A/UX on ci
Alan Mimms
abm at alan.aux.apple.com
Wed Dec 12 04:54:30 AEST 1990
In article <10780.27639eba at ul.ie>, leonardm at ul.ie writes:
|> Any point in trying to run AUX on anything less than an fx? I'd like to save
|> money by using a ci or cx. Anybody try it?
|>
|> +Martin+
I'd like to point out that almost everyone in the A/UX group at Apple runs
A/UX on a MacII or MacIIx or MacIIcx just so we are poigniently (sp?)
aware of any performance problems. A/UX 2.0 and later are QUITE useable
on MacII performance class machines (MacII, MacIIx, MacSE30, MacIIcx).
The MacIIci is QUITE good -- especially for X11, since direct mapped
CPU RAM is driving the display and is thus faster for things to be drawn
in.
I just didn't want anyone to get the idea that A/UX REQUIRES a many-MIPS
processor: it does NOT. ALL of the X11 code was ported on my boss's
MacIIx. It DOES, however, help to have a lot of RAM; 8MB is starting
to look kinda small if you're running a big Macintosh world and a lot of
X11 clients or compiles or something. Not that you can't do it, but it
is a LOT more palatable if you have 16MB or more.
--
Alan Mimms (alan at apple.com, ...!apple!alan) | My opinions are generally
A/UX X group | pretty worthless, but
Apple Computer | they *are* my own...
"Laugha whila you can, monkey boy..." -- John Whorfin in Buckaroo Bonzai
"Never rub another man's rhubarb" -- The Joker in BatMan
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