- 75 MHz Pentium CPU
- 8 MB FPM DRAM (or maybe 4 MB - this was upgraded quite a bit and I forget the original amount)
- 1 GB hard drive
- 1 MB integrated Cirrus Logic GD5430 PCI video card
- Some funky combo SoundBlaster 16-compatible sound card and 14.4 Kbps modem
- Two (yes, two!) 2x CD-ROM drives
- One ubiquitous 3.5" floppy disk drive
- 14" XGA (1024x768) monitor with some pretty fly bolt-on speakers
- 133 MHz Pentium CPU
- 40 MB FPM DRAM
- 2 GB hard drive
- 16 MB Creative Labs 3D Blaster Banshee PCI video card (3dfx Voodoo Banshee)
- Creative Labs SoundBlaster AWE 64
- 56 Kbps modem
- Kingston KNE20BT 10 Mbps ISA NIC
- 8x CD-ROM drive
- Home computer for my parents/sister for a couple years
- Test box for experimenting with Linux
- Router/firewall for my home network, running Linux and OpenBSD at different times
- back to the integrated 1 MB PCI video card - I stupidly gave my Banshee away to an ex-girlfriend long ago
- The 8x CD-ROM drive was dead, and the original 2x drive, while it still worked, could not read CD-RW discs, so I swapped it out for a 24x4x4 cd burner (which was the oldest/slowest drive I had that would read CD-RW discs)
- 3com 3c905c 100 Mbps PCI NIC
- 5.25" floppy disk drive - used to copy data off of some really old floppies I still had from elementary school
- I replaced the system fan with a brand new one - the original had developed a nasty vibration
- [1] Technically this is not the first computer we had in my home, but rather my first computer, and the first computer I had that I knew what to do with. Prior to this, we had a Commodore 64, but this was just a game machine to my brother and myself, and I was far too young (~4) to know what else could be done with it anyway. Sometime after that my parents purchased what I believe to be a 386-based PC when I was around eight, but no one in my family knew how to use it for anything more than running WordPerfect Jr., and even that required consulting a set of instructions every time we used it.