I'm pretty sure I once had a Legend QDI, but I must have sold it, probably as a working system a few years ago.
Anyway, I'm still without a case on my Pentium II 350 project with XP installed to SP3. I even managed to activate it over the Net, which surprised me and I've since learnt that you can only do this if SP3 is installed.
Then I forgot the LAN cable was still connected, went out to do a few jobs and came back to find 130 Windows updates, which took forever to install. Updates have been switched off now as more of a nuisance and I don't intend to use the Net with the one.
I also found my old Gainward Geforce 3 64Mb which I remember buying at Overclockers UK (Stafford) back in 2000. Anyway, Half Life runs a treat, so does DX Diag, so the card is still in good working order.
Except that TR2 will only play in pixelated mode for some reason.
This really is a lot of fun and I haven't done it for ages, what with writing the book and everything.
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Hmm... I would highly recommend that you keep the XP stock & off the internet. Poor thing just doesn't have what it takes to handle SP3, it barely even runs SP2 to be completely honest. In fact, I just booted up XP Professional on an old Athlon 1000 last night, but it kept on stalling at 100% CPU usage all the time & couldn't handle anything else. And that was a 1GHz, yours is 350. Again, I know you're doing so for fun, but I hope you understand, Pentium II was not designed to handle XP, especially not the latest SP3.
And pixelated mode is known as "Software Rendering" mode, due to the fact that TR2 couldn't detect appropriate 3D accelerator. See, this is exactly what I was telling you about, these things happen when you mix together older & newer software/hardware. I'm assuming this problem wouldn't exist under Win98/ME, but then again it could have been due to your choice of graphics - TR2 was designed to run on older PCI cards & 3dfx Voodoo! Maybe you could try with unofficial patch or an update, to compensate for this issue?
Ain't that the truth. I once installed XP on a 300MHz Pentium 2 machine. Then I tried to browse eBay on it. Frustratingly slow...
I don't mean to brag, but I have tons of experience with Slot 1 systems, ESPECIALLY PII 350. In fact, my very first "modern" computer, after upgrading from 4x86 DX2 was a Pentium II, 350. I still have have that machine here in my room, except it is now unfortunately housed inside generic (and modern) ATX case ... the original one is long gone, and I was never able to find another, identical one
Then, as I got into older computers, I've started making these for fun. So I've made another PII system, which is pretty much the clone of my own system from back in a day. Then I wanted to raise the stakes, so I made a Voodoo2 SLI system, powered by PII 350. I even made a Voodoo3 2000, also powered by the same processor. Overall I tried just about every single combination I could think of!
Which is why I'm familiar with these things & know what (and how much) to expect from them. I also had a WinXP on my system back in early 2000s, it was a temporary solution before I upgraded to S423 Pentium 4. Come to think of it, I still used my Pentium 2 for a while longer after that, and it had XP Home edition, SP2 but as MS was pushing out the updates every once in a while, things got slower & slower, to the point where it was taken out of service. In fact, I believe that was around 2005, 2006, when I decided to revert the Pentium II back to its original form & use it for retro gaming. Because it was either that, or to scrap the entire thing & throw it into the dumpster (which is exactly what everyone told me to do, back then). It was too modern to be a classic, yet it was too old & outdated to be anything else. Which is why hundreds (thousands) of these ended up being recycled or simply abandoned & sold for scrap/recycling.