andys@men1.UUCP (Andy Sibre) (06/06/86)
HARDWARE REVIEW (sort of) BELL TECHNOLOGIES' AT-CLONE ($4995) with: 72 MB (formatted) H.D., 24 ms. access 60 MB 1/4" tape streamer 6 Port (rs-232) board SCO SYS V Rel 2.12 (extra $) 8 MHz Clock 7 MB ram 1.2 MB floppy U.S.Robotics 2400 modem (xtra $) & all necessary driver software SPEED: with little serial I/O going on, it beats a 750 VAX in almost every category. Floating point benchmarks poor until 80287 installed. With lots of serial I/O going on, such as 3 other users catting bigfiles, speed degrades noticeably. "Make"s take about as long on clone as on lightly loaded VAX (1-2 users), again with the caveat that the clone not be getting beaten up by heavy serial I/O. Serial board is of the extremely dumb type, no on-board smarts, so use of smarter board (CompuTone, etc) might improve things a bit. With 1 make, 3 edit sessions, and someone dialed in trying to mail something to East Chickenswitch, machine is usably quick for all concerned. BACKUP: The tape is a wonderful thing. I know that no one else has ever thought "rm temp*" and typed "rm temp *", but it's da**ed nice when all you have to do is grab last nite's tape 'n say "tar x <whole_da**ed_directory>", and actually HAVE it in the machine again within 5 minutes! The data rate seems to be around 650K / minute when making a tar tape. Tapes readable by Altos, & a number of other UNI-Boxes. SERIAL I/O: As said, dumb cards run slow, but don't try to substitute their own brilliant ideas for mine. (ahem!) The Bell card comes with their driver which STILL seems to have a few aspects of interest to entymologists. First and second releases of driver were a disaster, 3rd seems pretty stable if terminal is decent. Works great w/ vt-100's, vt-220's, horrible with Tandy dt-100's. Latter gets screen garbaged if I type while clone is painting screen. Modem I/O perfect. DISK: Bell sells a Toshiba 86 MB (unformatted) ST-506 interface drive that is the finest I have ever seen. FAST !!! In 2 months of use, I have had NOT ONE error of any kind on disk I/O. 4 sec. to copy 300K shar file from 1 filesystem to another. Bell sells w/ drive a modified ROM with altered drive table entry that supports 830 cylinders and 10 surfaces, so if you get SCO Xenix instead of MicroPort UNIX, you can still get a semi-reasonable sized filesystem. Advertised average assess time = 24 millisec., and having worked on a VAX w/ SI controller + Fujitsu Eagle, I BELIEVE IT !!! The darned thing is fast, it doesn't make misteaks, and it's reasonably priced ! SCO XENIX: Everything you've heard about their compiler is wrong: IT'S WORSE !!! Example; mod.sources has a "TRC" expert-system builder. It compiles just fine on a Tandy 6000 (Xenix 3.0, mc68000 CPU) and on a VAX (BSD 4.1) and on an Altos 3068 (SYS V, mc 68020). Try it on SCO w/ default cc options, you get thru the first few passes OK, then the loader sez "group DGROUP > 64K". So like a dumbbell you give cc the -M2em (or -LARGE) options. As soon as it gets past the pre-processor, it starts complaining about undefined symbols (namely, every one you've used !) and crumps. Hmmm... Rumor Control has it that SCO will release a compiler by 7/30 that actually works. We'll see. SCO's disk buffering scheme seems to work very well, speeds up disk I/O very nicely. Either because they don't know how their products work (when they do, that is) or because they haven't figured ou