Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!aplcen!haven!mimsy!mojo!russotto From: russotto@eng.umd.edu (Matthew T. Russotto) Newsgroups: comp.sys.mac.hardware Subject: Re: SE/30 travel restrictions? Keywords: Travel, Export, License, 68020, 68030 Message-ID: <1990Sep18.172200.3963@eng.umd.edu> Date: 18 Sep 90 17:22:00 GMT References: <1990Sep18.120344.1716@nlm.nih.gov> Sender: news@eng.umd.edu (The News System) Organization: College of Engineering, Maryversity of Uniland, College Park Lines: 20 In article <1990Sep18.120344.1716@nlm.nih.gov> powsner@csb1.nlm.nih.gov (Seth M Powsner) writes: >Are there any travel restrictions on higher end 68000 processors? >I thought I'd heard you couldn't take a 68020 or 68030 to Warsaw >Pact countries. That was a while back. Who do you check with these >days? (What about 80386 or 486 chips?) I believe all these restrictions were removed for most Warsaw Pact nations recently. Obviously, check first! >More important maybe-- how well does an SE/30 cope with the variable >power available in countries outside of Western Europe, Australia, etc? If power is as bad as my sister claims it is in Moscow, badly-- you need to have a continuous supply of SOME sort of power.... -- Matthew T. Russotto russotto@eng.umd.edu russotto@wam.umd.edu .sig under construction, like the rest of this campus.