Doonesbury by Garry Trudeau for January 25, 2021

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    BE THIS GUY  over 3 years ago

    Windows 95 — I can hear the dial-up modem connecting.

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    Renatus Profuturus Frigeridus Premium Member over 3 years ago

    But they are hacking it ?

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    sirbadger  over 3 years ago

    What kind of chip do you have in that — A Dorito?

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    RichardHunter  over 3 years ago

    Wow, suddenly these flashbacks seem like a 100 years ago!

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    Anters55  over 3 years ago

    But it beat the pants off of Win 3.1!

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    dadoctah  over 3 years ago

    Remembering that I upgraded my last desktop computer from Win 95 to Win Me to Win XP before the hard drive finally died. (Wouldn’t have even needed to take it to XP except I had too many peripherals plugged into it and ran out of IRQs.)

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    donwalter  over 3 years ago

    Is he trying to do this on a 286?

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    JohnTheFoole  over 3 years ago

    Ah! Back in the days when hard drives were measured in megabytes!

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    arolarson Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Gadzooks….it’s a nightmare ramble down memory lane!

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    Alabama Al  over 3 years ago

    My smart phone today probably has 100 times more RAM than that 1996 PC shown. And the PC was undoubtedly top of the line for it’s day.

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    RonaldByrd  over 3 years ago

    Anyone have any idea if this was the first appearance of Hank?

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    jvo  over 3 years ago

    Ahh, the days before there was a Terabyte on your phone. ;)

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    Geophyzz  over 3 years ago

    This brings back memories of rejoicing, the day our massive mainframe, in a refrigerated room with the tape drives, got an upgrade to 300 MEGABYTES!

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    Yontrop  over 3 years ago

    ‘95 was the first Windows that was worth the trouble. But at that time, HD prices were going down so fast that it made more sense to buy a new one instead of “clearing memory” to make room for it. Double the RAM would have been a good idea too. If there wasn’t room in the box for another HD or space to upgrade the RAM, new computers weren’t that expensive either.

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    Lawrence.S  over 3 years ago

    As computer memory expands the bloat begins on OS and software – adding bells and whistles no one needs (but the developer has to add new features, even if they’re unwanted) to justify calling something that doesn’t work as well as the previous version an ‘upgrade’. I’d like security and stability to be the highest priorities.

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    wrd2255  over 3 years ago

    Hey, but Bill got from the Stones the best theme music money can buy.

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    jpnoon  over 3 years ago

    Last year, Microsoft made $29 billion in commissions on their browsers’ Notification Downloads.

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    dwdl21  over 3 years ago

    My first copy of 95 was on 12 3.5 disks…lol

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    Joseph Shelby Premium Member over 3 years ago

    “You Make a Grown Man Cry…”(the OTHER lyric from the Windows 95 launch song)

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    bbenoit  over 3 years ago

    Remember how excited we all were waiting for the new 386 processer, as we stared at our green Wang 9" dot matrix screens and thought of clever ways to write filenames using only eight characters in DOS?

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    RobinHood  over 3 years ago

    I haven’t understood any windows 3.1

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    Mark Hanson  over 3 years ago

    My first computer had a 386 chip, and a 20 MB hard drive. No idea how much memory, other than “not much.” Offhand, I’d love to see how it would have scored in Cinebench R15.

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    vaughnrl2003 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    I remember having to push in about 20 floppy disks, one at a time, to get the OS loaded. I may still have them around somewhere.

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    Weakstream   over 3 years ago
    Im still running 7
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    kauri44  over 3 years ago

    It makes a grown man cry…

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    Darryl Heine  over 3 years ago

    Yesterday we had a late Summer 1974 daily Doonesbury strip on a Sunday though daily reruns are in 1995.

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    RonaldByrd  over 3 years ago

    I belatedly notice that Hank’s glasses are opaque, preventing us from seeing his eyes, implying that like Zeke, Jeff, and others, he too is a morally ambiguous character. I guess we’ll see.

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    Will_Scarlet  over 3 years ago

    “I am now telling the computer EXACTLY what it can do with a lifetime supply of chocolate!!!”

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    mourdac Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Win 95 was so different from loading Win 3.1, which was actually just a graphical shell over a DOS backend. I still remember the good old days of trying to free up memory under DOS to run games, deleting programs, moving things to HIMEM, etc.

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    PoodleGroomer  over 3 years ago

    Windows 95 died after many attempts to shoehorn one more feature into it. It looked like that pickup truck with 50 wooden pallets tied up in the back. What we are seeing now is NT 4.0 as it evolved into Windows 2000. MS had to keep working up to XP to pry out all of the old DOS and Windows code.

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    bwalk7217 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Actually, Windows 95 was a pretty good operating environment. Windows ME sucked so bad, I took it off and downgraded it back to ’98. The jump to Vista was an experience, to say the least, XP would run on 500MB of RAM, Vista wanted 2GB or you needed to be a REALE patient waiting for it to boot, as in turn it on, go to the bathroom, get a cup of coffee, eat a doughnut, go outside for a breath of fresh air, come back inside and it might be up by then.

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    txmystic  over 3 years ago

    Always was, and still is, an ill-secured bastardization of MacOS.

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    delennwen  over 3 years ago

    “Reboot” looks like “reboob”.

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    MCProfessor  over 3 years ago

    You ain’t seen nothin’ yet!

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    ferddo  over 3 years ago

    I remember that back when we began upgrading to Windows 95, our McAfee antivirus software blocked it – gave us a message that it had detected Windows 95 as malware… we couldn’t dispute it…

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    Chris H  over 3 years ago

    My youngest was born in 1994. While taking a graduate class in child development the kid asked me for videos of themself as a toddler/preschooler. Later I got this comment: “Wow, mom, it was cool seeing myself with all of that vintage computer stuff!”

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    RonaldByrd  over 3 years ago

    This is why the Star Trek franchise invented the word “kiloquad” for 24th century computer capabilities. No one in the real world knows how much a “kiloquad” is so no one can ever say that real-world technology has surpassed it. :-)

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    Teto85 Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Windows 95 = MacIntosh 86.

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    cabalonrye  over 3 years ago

    The blue screen of death! The blue screen of death!

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    willie_mctell  over 3 years ago

    Drive space is storage, not memory. Except for the swap file or an advanced operating system like OS/400.

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    paullp Premium Member over 3 years ago

    Older versions of Windows (XP? Vista?) used to crash (not my fault), then leave me no choice but to hold in the power button to force a shutdown. On rebooting, Windows would tell me that it didn’t shut down properly, and that I should always shut down the computer properly in order to avoid seeing this message. Talk about being dissed!

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    varnason  over 3 years ago

    Windows 95 was Mac 84. Lol

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    bakana  over 3 years ago

    I can not so fondly remember having ti install a “new Release” of Word.

    The instructions said that the new version occupied 10 megabytes of disk space, but that it needed 30 Megabytes of free disk to Install it.

    Once it was installed, we discovered that, although it could Technically run on that machine, in Practical Terms, it was so slow that typing a 12 word memo would take at least 2 Hours. More if you used more than one font in those 12 words.

    The company ended up buying all new computers so they could install the “Update” to Word that they had just paid for.

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    MichaelMcGinnis1  over 3 years ago

    Microsoft used IBM’s money to design Win95 instead of OS/2, which IBM was left with in totally unworkable shape. Win95 wasn’t really an operating system… just an awkward front-end to DOS. Microsoft has a long and successful history of ripping off partners and bringing garbage to market.

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    Eldrad  over 3 years ago

    Yep. Still funny stuff.

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