• @[email protected]
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    19 days ago

    Haha I remember the days of downloading random EXEs off the internet and running them to see what they do (also the days of CD-rom drives).

    My auntie somehow managed to get a virus that played Für Elise through the motherboard speaker and never stopped so long as the thing was on. I don’t think they ever solved it, in the end they just got a new PC.

        • @[email protected]
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          2319 days ago

          When I read it, it stirred a distant memory of hearing such a story before, so I knew that there was something behind it and looked it up.

      • Kairos
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        4119 days ago

        Literally why would someone make that. That is completely indistinguishable as a signal.

        • @[email protected]
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          6719 days ago

          I mean I guess you are supposed to take it to your computer repair shop and tell them it won’t stop playing Für Elise, and the shop is supposed to recognise it as a failure of CPU fan signal. If it just beeped a few times on startup then people would ignore it, and if it beeped constantly then well maybe Für Elise is nicer.

          • Kairos
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            19 days ago

            Huh yeah that’s MUCH better than throwing a post code and playing a beep during startup to signal something is wrong.

            • mox
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              2219 days ago

              Sadly, many motherboards don’t have POST code displays.

              • Kairos
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                719 days ago

                Hm. Well if the motherboard can play a song it can blast “<Type> Error” during startup to be infinitely more helpful.

                • @[email protected]
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                  2219 days ago

                  I don’t think those speakers are capable of voice. They can handle a few different beep tones and that’s about it. The song was not like listening to Spotify, it was played using beep tones.

                • @Scubus
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                  219 days ago

                  “my shits fucked yo”

        • @[email protected]
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          2219 days ago

          Computers in 97 didn’t need much in the way of cooling. A large passive heatsink was plenty for those CPUs. They’re not the 300+ watt behemoths we have today.

          • @[email protected]
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            19 days ago

            I really remember heatsinks being a thing on overclocked systems around that time frame and then once we got to P4 cpus the chilling towers appeared those things were massive

            • @[email protected]
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              1019 days ago

              The lower power 486s didn’t even need a heatsink. The P3 was the first to take a heasink resembling what we have today, but damn did the P4s need some serious cooling.

              It’s kinda funny how we think the 100 watts of a desktop P4 was insane when now the TDP of a high end laptop CPU is more than that.

              • Illecors
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                219 days ago

                It’s kinda funny how we think the 100 watts of a desktop P4 was insane when now the TDP of a high end laptop CPU is more than that.

                It really isn’t. Modern mobile cpus barely sip power.

                • mbfalzar
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                  19 days ago

                  PL2 on a 14900T is 106W

                  Edit: I’m an idiot, T series is low power socketed, not mobile. 14900HX has a TDP of 55W but boosts short term to 157W, which is still pretty ridiculous

                • @[email protected]
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                  119 days ago

                  My 11950H (and all other “full power” Intel mobile CPUs) have a PL1 of >100 watts (109 for mine), and mine a PL2 of 139 watts. This laptop is about an inch thick.

                  Nothing about this laptop sips power, I’ve gotten as bad as 30 minutes of battery life out of a 90 watt hour battery not playing games.

                • I Cast Fist
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                  118 days ago

                  If you meant cell phones and tablets, that’s mostly due to the different architecture. RISC processors are super energy efficient, which also makes them much cooler to run.

                  x86-64 is a CISC architecture, which tends to be much more power hungry. There are only a couple of very low power Celeron CPUs that work under 10W of TDP, while that’s very common among phones’ CPUs.

          • @[email protected]
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            819 days ago

            I helped set up a friend’s “586” (about equivalent to a Pentium 1) and he had neglected to buy a heat sink or fan

            A hammer was a sufficient heat sink for the time it took to set up windows

      • @Lucidlethargy
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        18 days ago

        Can’t view this without cycling my VPN… We need a way to see reddit posts without visiting reddit. Is this a thing? Like… Piped for Reddit.

      • @[email protected]
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        117 days ago

        It explains that it means “fan failure”.

        And there was a link to a video of it happening.

        The only other link to an MS support page did not work.

    • @[email protected]
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      5419 days ago

      Drain.exe would say “water in drive a:, commencing spin cycle” then power up the drive and make a gurgling sound.

      Sheep.exe … would create a sheep that would wander the desktop.

      • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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        3819 days ago

        Haha, in highschool I put sheep.exes into the school labs startup folders as a prank once. A couple days later the tech teacher approached me and was like “nobody’s in trouble but these things are a nightmare and if I have to reimage half the lab to get rid of them it would personally ruin my day”. Somehow all the sheep were gone by the next day

        • @[email protected]
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          2219 days ago

          School computers back then were a wild west. I remember having Starcraft on the school shared drive and playing it in homeroom.

          • @[email protected]
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            719 days ago

            I remember getting sent to the principals office for “hacking” (pinging the computer in the next room) in like 8th grade.

            Back in 4th/5th I actually was hacking, modifying our user menu to add Windows 3.1 and a password (copying config from a teacher’s profile). Also brute-forced at least two teachers passwords.

            I’m a network architect now, so there’s that.

          • Captain Aggravated
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            519 days ago

            I remember labs full of networked Win 98 machines in middle school, with like Novell software on them for login credentials and whatnot. The computers sat there with a login screen and when students logged into it you would be presented with the Office suite and a restricted web browser and some educational packages. A lot of normal Win 98 stuff wasn’t there though, like any settings menus. But there was some convoluted way where you could bring up a help text and then by navigating deep in the menu system somehow cause it to launch to a “normal” Win 98 desktop.

          • I Cast Fist
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            419 days ago

            I’d often bring a floppy with wolf3d or doom to deal with the boredom

      • @[email protected]
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        1419 days ago

        Ah shit the sheep thing! In fact, there were others I can’t remember. And I seem to remember somewhere along the line they went from fun to spam things walking around your screen trying to make you buy shit or maybe they were trying to scam you, I can’t remember but they weren’t fun anymore, and hard to get rid of.

        • @[email protected]
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          919 days ago

          I remember an obscure one named “grommit” that was a dancing animated character and you’d click it to change arm and leg movements.

          Bonzi buddy was over of the bad ones, maybe?

          • @[email protected]
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            19 days ago

            Bonzai buddy! Yes, that was one. Also I seem to recall naked women ones you couldn’t close.

            I don’t remember grommit, but also I failed to find anything when trying to search it up. It shares its name with too many things.

        • @[email protected]
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          319 days ago

          I had a cottonelle puppy so basically a toilet paper ad. But it’s not even sold in my country, we have other brands.

    • @[email protected]
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      1519 days ago

      There was also a program that would open the CD-ROM drive and play a raspberry noise at random intervals. It was a fun prank to set it to run at login.

      • @[email protected]
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        3019 days ago

        Back in my day, that used to be the only way a computer could produce sound. Later on you could purchase a specialized sound card that would take up a slot in your motherboard.

        • Jay K
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          1619 days ago

          I thought I was the cool kid when I got my SoundBlaster 16!

          • @[email protected]
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            919 days ago

            The anticipation as you figure out a new IRQ and DMA configuration so you could play with your new toy

        • @[email protected]
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          619 days ago

          My dad used to disable the motherboard speaker because the noises games made back then were more annoying than fun. We eventually got a soundcard, and that was awesome.

        • @[email protected]
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          519 days ago

          And you could plug in your joystick into the soundcard, because where else would you put joystick, right? Perfectly logical.

      • @[email protected]
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        19 days ago

        They do, but it’s a very simple speaker that’s really more of a buzzer than what you might think of as a speaker.

        Many motherboards use a combination of beeps to report hardware errors if you fail on power on.

      • @[email protected]
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        419 days ago

        386 era machines often had a 4 inch speaker in the front panel. It couldn’t do much. Some main boards still come with headers for a speaker, some even come with an electret beeper

      • @can
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        419 days ago

        Beep beep

      • @[email protected]
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        112 days ago

        Slightly related, it is really annoying you cant stop the boot speaker on the PS4 without voiding your warranty and ripping the speaker out

      • @[email protected]
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        118 days ago

        A good number do, but you won’t hear anything during normal operation. If your vomputer has ever beeped at you when you try to turn it on at 0% battery, accessed the bios, etc., there’s a good chance that was the motherboard speaker.

    • dave@hal9000
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      318 days ago

      Lol the für Elise thing is funny. Back in highschool I got a “PC maintenance” credit which had me assigned as support in the computer lab. I made a batch script that ran on startup and showed a warning message saying the hard disk will self destruct and did a countdown from 10 with the motherboard speaker beeping down, fun times

  • @[email protected]
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    14019 days ago

    I remember there was a virus that had a tiny cat on the screen and it would chase your mouse cursor. Once it catches your mouse cursor, the computer would crash. It was freaking awesome.

  • KillingTimeItself
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    8719 days ago

    man i miss these days.

    These days not only would it open your CD drive, it would open your tax documents, your crypto wallet, your account cookies, probably even your banking information.

    The modern internet fucking sucks dude.

    • @[email protected]
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      6519 days ago

      Put the rose tinted glasses to one side. We still had harmful viruses back in the day, difference is these days you are storing more private information “online” so the effect of compromise is larger.

      • ChaoticNeutralCzech
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        1819 days ago

        Back then, there were still lots of “wipers” that deleted files and/or destroyed the OS. Now it’s all spyware and ransomware.

      • KillingTimeItself
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        818 days ago

        i’m mostly just sad that the funny side of malicious software is gone.

        There’s no more funny malware. It’s all ransomware and stealers.

        • Luke
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          318 days ago

          There’s no more funny malware.

          That depends who gets infected.

          You or me infected by malware? No thanks!

          Egon Mark infected by malware? Absolute hilarity!

      • @[email protected]
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        619 days ago

        Yeah I haven’t had harmful application on my computer in over a decade. I feel like you really have to go out of your way to get one these days (not including spyware that you download intentionally, like Windows 11).

          • @[email protected]
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            518 days ago

            There’s even extreme edgecases where a compromised machine being part of a botnet actually improves security because the malware shores up security to help itself remain persistent and not find itself removed/blocked by other malware or attackers

    • @booly
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      4519 days ago

      Oh don’t worry, malicious .exe files were all over the forums back then.

      • dave@hal9000
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        18 days ago

        I was just about to comment that this reminded me of the sub7 days. Not sure when it was released, but I definitely used it in 1998

        Edit, memory was wrong, it was released in February 1999

    • @can
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      419 days ago

      How could I know, out of curiosity? I probably have the exe from the time period.

      • @[email protected]
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        1519 days ago

        Great question! Not really my area of expertise, but probably there are at least a couple of possible avenues. One is decompilation and/or disassembly and static analysis. (Basically use automated tools to reconstruct the original source code as best it can and then read that imperfect reconstruction of the source code to figure out what it does.) Another is isolating it (“air gap” – no network or connectivity to anything you care about) so you’re sure it can’t do any damage and running it with tools that record/report everything it does. (On Linux, one could use strace and/or GDB. On Mac, dtrace. Not sure what the equivalent is for Windows programs running on Windows.)

        Actually, I guess another option could be to set up an isolated system, record a whole bunch of information about it before running the .exe then after running the .exe, examine it to see what you can find on the filesystem or in the registry or in RAM or whatever that might have changed. It wouldn’t catch everything, though. Like if it made a network connection or something but didn’t actually change anything on the filesystem, it might not leave any traces.

        Whatever the case, it’d probably require some specialized tools and expertise. But it’d be an interesting project.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 days ago

        There are tracing programs that let you see when a program makes system calls to read and write files, control hardware, etc. It might be easiest to run it and see what it does in a VM sandbox. Process Monitor looks like a strace equivalent on windows.

  • @[email protected]
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    2318 days ago

    This was a common April Fools prank back in my day. We would put a startup script on a person’s computer that opened their CD drive at random intervals. Drove them nuts!

  • @can
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    2219 days ago

    I have a folder of “pranks” like these from way back and they were harmless but sure enough they fire off modern anti virus software.

    • @[email protected]
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      1719 days ago

      I made one called “crash_bandicoot.exe” that opened the windows calculator in an infinite loop.

        • @[email protected]
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          118 days ago

          The modern school equivalent of cheap pranks on computers isn’t some elaborate virus, it’s just pressing the “mail” or “calculator” keys on the keyboard for the guy next to you. Never personally witnessed anything more elaborate, though my classmate apparently distributed dubious batch files he wrote once

    • @[email protected]
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      1219 days ago

      How about the one that launched a dialog box: “Do you have a small penis? Yes/No”, and if you moved your mouse near the “No” button, the button would run away around the screen?

      Man, good times.

      • @can
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        1119 days ago

        Odd, that button always worked for me.

    • @[email protected]
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      218 days ago

      I remember with mobile phones you’d have an app that was called shave or something like that.

      It would play the sound of a shaving apparatus and you’d run your phone across your cheek pretending to shave

  • key
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    2019 days ago

    That joke was constant in the early 00s.

  • @[email protected]
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    1818 days ago

    I remember a guy who tied his baby’s rocker to the drive and wrote code to open and close the CD drive repeatedly lol. Fun times.

    • @[email protected]
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      1518 days ago

      Hmm. Did the motor last? It’s obviously not built to provide that much torque/force, although I can’t say for sure it would be damaged by it.

      • El Barto
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        318 days ago

        They don’t say how much the seat was being rocked.

        Maybe just a couple of inches. Enough for babby to sleep.

        • @[email protected]
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          18 days ago

          Yeah, but the baby alone would weigh far more than the tray and disk ever would. And then they’re doing it over and over again for an extended period.

          • El Barto
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            118 days ago

            Just a little push from pops at the beginning.

            And they didn’t say it was a long term solution. For all we know, the drive was going to be replaced the following week.

            • @[email protected]
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              318 days ago

              Oh, so you’re thinking he’d start it first, and then start the program to be perfectly synced with the period of the rocking? I suppose that could work, although it would be tricky to get the timing just right by hand, or it would be for me.

              And they didn’t say it was a long term solution. For all we know, the drive was going to be replaced the following week.

              Yeah, and it might have electronics that will handle the extra load just by virtue of properties of the standard parts. Like I said, I don’t know that it’s bad idea, but I do wonder.

  • originalucifer
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    919 days ago

    naw, what you do is write a small exe to play “youre the best” by joe espesito through the pcspeaker at 15% volume than you can trigger remotely…randomly until the user goes mad

    “doesnt anyone else Hear that?!”