<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?><transcript><text start="0.42" dur="5.2">Greetings, LGR here, with a... a bit of an update 
to a previous video that I did.</text><text start="5.62" dur="5.32">You may remember a while back I got this huge lot of IBM PS2 computers for 300 bucks,</text><text start="10.94" dur="4.3">and see the old video if you&amp;#39;d like some more details there, there was a bunch of great stuff in there,</text><text start="15.24" dur="3.88">but included was, this monster here.</text><text start="19.28" dur="7.18">This is a model 60 IBM PS2 computer, it was, it was so much money back in the day, and,</text><text start="26.46" dur="6.44">you know, it wasn&amp;#39;t exactly meant for home consumer type of people, I mean...</text><text start="32.9" dur="2.96">Servers and stuff like that was more of its usage.</text><text start="35.86" dur="5.58">Huge, huge steel case here, this carrying handle, just to help it move around.</text><text start="41.44" dur="6.3">And, ah, yeah it&amp;#39;s a 286-machine an we&amp;#39;ll be taking a look at some of the insides and what I did to fix it up here</text><text start="47.74" dur="6.88">in a little bit. But, yes, let&amp;#39;s go ahead and take a look at it turning on, first let me get the monitor...</text><text start="55.26" dur="0.8">Alright...</text><text start="56.36" dur="1.48">And here we go.</text><text start="71.28" dur="7.66">Very nice, smooth sounding startup there, and yes it does have the lovely model M keyboard with it.</text><text start="78.94" dur="5.84">It came with a bunch of model M&amp;#39;s in that lot but this is the one I&amp;#39;m using right now, the 1990 model.</text><text start="85.18" dur="3.12">And I was able to source an original PS2 mouse.</text><text start="88.76" dur="2.72">I just, I just really like these designs.</text><text start="91.92" dur="5.96">It&amp;#39;s just a cool design for a mouse, I think. And it works well with this machine because it&amp;#39;s meant for it.</text><text start="98.4" dur="6.6">So yes, I didn&amp;#39;t exactly have to do a whole lot with it as far as far as putting anything on here,</text><text start="105" dur="9.78">it still had IBM PC DOS 3.3. I just cleaned it up a little bit and put some games and junk on here that I enjoy.</text><text start="115.64" dur="3.92">So, as you might be able to guess from the little sticker on the front that says,</text><text start="119.56" dur="1.94">&amp;quot;PLEASE DO NOT TURN THIS MACHINE OFF!&amp;quot;</text><text start="121.5" dur="5.96">It was used as some kind of a server at one point, and according to the software that was left on the hardrive,</text><text start="127.46" dur="5.7">it looks like it was also used as a 
CNC machine controller.</text><text start="133.44" dur="6.36">And some of the hardware that it also came with as far as like, extra, there was another card that went in here,</text><text start="139.8" dur="1.36">I took that thing out</text><text start="141.16" dur="6.16">It has this CNC to PC interface, so that you can control the motors and all sorts of cool things</text><text start="147.32" dur="5.74">But there wasn&amp;#39;t really anything else on this, so I just installed a bunch of things that I happen to enjoy.</text><text start="153.12" dur="5.82">And, let&amp;#39;s go to one of my favorites here.
Gotta try out some Crystal Caves,</text><text start="158.94" dur="3.96">First game I ever played, and it plays very well on a 286.</text><text start="163.14" dur="3.28">So, of course I had to install it and give it a shot.</text><text start="166.64" dur="4.08">Let&amp;#39;s just get past the little cutscene thingy, here, 
once it loads.</text><text start="171.22" dur="3.56">Yeah, I know. Milo, you&amp;#39;re cool.</text><text start="176.88" dur="7.12">So as fas as the performance of it, it does take a little while to load some things. But these are older games</text><text start="184" dur="4.38">and it&amp;#39;s not like it&amp;#39;s going to take too long to
load anyway, so it doesn&amp;#39;t matter.</text><text start="190.78" dur="7.18">And as you can see it pretty much runs full speed, you could have a slightly smoother framerate</text><text start="198.14" dur="4.18">on a faster computer, but, it&amp;#39;s more than playable.</text><text start="202.32" dur="4.4">Commander Keen in Goodbye Galaxy is 
also surprisingly playable.</text><text start="206.72" dur="5.18">I mean, I know this it&amp;#39;s pretty much made to run on a 286, so it&amp;#39;s not terribly surprising, but,</text><text start="212.1" dur="4.64">The fact that it runs as well as it does
is interesting to me.</text><text start="216.74" dur="3.32">And it does take, of course, a little bit to load here. 
Look at this...</text><text start="221.86" dur="4.62">C&amp;#39;mon! Hnnng! Thumbs up Keen! 
Thumbs up, you can do it!</text><text start="226.92" dur="7.02">You can do it! There ya go!
But yeah, the actual gameplay, 
I mean, it&amp;#39;s great as usual.</text><text start="237.68" dur="4.76">Another thing I quite enjoy on this is the actual floppy drive itself, so...</text><text start="244.18" dur="5.18">It&amp;#39;s very smooth feeling.
Let me actually copy something to the disk here.</text><text start="254.5" dur="5.16">You can&amp;#39;t hear it, can you?
There&amp;#39;s hardly anything going on there and it&amp;#39;s</text><text start="259.66" dur="6.86">actually copying stuff. There&amp;#39;s just none of that ...
[fake vocal clunky machine sounds]
... going on, it&amp;#39;s the quietest 3 and a half inch drive</text><text start="266.52" dur="6.3">I think that I have ever heard, and it seems just as efficient, if not more so, than any other 1.44 meg drive</text><text start="272.82" dur="2.48">that I have, it&amp;#39;s really impressive.</text><text start="275.58" dur="3.4">But of course, I have to let you hear this thing turn off.</text><text start="284.9" dur="3.84">Man, that hard drive spinning down is an event unto itself.</text><text start="288.74" dur="3.84">And I&amp;#39;m pretty sure the room is now lighter now that this is not drawing power!</text><text start="292.58" dur="4.64">We got brighter lights going on in here.
Anyway, let&amp;#39;s go ahead and look inside!</text><text start="297.22" dur="4.54">Now to actually get this thing apart is a little bit of an ordeal. Not to bad though.</text><text start="301.9" dur="3.16">I keep a little screwdriver here on my keychain.</text><text start="305.1" dur="6.52">So you basically just unscrew your little things here which I&amp;#39;ve already loosened up a little bit earlier.</text><text start="312.84" dur="2.9">And, once that&amp;#39;s done...</text><text start="315.74" dur="3.62">I&amp;#39;m assuming this is unlocked up here, which thankfully, it was.</text><text start="319.72" dur="8.88">You lift this entire assembly off, and here is the inside of the beast. Hehehe this is comedically huge.</text><text start="328.6" dur="5.08">I love this, I mean you could tell this was used as a server back in the day, there are so many expansions.</text><text start="333.68" dur="5.64">Just to give you an idea of scale, this is a 3.5 inch floppy disc and, I mean, it&amp;#39;s huge.</text><text start="339.32" dur="8.22">Even just the hardrive itself is positively massive, 
I mean this, it&amp;#39;s a 44 megabyte MFM drive,</text><text start="347.66" dur="6.08">a wonderful IBM original drive here. I have another one just in case this one craps out, but...</text><text start="355.04" dur="2.4">It&amp;#39;s, this is a monster machine here.</text><text start="358.36" dur="2.02">And check out this power supply.</text><text start="360.38" dur="4.54">You got all this up here, and then you have this sort of modular thing going on.</text><text start="364.92" dur="4.22">´Cause this here plugs into the hardrive, 
and then of course that just goes straight into the</text><text start="369.14" dur="4.24">motherboard right there. That&amp;#39;s cool. 
This is probably the oldest machine I have</text><text start="373.38" dur="2.7">that has any sort of modular 
power supply design like that.</text><text start="376.08" dur="7.44">See down here, we&amp;#39;ve got some memory sticks, for the RAM here, from Texas Instruments, interestingly.</text><text start="385.6" dur="4.28">A spot for another hardrive.
I do like these mounting things here, look at this,</text><text start="389.88" dur="9.16">It&amp;#39;s like a piping system, and you just, you just screw that in to mount the hard drive in place here.</text><text start="399.04" dur="2.3">So we can actually take two of these giant things.</text><text start="401.62" dur="7">Lot&amp;#39;s of expansion ports here too, and these actually are not PCI, they are IBM´s micro-channel architecture,</text><text start="408.62" dur="3.02">that I will have to do a video on sometime.</text><text start="411.64" dur="3.54">Only one right now is filled, 
and that is for the hard disk controller.</text><text start="415.18" dur="5.5">The floppy disk controller is actually integrated into the motherboard. As is the video card,</text><text start="420.68" dur="6.26">There are some other basic functions, a pretty far cry from earlier IBM machines.</text><text start="426.94" dur="5.38">Where you had a lot of cards for everything.
So you got your PS2 ports, serial, parallel, VGA right there.</text><text start="432.94" dur="4.8">All ready to go.
I did have to actually replace the floppy disk drive.</text><text start="437.74" dur="2.08">The one that it came with was dead.</text><text start="439.82" dur="7.38">This is 1.44 Meg, and you can put 2.88,
like some of my other PS2 machines do have those,</text><text start="447.2" dur="5.64">but I stuck with the 1.44 for this one for now.
I might upgrade some time later.</text><text start="453.72" dur="4.96">And of course down here, we do have, 
very important, if I can get it to focus,</text><text start="459.22" dur="7.6">the 286, 10 MHz CPU, as well as the 287 math coprocessor.</text><text start="467.5" dur="7.8">And this is kinda cool, you have this little bit right here, that connects over to the battery and the PC speaker,</text><text start="475.88" dur="3.74">integrated into the same unit.
And yes, this is a modern battery.</text><text start="479.86" dur="7.1">The one, that I had in here when I first got it, of course was dead, and the CMOS was erased as a result, but,</text><text start="487.32" dur="7.44">I&amp;#39;ve actually been able to take it to &amp;quot;Batteries and Bulbs&amp;quot;
or whatever, ya know, you&amp;#39;ve got batteries kind of store.</text><text start="494.76" dur="2.14">&amp;quot;Batteries Plus&amp;quot;.
I don&amp;#39;t remember what it&amp;#39;s called.</text><text start="496.9" dur="7.84">They have those batteries in stock still, because these are actually still used in a lot of cordless phones.</text><text start="504.74" dur="2.16">Like home telephones, so...</text><text start="507.28" dur="3.04">It still worked just fine in here.</text><text start="510.68" dur="3.92">Well that&amp;#39;s it for the IBM PS2 model 60 for now,</text><text start="514.6" dur="5.62">I&amp;#39;m sure I&amp;#39;ll revisit it at some point, whenever I clean up the outside a little bit more, and maybe put together</text><text start="520.22" dur="4.86">a more professional style of a scripted video on it.</text><text start="525.08" dur="4.08">And the other PS2 machines,
as I get them up and running fully.</text><text start="529.16" dur="6.42">Most of them are working, it&amp;#39;s just things like floppy drives and hard disks and RAM and batteries and,</text><text start="535.58" dur="4.36">ya know, everything that goes wrong in a computer that&amp;#39;s approaching 30 years old.</text><text start="540.24" dur="2.38">So yes.
Thank you very much for watching.</text></transcript>