From owner-freebsd-hackers Wed Feb 28 20:05:32 1996 Return-Path: owner-hackers Received: (from root@localhost) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.7.3/8.7.3) id UAA20174 for hackers-outgoing; Wed, 28 Feb 1996 20:05:32 -0800 (PST) Received: from wa3ymh.transsys.com (#6@[144.202.42.42]) by freefall.freebsd.org (8.7.3/8.7.3) with ESMTP id UAA20158 for ; Wed, 28 Feb 1996 20:05:25 -0800 (PST) Received: from wa3ymh.transsys.com (#6@localhost.TransSys.COM [127.0.0.1]) by wa3ymh.transsys.com (8.7.3/8.7.3) with ESMTP id XAA16136; Wed, 28 Feb 1996 23:04:51 -0500 (EST) Message-Id: <199602290404.XAA16136@wa3ymh.transsys.com> To: "Jordan K. Hubbard" cc: Jake Hamby , Narvi , Poul-Henning Kamp , hackers@freebsd.org From: "Louis A. Mamakos" Subject: Re: Go SCSI! Big improvement... In-reply-to: Your message of "Tue, 27 Feb 1996 11:30:59 PST." <13132.825449459@time.cdrom.com> Date: Wed, 28 Feb 1996 23:04:48 -0500 Sender: owner-hackers@freebsd.org Precedence: bulk I'll buck the trend here and praise the existance of PCI bus slots, which are a marked improvement in usability of EISA bus slots. I've got a DEC EISA 486 box at work, and it's always a pain in the butt to make work because whenever you want to plug a new card in, you have to boot the "magic EISA configuration disk". That is, once you remember where last you put it. Then you fiddle around with it, and hope you don't move things around and tempt fate. I compare this to the system I've put together at home. It's got a Tyan Titan III motherboard in it, with 4 PCI slots. I've got a #9 Motion 771 in one slot, a NCR 825 SCSI in another, and DEC PCI ethernet in the third. No muss, no fuss, all that worked fine on the first try without having to tell the BIOS any hints along the way. It's not like I've got real high-bandwidth Ethernet requirements here at home with just 3 other machines and a 56K internet connection; on the other hand, I didn't have even think about running out of IRQs, DMA channels, etc. It all Just Worked. Heck, PCI should have been the way to do Plug-and-Play, and not on the ISA bus. By the way, the only ISA bus card in the box is a GUS P-n-P sound board, and it's got its own growing pains to make it work on Windoz 95 and FreeBSD. EISA - good riddens! I dread everytime I open the machine up at work and having to invoke the spirits on the EISA config disk. I just know that it's going to get me bad one day. This nonsense is one of the stupid things they inherited for IBM MCA systems. Anyone else remember the PS/2 "reference disks" that defined the machine config? Feh. I'm really happy to have a mostly CPU independent bus in the box, so when I replace the base system with a 1GHz Alpha in a few years, I'll probably still be able to use the video board. louie