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  • Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And this is the eMachines eOne 433

  • released in August of 1999 for $849 US dollars.

  • *computer booting noises*

  • Although it was available for way less because that's what eMachines did.

  • There was a $50 mail-in rebate and then there was a $400 rebate if you signed up

  • for three years of CompuServe 2000 dial-up internet for $21.95 a month.

  • *Windows 98 startup sound plays*

  • And yes one of these things is not like the other. The obvious, let's state

  • it: this was built explicitly to cash in on the late 90s Apple iMac craze

  • complete with a not-Bondi Blue translucent color scheme.

  • Gosh they just look... so similar I "can't tell" which is the real one in which is

  • the knockoff... And I got to give a huge thank you to Douglas for donating this

  • these are not commonplace machines at all and for good reason. Not only was the

  • eOne originally sold exclusively through Circuit City stores in the US but Apple

  • sued the crap out of them for daring to make such a blatant iMac ripoff. And

  • that's a suit that they won and settled in March of 2000 with eMachines agreeing

  • to cease all sales of the eOne as a result. And Apple did not stop there either, they

  • also sued Sotec, the Japanese firm who co-developed the eOne with eMachines, and

  • was also selling their own version of the eOne in Japan. Within a month the Tokyo

  • District Court ordered Sotec to cease all production. And finally Apple also

  • sued Korean firm Daewoo due to their own iMac knockoff, the E-Power PC. All

  • sales of the E-Power PC were barred by a judge in San Jose California and Apple

  • won a worldwide injunction against all sales of the E-Power PC as well as our

  • eMachines eOne. So yeah the fact that I have one

  • of these banned things in my possession is pretty wild to me, considering it was

  • only on the market a few months and apparently didn't sell very well even

  • when it was legal to do so. But before Apple buried them with litigation

  • eMachines marketed this as a computer for people who dug the aesthetic and

  • form factor of Apple's hugely popular Bondi Blue iMac, but wanted to run

  • Windows 98 instead of Mac OS 9. It was also less costly than an iMac by several

  • hundred dollars while technically including more features and higher specs.

  • For example you got a 433 megahertz Intel Celeron processor,

  • a hundred megahertz more than the '99 Revision D iMac. As well as 64 megabytes

  • of PC100 SD RAM, twice that of the iMac. An 8 megabyte ATI Rage XL AGP

  • graphics chipset, 2 more megs than the iMac. And a 6.4 or 8.4 gigabyte

  • IDE hard drive, again up to twice that of a base-model iMac. They

  • even included a keyboard that more closely resembled Apple's keyboard than

  • anything on the PC side of things at the time. Which is not a good thing in this case.

  • *plasticky keyboard sounds*

  • The layout is weird and cramped and it just feels plasticky and gummy to the

  • fingertips, even compared to the Apple board which I'm not super fond of either.

  • And instead of putting USB ports on each side like the iMac, eMachines went with

  • dual PS/2 ports instead, reminiscent of what Apple used to do with ADB.

  • You plug in a male-to-male cable on either side and then the mouse in the

  • opposite port. This means you can daisy-chain both devices into just one

  • compatible PS/2 port if you want. Although redundant in this case since it has the

  • individual ports on the computer itself. Still, eMachines drew the line at copying

  • Apple's famous hockey puck mouse, thank goodness.

  • I don't have the original mouse from the eOne but you can see what it looks like

  • here. It's just a stylized mouse to fit with the rest of it. I actually ran

  • across this Kensington mouse, that looks like it was made for the eOne, at Goodwill

  • a while back. So that's what I'll be using here, this color scheme of

  • translucent dark teal was just super popular at the time. And then one of the

  • biggest boasts of the eOne was that it had a 3.5 inch floppy disk drive, a

  • feature which the iMac famously omitted due to them betting on the future being

  • USB. A future Apple was correct about. But hey the eOne has USB *and* a floppy drive, so

  • that means it's better right? Ehh. At least it had a 24x CD-ROM drive.

  • Although with a non-motorized tray, not as impressive as the fancy slot loading

  • mechanism of the late 1999 iMac. But hey the iMac didn't have this chintzy

  • pop-out panel that reveals CD player controls with a monochrome LCD panel!

  • How's that for some late nineties technological curb appeal? Or what about

  • this little spot for connecting 3.5mm audio jacks

  • and a USB device in the front! Or around to the right side where you see these

  • composite video inputs. Yeah that's right, the eOne has video capture capability!

  • There's no tuner so you'll need something with a composite output, so

  • VCRs or cable TV boxes or a game console. Yeah that's right, you want to plug in

  • your Sega Genesis to your eMachines eOne, you can do that! Resolution is not

  • great and the colors are severely washed out but hey, it's here and it's pretty awesome actually.

  • *Sonic the Hedgehog music and sound plays*

  • Also on this right-hand side of the machine, underneath a sliding panel, you

  • even got some expandability: an elusive thing in all-in-ones like this. Granted,

  • it came in the form of PCMCIA slots normally seen on laptops, so upgrade

  • options were kind of limited. But yeah this is also where you'll find the I/O

  • section for things like 10BASE-T ethernet, a 56k modem and fax connection,

  • RS-232 serial port, another USB port, two PS/2 ports, and speaker output for the

  • Cirrus Logic CS 4280 sound chip -- that is supposedly Sound Blaster 16

  • compatible, but more on that in a moment. And finally around the back of the

  • machine next to the power you get a parallel port for printers and such, and

  • a 15-pin game port for joysticks or connecting external MIDI devices.

  • eMachines also imitated the carrying handle on top like the iMac but it's

  • pretty awful. It's made of cheap plastic with sharp edges that kind of feels like

  • it'll slice your hand. And every time you lift it up it detaches itself from the

  • plastic on the front of the case. I'm gonna hazard a guess and say build

  • quality was not on the agenda. There's also this terrible little microphone

  • built into the top of the monitor housing and yeah just check it out, this

  • thing is... it's not good.

  • "Testing this crappy microphone."

  • *recording plays back terribly*

  • Hahaha!

  • Still, shoddy quality aside you got what appeared on paper

  • to be a fine list of features housed in an

  • "attractive" case that included a 15-inch CRT and stereo speakers. A rather soft

  • CRT with lackluster color reproduction and speakers that sound cheap and tinny,

  • but yeah an attempt was made. Speaking of speakers let's talk about

  • sound. You know the Sound Blaster 16 compatibility I mentioned? Well it's kind

  • of here, just listen to it trying to play Duke Nukem 3D's theme song.

  • *it's bad.*

  • *still really bad*

  • *it's getting worse.*

  • Well in case you didn't notice, it's missing half the notes! That's awkward.

  • It is at least pretty decent at doing PCM sound effects through Sound Blaster

  • emulation, but when I use this I swear you can hear a Yamaha engineer crying

  • somewhere in the distance. This is seriously one of the worst FM synth

  • emulations I've ever heard. Just listen to canyon.mid!

  • *canyon.mid plays, technically.*

  • *it is unfortunate.*

  • Argh! And no in case you're wondering, it does not have any general MIDI or

  • wavetable audio onboard. Or at least if it does the drivers that this one came with do

  • not support it. But as you saw the connection earlier you can connect

  • external MIDI devices if you really wanted to. Also interesting is that there

  • are zero monitor controls on the case, you have to do all the color, brightness, and

  • geometry adjustment through a control panel plug-in. That's not the most

  • unusual thing, but even the degaussing is done through software. That's something

  • I've never seen before. And yeah, despite a lot of crap, I mean, as far as late

  • nineties Windows games and software it runs that stuff pretty okay. At least for a

  • 433MHz Celeron with an integrated 8 meg ATI Rage card. So you know, games

  • like Starcraft are totally fine, games like Quake 3 are not. But it's playable

  • so that's something. It was also available with a 500MHz CPU so

  • assuming it's not soldered to the board or something stupid like that, I guess

  • you could upgrade this thing. But that's something that I'm not going to dare

  • doing, I tried opening this up and it was an absolute nightmare. It's almost like

  • you had to destroy parts of it to get to what you really wanted to do, it's not

  • personally worth it to me to bother with that.

  • So 433 megahertz it is. And that is the eMachines eOne!

  • What a piece of junk. But an incredibly fascinating piece of junk

  • with a tarnished, legally dubious legacy. And you know what, I'm just kind of

  • partial to this translucent colored plastic that happened on several

  • computers and technology products of the time. It's admittedly cheesy and maybe

  • even a bit off-putting, but at the same time oddly attractive and very much

  • nostalgic. And you know I just like all-in-ones, so I like messing with this

  • thing. And yeah that's about it, I got no excuses I'm just weird. Speaking

  • of weird there was a follow-up of sorts for the eOne by Gateway, who purchased

  • eMachines in 2004. And I guess they liked the name and the idea so they released

  • the Gateway One in 2007. And thankfully this didn't seem to infringe on any

  • other iMac trademarks or design disputes or anything like that because it was

  • sold and forgotten. And well that's not a happy ending either but anyway, that's

  • all for this video. And I hope that you enjoyed watching what you just did!

  • I always like taking a look at bizarre computers from the past

  • and just talking about them if I can get my hands on them. And I've got a lot more

  • to talk about in the future so stick around there are new videos every Monday

  • and Friday here on LGR. And as always thank you very much for watching!

Greetings and welcome to an LGR thing! And this is the eMachines eOne 433

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