Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!helios!tamuts!dlb5404 From: dlb5404@tamuts.tamu.edu (Daryl Biberdorf) Newsgroups: comp.unix.amiga Subject: Re: Amiga 3000UX, X, OpenLook, Motif, Color, A2410, Etc. (somewhat long) Summary: Sun sucks silicon Message-ID: <13710@helios.TAMU.EDU> Date: 25 Mar 91 17:16:36 GMT References: <1991Mar20.211652.3247@kessner.denver.co.us>> Sender: usenet@helios.TAMU.EDU Organization: Texas A&M University Lines: 25 In article jac@gandalf.llnl.gov (James A. Crotinger) writes: > I guess I'm missing something. Sun's IPC *lists* for $10K (our >price, $6K) and is every bit as complete as the A3000UX, coming with >16" color monitor, ethernet, 200 Meg hard drive, 8 Meg ram, SunOS 4.1 >and OpenWindows (which includes a lot of stuff that CBM's OPEN LOOK >software doesn't have). What additional software do you have to buy >for this that you wouldn't have to buy for the Amiga? (And is the >software you want even available on the Amiga). Assuming the 3000UX ships with an ANSI C compiler, that's one thing you wouldn't have to buy! I find it totally ludicrous that an established, respected workstation vendor like Sun still doesn't give me a full ANSI compiler. Someone correct me if I'm wrong on this, but I still can't find a way to get a statement like "char filename[]="data.dat"" to compile without an illegal aggregate initialization error on the new Sun 4/4xx we have here. It works fine under the xlc compiler under IBM's AIX, however. Kinda odd that you have to use gcc if you want an ANSI compiler on the Sun.... --Daryl Biberdorf, dlb5404@{tamuts,rigel}.tamu.edu Texas A&M University