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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!spool.mu.edu!agate!ames!news.hawaii.edu!lumchan!patten
- From: patten@lumchan.ifa.hawaii.edu (Brian Michael Patten)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun.misc
- Subject: Re: What is a 386i???
- Message-ID: <1992Nov24.053604.19053@news.Hawaii.Edu>
- Date: 24 Nov 92 05:36:04 GMT
- References: <Uf3E1Pu00Uh_M2JI4=@andrew.cmu.edu> <15590@auspex-gw.auspex.com> <wargopl.722368905@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>
- Sender: root@news.Hawaii.Edu (News Service)
- Organization: Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii
- Lines: 51
- Nntp-Posting-Host: lumchan.ifa.hawaii.edu
-
- In article <wargopl.722368905@sun.soe.clarkson.edu>, wargopl@sun.soe.clarkson.edu (Peter L. Wargo) writes:
- |> guy@Auspex.COM (Guy Harris) writes:
- |>
- |> >> I have a friend interested in buying a used Sun 386i but either of
- |> >>use have any idea what exactly it is. I assume that it really a ibm pc
- |> >>clone with sold buy Sun which happens to come with a Sun os installed.
- |> >>Right???
- |>
- |> >Wrong.
- |>
- |> >It's more like a Sun workstation that happens to come with a 386 and
- |> >(optional?) 387 as its processor, and that happens to have an AT bus as
- |> >its expansion bus.
- |>
-
- The machine came with a 386 and 387 on board. There was an optional
- Weitek FPU that could be added on later.
-
-
- |> >It has Sun-style frame buffers, and Sun-style serial port chips, and a
- |> >Sun-style network interface; I think other peripherals are also
- |> >Sun-style peripherals.
- |>
-
- Yep.
-
- |> It was also pretty much of a flop. Like I told one person:
- |> "imagine IBM deciding to build a PC based on the 68030 and make it
- |> compatible with MS-DOS."
- |>
- |> -Pete
-
-
- Poor analogy Peter, but we've been through this before, haven't we?
- MC68030 chips can run MS-DOS just fine. It's all in the software in this
- case. The 386i *is* a Sun workstation that also happens to live a
- double life as a DOS emulation box. I run mine as a Unix workstation
- only, and it works wonderfully.
-
- The 386i was a "flop" (as was the Sun 3/80) only in that it was released
- just before SPARC came on the market. After SPARC appeared, interest in the
- 680x0- and 386-based machines quickly died out. The lack of interest was on
- the part of Sun, not the consumers.
-
-
- -----
-
- Brian M. Patten
- Institute for Astronomy
- University of Hawaii
- patten@lumchan.ifa.hawaii.edu
-