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Date:      Tue, 11 Apr 1995 10:07:18 -0700 (PDT)
From:      "Rodney W. Grimes" <rgrimes@gndrsh.aac.dev.com>
To:        taob@gate.sinica.edu.tw (Brian Tao)
Cc:        freebsd-current@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: ASUS www mirror
Message-ID:  <199504111707.KAA03963@gndrsh.aac.dev.com>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.BSI.3.91.950411172717.27404S-100000@aries.ibms.sinica.edu.tw> from "Brian Tao" at Apr 11, 95 05:29:50 pm

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> 
> On Mon, 10 Apr 1995, Rodney W. Grimes wrote:
> > 
> > Carefull with them there model numbers dropping parts of them can
> > lead to the wrong board being talked about and/or facts about them
> > not being quite factual.
> 
>     No kidding!  This lead to much confusion a couple months ago when
> I went shopping for a second system on which to build FreeBSD.  My
> general impression was that the 486SP3 is "bad" and the 486SP3G is
> "good".  However, I ended up with a 486AP4 because the dealer,
> strangely, said he was not able to get any SP3G's.  Seems like ASUS
> earmarks close to 100% of their SP3G's for export... :(

And every one keeps droping the PCI/I- or PVI- or PCI/E- off the front
of these part numbers, this is just as bad :-(.

I haven't done any of the PVI-486AP4 boards so I don't know how
fast they are compared to the PCI/I-486SP3G, does your board
require simms to be installed in pairs or can you install just
1 72 pin simm and have it work.  If the later you lost quite a
bit in memory performance compared to the PCI/I-486SP3G as the
latter is about the only board I have seen lately that uses
memory interleaving to get real performance out of a 486 chip.

The PCI/I-486SP3G with a 486DX/4-100 CPU chip competes very
well against most 60mHz Pentium systems, outperforming some
at a price that is 60% lower.

The PVI-486SP3 looks to be a bad choice of motherboards for
Unix, it only accepts 2 simms total :-(.


-- 
Rod Grimes                                      rgrimes@gndrsh.aac.dev.com
Accurate Automation Company                   Custom computers for FreeBSD



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