I still remember the first computer my father put together for me.
It all hinged around a PC-Chips M598 mobo with some seriously WTF port header placement between the expansion slots, no AGP slot, integrated SiS 530 graphics that lose their 2D acceleration if you update past DirectX 7.0, a built-in CMI8338 sound codec that never worked, and for whatever reason, it could never run 100 MHz FSB stably, forcing the AMD K6-2 350 to be set to 366 MHz instead with a lower 66 MHz FSB.
Oh, and it used an AT case and PSU when the industry was already moving to ATX. In fact, the board was designed to work with either AT or ATX. The whole thing reeked of being budget-conscious.
It eventually got sent to recycling because my current family doesn't like me keeping so many computers, and I don't miss it one bit, though I did yank the 128 MB of PC-100 SDRAM, Ethernet card and SB Live! Value that were in it before doing so. Those things could find a new home in much better computers.
adalbert wrote:Any laptop with passive (DSTN) screen.
"Better" yet, a laptop with a passive-matrix LCD, just the stock 32 MB of RAM, only 2 MB of VRAM, and the real kicker - a CPU with NO L2 CACHE.
Yeah, turns out my neighbors owned the much-maligned "MainStreet" configuration of the WallStreet PowerBook G3 line. That thing was utter crap compared to what the higher-end configurations offered, partly due to giving the CPU the Covington Celeron treatment, partly because the screen actually makes active-matrix TN LCD garbage tolerable to look at by comparison.