Bill Gates' way of insuring that computers never really got faster,It could be argued the other way; Moore's law allowed cartoon
interfaces.
just more complex.
Bill Gates' way of insuring that computers never really got faster,It could be argued the other way; Moore's law allowed cartoon
interfaces.
IBM bought 30% of Intel to keep Intel afloat (then sold the stock
to keep themselves afloat). IBM also gave Intel their Engineering
Design System (which Intel had rewrite to make usableso they
could design something as complicated as a '286. The memory IP may
have been in that deal, don't remember.
Keith said:It could be argued the other way; Moore's law allowed cartoon
interfaces.
Any way you slice it, I think it's still a fair statement that GUIs usually
aren't the limiting factor in computer performance these days, but they have
made PCs tremendously more accessible to the average person... something
like the old CP/M WordStar or the DOS WordPerfect would *never* have passed
the "Grandma" test, even though they were both good-quality, highly-capable
programs for their day.
The lovely thing about all this power to make computers accessible is
that it has resulted in excellent engineering machines being made
available a price just about anyone can afford. Snappy floating-point
and 3-D graphics for parametric CAD and number crunching ability for
SPICE and other simulations. I'd sure hate to be stuck in the old days
of sluggish CPUS and tiresome math co-processors.
Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
that it has resulted in excellent engineering machines being made
available a price just about anyone can afford. Snappy floating-point
and 3-D graphics for parametric CAD and number crunching ability for
SPICE and other simulations. I'd sure hate to be stuck in the old days
of sluggish CPUS and tiresome math co-processors.
Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
It could be argued the other way; Moore's law allowed cartoon
interfaces.
and 3-D graphics for parametric CAD and number crunching ability for
SPICE and other simulations. I'd sure hate to be stuck in the old days
of sluggish CPUS and tiresome math co-processors.
Best regards,
Spehro Pefhany
asfaik.And Motorola took the 6800 guys to court. So they changed it into 6502
asfaik.
The Intersil (Siliconix?) 6500 line predates the Motorola 6800 line by over
a year. There should not have been any lawsuits between them, the designs
and instruction sets were far too different. I have used both.
That's why some companyes hire they programmer. Despite the "free" source..
I did some work on vfc driver in linux/Sparc and was horrified by the kernel
interfaces lack of abstraction and orthogonality. You could try the BSD
family of operating systems they have the policy of "It rights, it works".
Rather than "It works, it right" or "It's good enough" .. for the moment..
I find BSD systems be one of the most stable os so far.
IBM did try to sell a good bus system with the Microchannel but being
proprietary, it never really took off.
I still think the old PS/2s are the hardiest PC type machines ever
built.
It could be argued the other way; Moore's law allowed cartoon
interfaces.
I'd argue that the PS/2 didn't fail.
But the micro-channel bus that is found on them did.
To-Email- said:Amen! I started out doing Spice 2G6 on a VAX780, all text-based :-(
Yeah, I like Rocky and Bullwinkle too.Saturation into a cartoon world with a cartoon-watching user based forced
cartoon interfaces.
I knew we would figure out what you were sooner or later...
Was that lie stated publicly or in private conversation..?
(ie one can prove they lied)
Anyway the x86 instruction set is a hodgepodge compared to m68k. So it doesn't
matter too much..
Richard Henry said:And the worst is getting into a rental car at night when it is raining and
the rear window is fogged up.