Quote:
Originally Posted by Jim
I remember buying my first Pentium and wanted to be ready for Windows 98 so I paid an extra $1200 for 24 more megs of ram  That was the processor that had the math problems. Intel first said they would only replace the bad processor if it was needed in your work. Since I was in Construction Engineering at the time, I qualified. I still had to give intel a $600 deposit for the new chip. Later, intel said they would replace all bad processors. I think that was back in 1994 or 1995.
I was just looking at some new PCs and I just can't believe how cheap they are. I paid over $5k for that first Pentium. Take a look at what $5k will buy you today 
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For the first decade of PCs all usable systems cost $5k. Kaypro 10 cost about $5K. IBM XT was about $5k. IBM AT was about $5k. Every 2 years that $5k purchased twice or even more performance then it did before so it was needed. PCs didn't become home friendly until they went below $2k and once that happened, well now we all have them.