• hermannj314 17 hours ago

    I'd suggest just watching the YouTube video and supporting the content creator with likes and subscribes and not reading the ad-laden summary paraphrasing it.

    • 0xy 14 hours ago

      You don't want to be supporting that guy. He's an ex-scammer who used to operate a registry cleaner malware business.

      He agreed to pay the State of Washington $400,000 for the scheme.

      https://www.atg.wa.gov/news/news-releases/attorney-general-s...

      • ghastmaster 14 hours ago

        I thank you for the information! However, I want to play devil's advocate with your sentiment.

        Is his current content a scam? No. Did he rehabilitate? Maybe. Should former blackhats be banned from whitehat efforts? If that's the only instance of his ethical wrongs, I think I'll give him a pass. There was a lot of that crap software at the time. I never bought into any of it. A lot of people were scammed to a certain extent. I hope he learned his lesson. His sharing of knowledge is still valuable to him and posterity. Maybe we can get him to do a video on his softwareonline.com shenanigans!

  • nubinetwork 17 hours ago

    Let's be real, Windows 2000 ran reasonably well on only 128mb of memory... if it needed megabytes like modern apps, it wouldn't be very useful, especially when you're low on memory.

    • carefree-bob 17 hours ago

      Win2K was peak windows for me. Every subsequent version has gotten worse from my POV.

      • bombcar 17 hours ago

        I'd probably lean towards Windows XP with the W2k theme (at least later in its life) but it was basically the same thing.

        Main difference was easier-to-install video card drivers, though you could often get them to work on W2k by editing INI files.

        • ahartmetz 17 hours ago

          Yes. A no frills but full-featured NT. It was the best version of Windows.

          • naikrovek 15 hours ago

            Agreed.

            Even WinXP had goofy web technology tied into File Explorer (called “Windows Explorer” then, I believe). Win2K was just optimal, for me, for what I was doing at the time.

            • Grumbledour 8 hours ago

              I think Win2k already had that. As far as I remember, the explorer sidebar, the white box with the colored line under the heading, already being HTML. I loved hacking on that back then to customize my windows experience.

              • 72deluxe 7 hours ago

                Yes, it was called Active Desktop and it was much older than Win2K: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Active_Desktop

                If you changed the colour scheme on Windows 98, none of the cloud images were transparent in Explorer (they assumed the background was white) so you'd end up with these weird clouds/sky fading into a white background and then a hard line into whatever colour you'd set your background to.

                The desktop was very sluggish if you added an active desktop to it, as IE4 had to run; at least it was on my underpowered machine. Additionally it came with a screensaver that you could interact with, which was odd because normally moving the mouse dismissed the screensaver.

                • naikrovek 6 hours ago

                  Active Desktop was a different thing, on top of what I was talking about.

                  But the post parent to yours was correct about HTML being in Win2k: https://imgur.com/ncvvBY0

                  That infopanel on the left is HTML.

                  • 72deluxe 5 hours ago

                    Ah ok. Unfortunately I cannot look at that page on imgur as I am in the UK and it's blocked here.

        • johnwhitman 14 hours ago

          [dead]