Nice website!
I'm thinking of making something similar again someday lol.
Discussions on vintage and retrocomputing
Nice website!
I'm thinking of making something similar again someday lol.
My old homepage from nearly 10 years ago was a page that looked like it was straight out of the late '90s but was entirely valid HTML5 and CSS 3. That included an applet-like rippling water reflection effect beneath a photo of my city at the time, MIDI audio, JavaScript emulating the blink tag, and right-click "image save protection."
It was a total blast to make and people loved it, but being in the tech industry it kind of gave the wrong impression to hiring managers, so I swapped it for a much more boring page.
Tape drive! I had one of those back in the mid to late 90s, salvaged from my dad's dead office PC. I was around 10, and the fact that it worked to take a part from a machine and put it into another, as well as the absolutely insane storage capacity of the tapes... felt like magic. No clue how I knew what to do, either, but it worked.
Edit. Hazy on the specs, but I think it would have been a Pentium 1 (166MHz) with 16MB RAM, and 1.2GB HDD seems about right. Played the heck out of Rayman on that.
That DI-30 tape drive was a couple years older than the rest of the system. That's why it's half the size of the hard drive. It was a consumer-grade format with somewhat janky proprietary software.
I remember the software being very janky, too. But then again, that was Windows 95 days. 😅
Monkey island for hours and hours. Man I had a good time with that PC. Thanks for bringing back those memories.
Nice! Love the MIDI songs.
I've been hankering to make a 90s era web page lately, myself. Just have to sit down and commit one of these evenings.
Those songs were scavenged from the internet, as I never had the musical skill to make them.
I used https://cifkao.github.io/html-midi-player/ to get MIDI working in modern browsers, though it seems less reliable than an adlib synth.