Newsgroups: comp.sys.apple2
Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!wuarchive!m.cs.uiuc.edu!ernie!bazyar
From: bazyar@ernie (Jawaid Bazyar)
Subject: Re: AE Rumors
Message-ID: <1991Mar24.203009.2055@m.cs.uiuc.edu>
Sender: news@m.cs.uiuc.edu (News Database (admin-Mike Schwager))
Reply-To: bazyar@cs.uiuc.edu (Jawaid Bazyar)
Organization: Mutation Testing Facility, University of Illinois
References: <13008@ucrmath.ucr.edu> <1991Mar24.091116.27945@mthvax.cs.miami.edu> <13028@ucrmath.ucr.edu>
Date: Sun, 24 Mar 91 20:30:09 GMT
Lines: 18

In article <13028@ucrmath.ucr.edu> rhyde@ucrmath.ucr.edu (randy hyde) writes:

>Ultimately, we cannot place the blame on Apple for the demise of the Apple II
>line.  The 65xxx   processor technology simply hasn't kept up.  The 65832,
>if it really exists, is too little too late.  25Mhz Zip chips may make a great
>niche product, but you can't get the devices in quantity (in fact, any quantity)
>today.  And it's questionable what the system performance would be like when
>they get stuck in a machine with 80ns RAM.

   Uhh, last time I checked, 33MHz '386s used 80ns RAM.  There's a thing
called a "cache" that interfaces high-speed CPUs and slow memory.
The GS accelerators have one.  You put it together and figure it out.

--
Jawaid Bazyar               |"I'm sure K&R have never heard of Mike." 
Senior/Computer Engineering |
bazyar@cs.uiuc.edu          |"That's okay. I'm sure Mike's never heard of K&R".
   Apple II Forever!        |  (discussion about Orca/C)
