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Celebrating 30 Years of Windows 95 at VCF

Por: Adam Fabio
6 Abril 2025 at 11:00

It’s been 30 years since Windows 95 launched. [Ms-Dos5] and [Commodore Z] are celebrating with an epic exhibit at VCF East 2025.  They had no fewer than nine computers — all period-correct machines running versions of Windows 95. The pictures don’t do it justice, so if you are near Wall, NJ, on Sunday, April 5, 2025, definitely go check out this and the rest of the exhibits at VCF.

An exhibit like this isn’t thrown together overnight.  [Commodore Z] and [Ms-Dos5] worked for months to assemble the right mix of desktops, laptops, and prehiperals to showcase Windows 95. Many of the computers are networked as well – which was no easy task. One particular Thinkpad 760e required pliers and force to remove a stuck PCMCIA modem card. After a struggle that was ultimately destructive to the card, the pair determined it was stuck due to a sticker that had effectively glued the card into the laptop. As the sticker finally gave up, the card popped itself out of the laptop.

Hardware isn’t the only story of this Windows 95 exhibit. An operating system is software, after all. The team has plenty of software running. Some highlights are Kidpix, MS-paint, Lego Island, LucasArts Full Throttle, Duke Nukem 3D, Word 97, and Space Cadet Pinball, which came with the Plus! expansion pack.  There is a huge array of original boxes for Windows 95 software. It’s a nostalgia trip to see software in boxes,  especially in all those bright 90’s colors.

The various versions of Windows 95 are also represented. [Ms-Dos5] and [Commodore Z] are running all major versions from Chicago beta 73g to Windows 95 C / OSR2.5.

If you’re old enough to remember 1995, the Windows 95 launch event was a big deal. Windows 3.0 series was five years old at that point.  Millions of people owned PC compatible computers and were ready for something new and flashy, and Windows 95 delivered.  Thanks to [Commodore Z] and [Ms-Dos5] keeping this bit of internet history alive.

The Perfect Pi Pico Portable Computer

Por: Adam Fabio
22 Febrero 2025 at 12:00

[Abe] wanted the perfect portable computer. He has a DevTerm, but it didn’t quite fit his needs. This is Hackaday after all, so he loaded up his favorite CAD software and started designing. The obvious choice here would be a Raspberry Pi. But [Abe] didn’t want to drop in a Linux computer — he was going for something a bit smaller.

An RP2040 Pico would be a perfect fit. Driving a display with the Pico can be eat a lot of resources though. The solution was a PicoVision from Pimoroni. PicoVision uses two RP2040 chips. One drives an HDMI port, while the other is free to run application software. This meant a standard HDMI screen could be used.

The keyboard was a bit harder. After a lot of searching, [Abe] found an IR remote designed for smart TVs. The QWERTY keyboard was the perfect size but didn’t have an interface he could use. He fixed that with an adapter PCB including an I2C GPIO expander chip. A bit of I2C driver software later, and he had a working input keyboard.

Hardware doesn’t do anything without software though. The software running on the handheld is called Slime OS, and the source is available at [Abe’s] GitHub. It’s a launcher, with support for applications written in python. [Abe] has a few basic demos working, but he’s looking for help to get more features up and running.

Although it wasn’t quite what [Abe] was after, our own [Donald Papp] came away fairly impressed when he gave the DevTerm a test drive back in 2022. Something to consider if you’re looking for a Linux handheld and not quite ready to build one yourself.

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