• Tag Archives IBM
  • VideoGames & Computer Entertainment (September 1992)

    Source: VideoGames & Computer Entertainment – September 1992

    VideoGames & Computer Entertainment was my favorite gaming magazine during most of its life. It went through a couple of transitions later on, eventually giving birth to Tips & Tricks but I never really cared for that one. The September 1992 issue of VG&CE includes:

    Features

    • Tokyo Toy Show Report – Some highlights of items shown at this show include a RAM backup card for the Turbo Duo, the Wondermega Genesis/Sega CD combo unit, the Teradrive which is a combo 286-based PC and Sega Genesis, Street Fighter II for the Super NES, Afterburner III for the Mega Drive/Mega CD, Lunar: The Silver Star for the Sega Mega CD, Soldier Blade for the PC Engine, Dodge Ball for the PC Engine, Musashi for the Mega Drive, Snatcher for the PC-Engine CD-ROM, Cosmic Fantasy 3 for the PC-Engine CD-ROM, and lots more.
    • Searching for the Dark World: A Player’s Guide to Zelda III, Part I – The first part of a detailed guide for A Link to the Past.
    • The 1992 Summer Consumer Electronics Show Recap – Highlights of the show include Super Star Wars (Super NES), Street Fighter II (Super NES), Dracula (Atari Lynx), Bart’s Nightmare (Super NES), Shadowrun (Super NES), TTI’s Turbo Duo, Centipede (Game Boy), Betrayal at Krondor (PC), Maximum Overkill (PC), Battletank 2000 (PC), Dark Sun: Shattered Lands (PC), and lots more.
    • Getting Into the Game: An Exclusive Look at Nick Arcade – Nick Arcade was a game show in Nickelodeon that featured virtual reality by putting players inside arcade games.

    Reviews & Previews

    • Video-Game Reviews
      • Dungeon Master – The classic 3D adventure game for the Super NES.
      • Taz-Mania – A platform game for the Genesis featuring the classic Warner Bros. character.
      • Danny Sullivan’s Indy Heat – A racing game for the NES featuring nine courses across the U.S.
      • Jackie Chan’s Action Kung Fu – Side scrolling beat-em-up featuring Jackie Chan before he became a household name.
      • King Salmon – Another fishing game, this one for the Genesis. I don’t like fishing games anyway and this isn’t one of the best.
      • DinoCity – A platform game for the Super NES in which you team up with a dinosaur to defeat some evil Neanderthals.
      • Andro Dunos – A side-scrolling shooter for the Neo Geo.
      • Side Pocket – Classic pool game for the Genesis.
      • WWF Wrestelmania Steel Cage – The last WWF wrestling game for the NES.
      • Ka-Blooey – A puzzle game for the Super NES in which you must set off all the bombs on a level without blowing yourself up.
      • The Terminator – An action adventure game based on the movie of the same name for the Genesis.
      • Adventure Island III – The latest iteration of this platform game for the NES.
      • Splash Lake – A puzzle game for the TurboGrafx-CD that bears more than a passing resemblance to a classic board game called Don’t Break the Ice.
      • King of the Monsters 2 – Fighting game featuring various monsters for the Neo Geo.
    • Gaming on the Go
      • Roger Clemens MVP Baseball – A reasonably fun baseball game for the Game Boy.
      • R.C. Grand Prix – A fun R.C. racing game. I never played this one but have fond memories of R.C. Pro Am on the NES and Re-Volt on the Dreamcast.
      • Tom & Jerry – A platform featuring the famous cartoon duo on the Game Boy.
      • Marble Madness – Conversion of the arcade classic for the Game Gear.
      • Steel Talons – Conversion of the helicopter coin-op game for the Atari Lynx.
    • Seven’s The Charm: A VG&CE Exclusive Preview of Wizardry VII – Eleven years after the original Wizardry was released, the seventh game in this classic RPG series, Crusaders of the Dark Savant, makes its debut.
    • Computer Game Reviews
      • Darkseed – An H.P. Lovecraft/H.R. Geiger inspired adventure game for the PC.
      • Mutant Beach – A puzzle/adventure game for the Macintosh.
      • Pinball Dreams – A pinball game featuring four different tables for the PC and Amiga.
      • Global Effect – A world building sim for the Amiga and PC featuring 14 different scenarios.
      • Aquaventure – An action game that plays like a 3D version of Defender for the Amiga.
      • Crisis in the Kremlin – A strategy game for the PC based on the Tom Clancy book of the same name.
      • Road & Track Presents Grand Prix Unlimited – A Formula One racing sim for the PC.
      • Gateway – A sci-fi game based on the Frederik Pohl book of the same name.
      • Gods – A run and shoot platform game. Think Contra.
      • Hong Kong Mahjong Pro – An actual Mahjong game for the PC, not the tile matching game that is usually associated with that name.
      • Wolfenstein 3-D – The granddaddy of all first person shooters. Welcome Id software to the scene…

    Departments

    • Editor’s Letter – A preview of this issue as well as a little about the upcoming October issue.
    • Reader Mail – Readers write in about game incompatibility with the new version of the Genesis, rumors of a new Super NES pack-in, controllers and Street Fighter 2, Neo Geo coverage, and more.
    • Tip Sheet – Game tips for Terminator 2 (arcade), Mission: Impossible (NES), and The Immortal (Genesis).
    • News Bits – Atari drops price of Lynx software, Galoob wins legal battle to keep making Game Genie, Nintendo and Sega lower 16-bit system prices, Sunsoft to release Road Runner’s Death Valley Rally and Tazmania for the Super NES, TTI lowers hardware prices, and lots more.
    • Easter Egg Hunt – Hidden secrets revealed in Street Fighter II (Super NES), Mike Ditka Power Football (Genesis), Awesome Golf (Lynx), The Guardian Legend (NES), Q*Bert (Game Boy), Sengoku (Neo Geo), MLBPA Sports Talk Baseball (Genesis), It Came From the Desert (TurboGrafx-16), OutRun (Genesis), and Steel Empire (Genesis).
    • Inside Gaming – A look at the near future of multiplayer gaming.
    • Q & A – Questions answered about unlicensed NES carts, software for the Apple IIgs, technical details of the Atari Lynx, the maximum number of Genesis controllers, the ext. port on the Genesis, the future of Sega CD, and more.

    …and more!


  • PC World (July 1989)

    Source: PC World – July 1989

    PC World was one of the most popular PC magazines for many years. Like most other computer print magazines, this one ceased publication quite some time ago. The July 1989 issue includes:

    Previews

    • Pascal Gets Two Object Lessons – Pascal was a popular structured programming language at one point that offered a sort of middle ground between BASIC and C. This article compares Borland’s Turbo Pascal 5.5 with Microsoft’s QuickPascal.

    Reviews

    • Advanced Word Processors – Familiar Faces, New Features – A comparison of several word processors, including DisplayWrite 4 version 2, Microsoft Word 4.0, MultiMate Advantage II 1.0, Somna Word IV 2.0, WordPerfect 5.0, WordStar Professional 5.0, and XyWrite III Plus 3.54. Microsoft Word and WordPerfect come out on top.
    • The Best in Forms Software – A comparison of software specializing in creating forms. Products reviewed include FormFiller 2.0, FormSet 1.0, Horizon 1.1, JetForm 1.01, and Perform 1.0.
    • Data Base Powerhouses Strike a Balance – A comparison of the top four database managers, including DataEase 4.0, dBASE IV 1.0, Paradox 3.0, and R:base for DOS 2.11.
    • Net Gains in Multiuser Accounting – A review and comparison of seven multiuser accounting packages, including Accpac Plus, Great Plains, Harmony, M.A.S. 90, RealWorld, SBT, and Solomon III.
    • Groupware; E-Mail Meets Scheduling – Groupware is a category of software that provided shared LAN software such as LAN e-mail, scheduling, calendars, and other utilities. This is a comparison of five such packages, including The Coordinator II, Higgins, Office Works, WordPerfect Office, and cc:Mail. More advanced packages such as Lotus Notes were on the way.
    • Well-Rounded Drawing – A round-up of the latest drawing tools, including Artline 1.0, Arts & Letters, Corel Draw 1.0, Designer 2.0, and Illustrator 1.0.

    News

    • Top of the News – Microsoft introduces the PS/2 Model P70 portable computer featuring a 20 MHz 386, 4 MB of RAM, microchannel architecture, a 60 MB hard drive and more for $7695. Also introduced by IBM is the PS/2 Model 55 SX desktop; featuring a 386 SX, 2 MB of RAM, a 30 MB hard drive and more for $3895; Microsoft and Borland introduce new versions of their Pascal software; Quarterdeck awarded patent for displaying windows on screen; Integrated Information Technology introduce Intel compatible math coprocessors; and more.
    • Industry Outlook – SQL data base servers coming; Zenith sales increase fueled by laptop success; a look at the upcoming i486 processor; IBM and Intel push multimedia with Digital Video Interactive (DVI); and more.
    • Product Outlook – A look at new and upcoming products, including the Zenith Z-386/25 PC, Solomon III based Profitwise Basic Accounting software, DaynaNet PC and Mac networking solution, Arriba personal information manager, ProCollection and Type Director font software, Mannesmann Tally MT81 and MT905 printers, PrintRite print queue, Laser-Ready templates, Up Your Cash Flow spreadsheet, AutoImport data conversion software, and Network Eye remote control software.
    • Update – Updates on Pizazz Plus and Readability Plus.

    Perspectives

    • Richard Landry – Designing software for small businesses.
    • Letters – Letters from readers about avoiding copy protected software, standards, PS/2 problems, SideKick, the Mitsubishi MP 286L laptop vs. the Zenith SupersPort 286, and more.
    • Another Angle – Retailers vs. manufacturers.

    Features

    • Buyers’ Guide: 38 Tools for Great Writing – A look at various tools that enhance word processors to help the writer. Included is software to help make outlines, reference software (dictionaries, thesaurus, etc.), spell and grammar checkers, group writing tools, file conversion utilities and much more.
    • Second Look: Hard Disk Utilities Revisited – Tools for taking care of you hard drive and diagnosing and fixing issues, including Disk Technical Advanced 3.0, HTest/HFormat 2.0, Mace Gold, Norton Utilities Advanced 4.5, PC Tools Deluxe 5, and SpinRite 1.2.

    Departments

    • In This Issue – An overview of the current issue.
    • The Help Screen – Questions answered about passwords, using a Tandy 1000SX in Germany, DOS 4.01 on an IBM PS/2 Model 60, using hard drives in old PCs, and more.
    • Windows Journal – A look at things missing from Windows.
    • Consumer Watch – Misleading pricing by The New PC Network, complaints about Fast Micro, Toshiba T1200 problems, and more.
    • The Upgrade Path – Upgrading a Compaq Portable with a $1495 386 Motherboard/CQ16 from Hauppauge Computer Works.
    • Star-Dot-Star – A technique for creating arrays larger than 64K in Turbo Pascal 4.0, automatically resetting the date to the last date entered on PCs without a hardware clock, formatting directory output on a printer, and more.
    • Network Q&A – Solving backup problems using IBM’s PC LAN version 1.24 and a network of PS/2s.

    …and more!


  • Digital Archaeology: IBM 300GL

    The IBM Personal Computer 300GL is a model designation that actually covered a pretty wide variety of different models. Machines were built with the 300GL designation with CPUs ranging from Pentium MMX to Pentium IIIs and everything in between. This particular one came with a 300 MHz Celeron (Mendocino). The Mendocino Celerons were essentially Pentium IIs with a small, on die cache. The cache was less than the Pentium IIIs of the time (128K vs. 256K) but it ran at full clock speed instead of half speed. The Celerons were also missing the new SSE instructions that Pentium IIIs had but they were highly overclockable. For instance, a 300 MHz Celeron could typically be easily overclocked to 450 MHz by simply changing the bus speed from 66 MHz to 100 MHz.


    I believe that the 300GL iterations that came with Celeron processors were among the latest released even though they weren’t the most capable. The Celeron iterations were designed as an inexpensive way to buy into the IBM ecosystem. They (at least some of them) were crippled with a 66 MHz bus though whereas the vast majority of computers with the BX chipset could also support a 100 MHz bus. This limits the upgrade possibilities significantly. HWiNFO32 and CPU-Z identify the mainboard as having a 440BX/ZX chipset. Maybe it is really a ZX chipset which was a lower cost variant of the BX which sometimes only supported a 66 MHz bus… In any case, this seems to have been an intentional design decision by IBM presumably to keep people from inexpensively upgrading and forcing them to buy a whole new machine instead. Too bad for IBM most people went with less expensive, less crippled hardware moving forward. I’m being a little harsh. While IBMs were typically not the fastest around and not very upgradeable, they did tend to be well built, quiet and reliable. This one is still running strong after all.

    Celeron 300A “Mendocino” Slot 1 Processor (back)

    No hard drive was included when I got my 300GL. I thought about putting in a compact flash card as I had a couple of compact flash/IDE converters. However, there is only one IDE connector to connect the hard drive and the optical drive in a master slave configuration so the adapter wouldn’t work unless I was willing to give up the optical drive (which I needed for things like installing the OS). Instead, I found a 60 GB hard drive lying around that would work. So step one was to install the hard drive. In addition to installing a hard drive, I also decided to upgrade the RAM. I replaced the single 64 GB module with two 128 MB 133 MHz SDRAM modules (which will only be running at 66 MHz anyway) for a total of 256 MB. In theory, this is the maximum amount of RAM supported but I haven’t tested that theory. It’s possible that up to 512 MB would work but I wouldn’t bet on it.

    Before CPU and RAM upgrade

    The next decision was which OS to install. I could install some iteration of Linux but my favorite ones won’t run well in 256 MB (or with a 300 MHz CPU for that matter). I decided to keep things a little more retro and installed Windows 98 SE instead. The install went well for the most part but I had trouble getting the network card working. I found a CD image online to download that was supposedly drivers and other software for the 300GL but the network “drivers” didn’t work. Instead, trying to do the setup from that CD prompted me to insert the Windows 98 CD where it couldn’t find them. I ultimately found a couple of other downloads that are supposedly drivers for this card that might work but I had already lost my patience and decided to install Windows XP instead.

    After CPU and RAM upgrade

    Windows XP was really a big leap over Windows 98. That’s both good and bad. Good in the sense that most drivers for most machines of this era are included, multitasking is better, it’s more stable, etc. Bad in the sense that older DOS games and software don’t always work with it. Anyway, the install went perfectly, including drivers for the network card which Windows XP identifies as an IBM Netfinity 10/100 Ethernet Adapter (which is not exactly what I thought it was so maybe that was part of the problem). I downloaded k-meleon as a browser which works pretty reliably if slowly. But then what do you expect with 300 MHz and 256 MB of RAM? Windows XP itself though is pretty snappy even on such low spec hardware.

    Celeron 300A “Mendocino” Slot 1 Processor (front)

    The next step in the upgrade process is installing a 533 MHz Celeron processor. This motherboard takes a Slot 1 processor and the fastest Slot 1 processor on a 66 MHz bus is a 433 MHz Celeron. However, with a Socket 370/Slot 1 converter (slotket) faster CPUs can be used. The fastest 66 MHz bus Socket 370 processor that can be used is the 533 MHz Celeron. Most Slotkets cost more money than I am willing to spend for such an upgrade but I found a cheap one on eBay labeled “no jumpers, no Pentium III” or something like that. I took that to mean it would work with Celerons and not Pentium IIIs though I am not sure exactly why. At any rate, I bought that one and a 533 MHz Mendocino Celeron…

    Ad for the IBM 300GL

    The 533 MHz Celeron is also available as a Coppermine model, the main advantage of which is that it supports SSE instructions. It also runs a little cooler. However, I wasn’t sure it would work with this converter so I stuck with the older Mendocino model. Incidentally, there ended up being two jumpers on the adapter I got but I have no idea what either one of them do. There are also a series of dip switches on the motherboard of the 300GL that are supposedly used to configure processor speed but as the 533 MHz Celeron seems to run fine at 533 MHz without fiddling with them I’m not sure exactly when they are needed.

    Technical Specs (1)

    The heatsink and clip on the existing processor seems to be a custom job as it wouldn’t fit on the adapter I had. There weren’t the right number of holes in the right places. However, the adapter I have can accept a standard socket 370 heatsink clip and I had one lying around. Unfortunately, the heatsink and fan combined were too big as the memory would be in the way. I took the fan off since some research showed that the Celeron 533 could be run with a passive heatsink in at least some cases. There was a case fan right next to it blowing air over it and it was a fairly large, copper heatsink. The machine booted up right away though it complained about the BIOS not having the right code for it. Even though I updated to the “latest and greatest” BIOS before attempting the upgrade. Pressing cancel allowed booting into Windows XP normally and the new processor seemed to work exactly as expected.

    Technical Specs (2)

    I’m running BOINC and the milkyway@home project on it as a sort of stress test. That particular project has relatively low memory requirements and seems to work well on this old PC…if slowly. On the 300 MHz processor it took approximately 6 days and 7 hours to complete one task. However, after running for an hour or so with the 533 MHz upgrade the machine froze. I assume due to overheating though there is no temperature sensor to verify that). I added the cpu fan into the case. It sits a few inches away from the cpu heatsink at an angle and blows air onto the memory and heatsink. That seems to be doing the trick though I wish I had a better way to secure it. I’ll have to hunt down a lower profile socket 370 heatsink and fan at some point. I might also try a 100 MHz bus P3 slot processor just to see if one will actually work. Assuming this motherboard can actually do 100 MHz, then at least an 850MHz PIII should work and perhaps up to a 1 GHz processor.

    Here are the links for the HWINFO output before and after the CPU and memory upgrade.