This video it's about running PCI-Express cards on Windows 98—an operating system that predates the PCI-Express standard and was never originally intended to support modern hardware. However, since PCI-Express was designed with backward compatibility in mind - this standard is functionally the same as PCI as far as Windows 98 is concerned. Yes, PCI-E was designed to be backward-compatible with existing operating systems and doesn’t require any system-level updates! As long as we have the right drivers, we’re good to go! This box was purchased from a small national dealer for a total of $49.64, including shipping. It contains PCI-Express hardware that is compatible with Windows 9x operating systems and also with every other Windows released after, including Windows 11. Contents of the Box: *Delock PCI Express Card (4x USB 2.0 external + 1x internal) – $18.39 *Dell Network Card (1-Port 10/100/1000 PCI-E, BCM-95722A2202G) – $7.36 *nVidia Quadro FX 4500 (512MB DDR3, 256-bit Graphics Card, VCQFX4500) – $18.39 Shipping Cost: $5.50 Total Cost: $49.64