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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.pen
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!eclnews!usenet
- From: dale@manet.wustl.edu (Dale Frye)
- Subject: Re: RE: Newton
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.163809.16146@wuecl.wustl.edu>
- Sender: usenet@wuecl.wustl.edu (News Administrator)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: degas
- Reply-To: dale@manet.wustl.edu
- Organization: Washington University, School of Engineering, St. Louis MO
- References: <1jmvr0INN151@ginger.csv.warwick.ac.uk>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 16:38:09 GMT
- Lines: 37
-
- In article <1jmvr0INN151@ginger.csv.warwick.ac.uk> phudv@csv.warwick.ac.uk
- (Mr R B Birkby) writes:
- >
- >
- > In article <1993Jan21.171710.11216@wuecl.wustl.edu>
- > dale@manet.wustl.edu (Dale Frye) writes:
- >
- > >>
- > >>> ... Active Book worked with Acorn to design the ARM610...
- > >>
- > >>i'm not sure you have your fact straight
- > >>on this, either. but that's all right.
- > >----------
- > >As far as Active Book helping design the ARM610, I'll have to dig up
- the
- > >article on that but I thought I had it straight. Maybe I'm off by a
- little
- > >bit. Maybe my source was wrong. Please correct me.
- >
- >
- > How can Active book have helped design the ARM610? That processor was
- only
- > specified (by Apple) in November 1991. After the Active Book company had
- > changed architectures.
- > I thought Herrman Hauser had a macro cell implimentation of the ARM2
- produced
- > in 1989.
- >
-
-
- I have been corrected on that via email. It was the ARM 2 that Active Book
- helped design. This information came from a former employee of Active
- Book. Sorry for misinformation.
-
- Dale Frye
- Pen Lab
- Washington University in St. Louis
-