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  • [♪ Music Introand Keyboard Typing noises]

  • Say hello to the Gateway 2000 Solo 2200 Model S5-166!

  • And this cost $5,399 US dollars in March of 1997 or around $8,073, adjusted for inflation, in 2017.

  • When this was new, it truly was one of the best laptops that money could buy.

  • [♪ Windows 95 Startup Chime ♪]

  • Well, for a few months, at least.

  • This kind of machine is what I imagine whenever I hear the term "Moore's Law."

  • And in case you're not familiar with that, it is an idea that came from Intel co-founder Gordon Moore.

  • And his observation that

  • "the number of transistors in an integrated circuit doubles approximately every two years."

  • That was definitely the case with the Solo 2200;

  • in fact, just five months later, the 9100 was available from Gateway for the same price and it was better in every way.

  • And by 18 months, or two years, or whatever, it was completely obsolete.

  • Nevertheless, the Gateway Solo 2000 series of laptops were billed as desktop replacements

  • allowing for "More Computing, More Places!"

  • [♪ Jingle ♪] Commercial: "More Computing, More Places.

  • More Computing, More Places.

  • More Computing, More Places.

  • Finally have more computing in more places..."

  • LGR: Man, they really doubled-down on that tagline.

  • Anyway, the 2200 was one of the early laptops to feature the brand-new Pentium MMX CPU,

  • boasting near desktop performance that you could carry with you and only weighing 7 pounds.

  • It was more than good enough for your average consumer and very much suited the business needs of business users.

  • As well as being the computer of choice for the Dakota Keykeeper guy

  • as used in Gateway 2000 advertising. I don't know exactly why,

  • but you know, whatever, Solo 2200, take it in the snow and cabins and stuff.

  • But yeah, the Pentium MMX processor was the big deal with this particular laptop.

  • It was new and it was exciting, and in case you're not familiar with what exactly made it so,

  • these MMX processors featured a more advanced CPU core, larger L1 cache, and 57 additions to the x86 instruction set,

  • allowing it to outperform even the faster Pentium processors and even the Pentium Pro,

  • which meant you had speedier applications and games, especially when they supported the MMX instructions.

  • PC game developers and publishers really leapt onto the MMX bandwagon around 1997,

  • with Ubisoft's POD being one of the first games to do this, running nicely with no 3D acceleration at all.

  • In fact, the Solo 2200 is a very solid machine for DOS and Windows 95 gaming,

  • with great sound and video support in Windows and DOS modes. Just listen to Tyrian's OPL3 soundtrack through this.

  • [♪ Tyrian - Return me to Savara ♪]

  • The biggest problem here is that you're stuck with black borders for low-res on the LCD panel

  • unless you wanna deal with ugly non-integer graphics scaling through software,

  • or, of course, you could just plug it into a CRT and it's gonna look fine.

  • This is true across the whole range of systems in the Gateway Solo 2XXX line,

  • including this 2100 system that I also happen to have because why not?

  • This was one of the lower-end models, although externally, these systems are almost completely the same.

  • It's just on the lower-end; they started at $2,299,

  • which came with a Pentium 120 megahertz and 16 megs of RAM, among other lower specs.

  • But back to the 2200 and what you got with for 5 and a half thousand dollars after tax in '97:

  • Which starts with a 166 megahertz Pentium MMX CPU,

  • Windows 95 as an operating system with a whole bunch of bundled software for Microsoft, Coral, and others,

  • 80 megabytes of RAM, yes, that's right!

  • 80 megs, which was absolutely genuinely massive in '97, with most systems still peaking at 32.

  • A respectable 2.1 gigabyte 4200 RPM IDE hard drive,

  • a 2 megabyte SVGA graphics chipset,

  • a 16-bit integrated wavetable soundchip and stereo speakers (which are annoyingly covered up by your hands when you're typing),

  • a couple of Zoom Video-compatible PCMCIA slots with a 28.8 Data/Fax dial-up modem card included,

  • a 4 megabits per second infrared port for doing wireless printing and such,

  • topped off with a 12.1 inch active matrix LCD panel, with an 800x600 native resolution.

  • And of course, you had optical and magnetic storage, with an 8x speed CD-ROM drive and a 1.44 megabyteinch floppy drive.

  • And these were actually plugged into a modular bay, which meant that you could only have either the CD-ROM or the floppy drive at the same time.

  • Unless you were to use an external drive in addition to these. And pretty awesomely, that same bay could also accept

  • a second lithium ion battery pack to double your battery life from 2 hours all the way up 'till 4, holy crap!

  • And if that wasn't enough of a desktop replacement, they sold a variety of docks and port extenders,

  • most of them being rather small, but one at least being large enough to fit multiple expansion cards.

  • Yeah, that's right! Full size PC expansion cards! Delightful and absurd!

  • Yeah, alright, so maybe this all sounds a little bit silly today and really, it is.

  • There's nothing that particularly special about these machines now and

  • really, they can be found for pretty cheap on eBay. I got each of these for like, $30 total.

  • But, to me, I just like Gateway 2000 laptops, the Solo line in particular, they just always impressed me when I was a kid.

  • I mean, that massive 12.1 inch active matrix panel, I mean, that thing just looked amazing!

  • I know it doesn't look great in this particular shot because camera issues.

  • And beyond the nostalgia factor, I just think it's interesting to look at a computer like this that was so ridiculously expensive when it launched

  • and was so quickly replaced by stuff that was cheaper and way better,

  • which just really represents the rapid obsolescence of PCs in the late 1990s and beyond.

  • [♪ Music Outro ♪]

  • And if you enjoyed this look at a little old computer, then perhaps you would like some of my other videos.

  • I do similar stuff every Monday and Friday, here on LGR, so subscribe if you would like.

  • And as always, thank you very much for watching.

[♪ Music Introand Keyboard Typing noises]

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