sneakers@heimat.UUCP (Dan "Sneakers" Schein) (11/30/88)
s you mean line eater!] The following is taken directly from the Dec 88 issue of UnixWorld (Pg 59) from an article called "Apple Conquers The UNIX/68000 PC Market". (Without permission of course ;-) ----<START>---- COMMODORE RAISES STEAM FOR UNIX Commodore's Amiga 2000 - in beta testing at press time - uses a DMA coprocessor slot to hold a 68020/68030 processor running a full implemenation of UNIX system V.3.1. The Amiga 2000 comes in three configurations: a 68020 with 4 megabytes of 32-bit memory, a 68030 with 4 megabytes of 32-bit memory, and a 68030 with 20 megabytes of 32-bit memory. (The Amiga 2000 actually uses a 68000 processor and three custom chips for graphics, sound, and multitasking; the 68020/030 chips are coprocessors that plug into a direct memory access, or DMA slot.) All three models run at a clock speed of 33 MHz. Hard disks are available in 60-, 80-, and 100-megabyte sizes. Ethernet, TCP/IP, and NFS will all be supported. As many as seven terminals can be connected to the Amiga 2000, each connected to the host through an RS-232 expansion card. According to Commodore, the Amiga 2000 is very fast. "We've achieved a benchmark of 6200 Dhrystones", says Dr. Henri Rubin, chief operating officer of Commodore International. Commodore hopes to use raw performance as the enticement for the university market. "Real performance is what sells in the university market and to VARs in niche markets," says Rubin. "We feel that the Amiga 2000's performance will upstage both [Apple and IBM]". Rubin challenges analysts to run their own benchmarks rather than take his word. Commodore will not sell the Amiga 2000 directly to business users. Instead, it will rely on VARs who can provide applications-level support. "In business applications, the importance of support overshadows all else," says Rubin. Like Atari, Commodore's success with its UNIX machine will be heavily dependent on the performance of its VARs. Commodore's move to UNIX is based on pragmatism. "English is a complex and illogical language, yet it is still the most widely used," says Rubin, using English as a metaphor for UNIX. "Purists take delight in the inconsistencies that frustrate others. Yet if the language is widley used, its technical faults become irrelevant," adds Rubin. ----<END>---- -- Dan "Sneakers" Schein {pyramid|rutgers|uunet}!cbmvax!heimat!sneakers Sneakers Computing 2455 McKinley Ave. Of course heimat is an Amiga. West Lawn, PA 19609 Doesn't everyone run UUCP & UseNet on an Amiga? Call: BERKS AMIGA BBS - 60+ Megs - 24 Hrs - 3/12/2400 Baud - 215/678-7691