life with that much storage. i went away to college the next year and filled it right up with mp3’s.

    11. OkAbbreviations3078 on

      Remember my parents buying a Tandy 1000 back in the late 80s and playing space quest 2.

      “Insert disk 2”
      “Insert disk 3”

      Good times.

    12. Iamstillhere44 on

      In 1995, I opened a personal loan from my credit union when I was 20 to buy my first computer for $2,200.  That was a lot of money back then.

    13. brianthesmith on

      That seems about right, paid $3000ish in 1998 for a pentium 2 monitor and printer from Best Buy

    14. Next-Project-1450 on

      Takes me back seeing that.

      My first computers were Ataris in the 80s, but when I made the leap to PC in the early 90s my first was a P100 system. Looking at the spec of that now, along with the price, makes me smile and wince at the same time.

      In the UK, we had a budget computer builder called Tiny Computers. They were quite big at the time and had high street stores all over. It was they who inadvertently got me into building my own.

      One time, my then Tiny Pentium – and I think it was a P150 by then – stopped working. No power at all. So I opened it and thought ‘Jeez, there’s not much in here’. I can’t remember what logic I used now, but I guessed the PSU was the culprit (other people had complained about them). I contacted Tiny who were happy to sell me a replacement PSU, but the price was very high.

      When I measured up, I realised Tiny was using cheap miniature/cut down Chinese import PSUs. I found that I could buy them myself for somewhat less, but with import costs – but still for a lot more than standard ATX PSUs in all the magazines back then. Of course, at the time, I had no idea what to do with them, but I was into electronics, and I thought ‘how hard could it be?’ Then I realised that the size had nothing to do with the connectors (this was the learning curve at the time, you understand).

      Tiny cases were standard tower units, and the compartment for the PSU would take a standard ATX with ease. So I bought one, fitted it (easily), and it fixed my issue straight away. Mind you, Tiny cases were also potential death traps, because they cut costs on those, too, and every metal edge was like a razor blade – I cut myself brushing against one several times.

      I was smug for a year or two, but then I wanted to upgrade. This time, I went for a complete build of my own.

      And I’ve been doing it ever since.

    15. Fuck i thought 28 as like something in the mid 80s not 1996 ![gif](emote|free_emotes_pack|facepalm)

    16. DAMN, you were one of those rich guys with the 28.8 and the altec lansing sub. Jealous.

    17. I remember how fast my friend’s dad’s 486 DX2/66 was compared to our 386 SX it was mindblowing. The pentium here was an equal jump over the 486… and the P120 was not an early pentium…

    18. My first PC was about the same price (with a 14″ monitor). I think it had 8MB RAM and a 200MB hard drive.

    19. LivingGhost371 on

      Back in the day computers were improving so fast you typicall got a new one every other year too.

    20. I took out a loan for 2k in 1997 to buy a dell. I was fresh out of college and need something

    21. No-Addendum-4501 on

      If you include inflation, and consider processing power and memory (or maybe just sheer silicon), it seems like Moore’s Law is probably close to applying.

    22. Is that 260 for labour? An experienced tech could assemble that in an hour, tops.

      Wow!

    23. Crazy_Screwdriver on

      One hell of a beast for the time, though higher end parts would add another grand do that !

    Leave A Reply