Had to deal with it then because it was the only option, and until my late teens the only pc in the house was in the home office and it was never just left running.
Now that near silent machines are easy to achieve though, and my pc is right by my bed and on nearly 24/7, I see no need to suffer like I used to (it’s also at least partly a sensory processing disorder thing, because I hear components most people never notice).
Had to deal with it then because it was the only option, and until my late teens the only pc in the house was in the home office and it was never just left running.
Now that near silent machines are easy to achieve though, and my pc is right by my bed and on nearly 24/7, I see no need to suffer like I used to (it’s also at least partly a sensory processing disorder thing, because I hear components most people never notice).
I miss loud harddrive sounds. Sometimes you thought the pc crashed, and suddenly it would rev up and you’d go:“heck yeah, tubular.”
Nothing’s keeping you from throwing a complete of old disks in your tower and through the power of zfs making an awesome raid for backups
Or building a flopinator to play music with
Compact Flash cards are popular as an HDD replacement in retro computing – with the downside of no sound.
Luckily people have made a device to emulate the sound of a real hard drive.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
a device to bring back the sound of a real hard drive.
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.