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Re: Hardware generators was: your mail
In message Sun, 19 Jun 1994 11:24:34 -0600,
Richard Johnson <[email protected]> writes:
>
> How about a SCSI device instead. Most UNIX boxes and Macs nowadays have
> a few unused SCSI IDs. The great majority of DOS machines with SCSI (all
> those new ones with CD-ROMs, etc.) have unused SCSI IDs. SCSI has the
> advantage of being rather fast, and is a cross-platform solution.
Sadly, the state of PC platform SCSI is in turmoil, at least right now.
Microsoft is working hard to convince folks that Enhanced-IDE is the
answer, and many CD-ROMs, big disks, etc. that are aimed at the mass
market are no longer SCSI, but E-IDE.
I don't think you can substantiate your claim that a "great majority of
DOS machines" have SCSI.
Worse, MS is pushing hard to push into Windows-for-Workgroups. Many OEMs
no longer ship Windows, even for standalone PCs. They ship W4Wg.
W4Wg's support for SCSI devices is a step or two down from even
W4Wg 3.10. My SCSI disk setup (1.7GB Maxtor) is significantly slower under
W4Wg 3.11 because MS changed things to the point that I no longer have
32-bit disk I/O.
Chicago is claimed to have "better" SCSI support, but I was hoping that
I could get this at least prototyped this summer. No RSN reliance
on 3rd party vendors for me, thanks.
Right now, SCSI is too high-end (Suns, HP, Macs, serious PCs, etc.)
for the market that I have in mind.
Pat
Pat Farrell Grad Student [email protected]
Department of Computer Science George Mason University, Fairfax, VA
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