Gateway 2000 486 DX2/66

residential

The cow-spotted box sits beside the tower like a badge of membership in a club that no longer exists: the mail-order PC revolution, when you could call a number in South Dakota and a man named Ted Waitt would ship you the future in a box decorated like a Holstein. The Gateway 2000 486 DX2/66 arrived with everything — Sound Blaster 16, CD-ROM drive, 8 megabytes of RAM, a 14-inch monitor that could display 65,536 colors. It was the machine families saved for. The machine that turned a spare bedroo...

Located in Conventional Memory.