Iirc I used a Maxtor 100-something MB drive for my first hard drive speaker 
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CE2y7ZWubps
My first hard drive (115MB) looks like this:-I still have my first hard drive I ever bought.
212.6 MB Western Digital HD
berlin.museum-digital.de
That should make a pretty nice firewall box, decent cpu and plenty of RAM, and dual ethernet, its ideal. Does it use a standard psu or a custom cybernet one? Looks like it's got USB so you should be able to boot ghostbsd live from a usb drive to test it out.I posted pictures of my CyberNet CyberMed 19" All-in-One above and I decided to try and make it my main firewall. Intel 6200U and 16GB RAM.
It has dual SATA drives and Dual Ethernet. Many expansion slots.
The screen came cracked but I like the hardware. .So I put a Chelsio T620 in the x8 slot and rigged up a temporary fan until a 120mm one shows up.
Milled the cover plate so QSFP stick thru. Made a temporary strap to mainboard.
I always think of slide rules as the assembly language of math. There are all these special quirks, like if you want the sine, but it's a really small angle, you use the SRT scale instead of the S scale, and on some scales, if the angle is greater than 45 degrees, you use the red numbers that read backwards.Slide rules? How about the "computer equivalent of a manual transmission"
![]()
Upgrade to windows for workgroups (joke)
![]()
Windows 3.11 for Workgroups : Microsoft : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive
Windows 3.1 is a series of 16-bit operating environments produced by Microsoft for use on personal computers, released on April 6, 1992. The series began with...archive.org
And don't connect it to the Internet. I think the average time to get pwned on old versions is half an hour.
The worst thing that can be done is to upgrade the MS Windows.
If I were a Windows user, I would stop at Windows XP.

The worst thing about Windows for Workgroups was running it on a token-ring network, like my company had at the time. It was set up for TCP/IP, and you had to get this program that was referred to as "the shim". It wasn't an official Microsoft distribution; you just found some random guy who had it on his website and downloaded it from there. Pretty scary, but at least the 'Net was a safer place back then.
What can happen? I once intentionally left running my XP game PC with internet connection. Nothing happened in 2 days, but it had no working browser and mail program either. Maybe I should give it a hostname and run some services to attract portscanners. There was a time your computer caught blaster32 only of being online.And don't connect it to the Internet. I think the average time to get pwned on old versions is half an hour.
What can happen? I once intentionally left running my XP game PC with internet connection. Nothing happened in 2 days, but it had no working browser and mail program either. Maybe I should give it a hostname and run some services to attract portscanners. There was a time your computer caught blaster32 only of being online.
I think WinXP is so old that fishing for exploitable targets probably isn't worth the effort. You aren't going to make a botnet of them and nobody does banking with it.The Internet is full of these stories and I don't think it's an urban myth.
![]()
Study: Unpatched PCs compromised in 20 minutes
The average "survival time" is not even long enough to download patches that would protect a computer from Net threats.www.cnet.com
Microsoft Windows average ‘survival time’ rises to 40 minutes for unprotected PC to become infected
According to the latest data at the SANS Internet Storm Center, the average time it takes for an unprotected PC running Microsoft Windows...macdailynews.com
I was starting a dedicated server for a game, installed XP SP2 fresh, and within 5-10 minutes a Messenger exploit just-happened out of nowhere (I didn't touch it beyond getting to post-setup desktop but it was internet-connected)What can happen? I once intentionally left running my XP game PC with internet connection. Nothing happened in 2 days, but it had no working browser and mail program either. Maybe I should give it a hostname and run some services to attract portscanners. There was a time your computer caught blaster32 only of being online.