You never heard of the infamous Katmai? Win98SE, the Swiss Cheese of OS was the perfect vehicle to slip it in.
They even had a fix for it but this is pristine NSA Quality OG sneaky, and today, and today only, because I like the cut of your jib, I will throw i the Full-sized Gaming tower and a VooDoo3 graphics card, for a Bill Gatesway Deal with the Devil price of $666
But searching is going to drive the price up. Thisis all I could find now and I hneed to get some poppy seeds for my sour jar:
The Pentium III was the first x86 CPU to include a unique, retrievable, identification number, called Processor Serial Number (PSN). A Pentium III's PSN can be read by software[20] through the CPUID instruction if this feature has not been disabled through the BIOS.
On November 29, 1999, the Science and Technology Options Assessment (STOA) Panel of the European Parliament, following their report on electronic surveillance techniques asked parliamentary committee members to consider legal measures that would "prevent these chips from being installed in the computers of European citizens."[21]
Intel eventually removed the PSN feature from Tualatin-based Pentium IIIs, and the feature was absent in Pentium 4 and Pentium M.
A largely equivalent feature, the Protected Processor Identification Number (PPIN) was later added to x86 CPUs with little public notice, starting with Intel's Ivy Bridge architecture and compatible Zen 2 AMD CPUs. It is implemented as a set of model-specific registers and is useful for machine check exception handling.[22]
One of the softwae sites from that era no doubt has one.
$666 going omce...
They even had a fix for it but this is pristine NSA Quality OG sneaky, and today, and today only, because I like the cut of your jib, I will throw i the Full-sized Gaming tower and a VooDoo3 graphics card, for a Bill Gatesway Deal with the Devil price of $666
But searching is going to drive the price up. Thisis all I could find now and I hneed to get some poppy seeds for my sour jar:
The Pentium III was the first x86 CPU to include a unique, retrievable, identification number, called Processor Serial Number (PSN). A Pentium III's PSN can be read by software[20] through the CPUID instruction if this feature has not been disabled through the BIOS.
On November 29, 1999, the Science and Technology Options Assessment (STOA) Panel of the European Parliament, following their report on electronic surveillance techniques asked parliamentary committee members to consider legal measures that would "prevent these chips from being installed in the computers of European citizens."[21]
Intel eventually removed the PSN feature from Tualatin-based Pentium IIIs, and the feature was absent in Pentium 4 and Pentium M.
A largely equivalent feature, the Protected Processor Identification Number (PPIN) was later added to x86 CPUs with little public notice, starting with Intel's Ivy Bridge architecture and compatible Zen 2 AMD CPUs. It is implemented as a set of model-specific registers and is useful for machine check exception handling.[22]
One of the softwae sites from that era no doubt has one.
$666 going omce...
Statistics: Posted by Trihexagonal — 2025-02-04 01:08