Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!uunet!stanford.edu!neon.Stanford.EDU!torrie From: torrie@cs.stanford.edu (Evan Torrie) Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.advocacy Subject: Re: An interesting idea... Message-ID: <1991May8.013806.14640@neon.Stanford.EDU> Date: 8 May 91 01:38:06 GMT References: <1991May3.200546.16303@sbcs.sunysb.edu> <1991May7.235145.12420@sbcs.sunysb.edu> Sender: torrie@neon.Stanford.EDU (Evan James Torrie) Organization: Computer Science Department, Stanford University, Ca , USA Lines: 22 dtiberio@eeserv1.ic.sunysb.edu (David Tiberio) writes: >In article melling@cs.psu.edu (Michael D Mellinger) writes: >> >> Unless nExt is making 30 mip custom chips, I think every system will soon >> have 50 mip chips (that is if they have enough expansion slots; I would >> hate to have to throw away a computer just because it has no expansion >> slots). >> >>nExt doesn't make microprocessors they buy them from Motorola. You >>know, the company that makes the CPU for the Amiga. > Oh, I thought the Amiga uses a 6502 chip. Are you sure Motorola makes 6502s? I hope you're being sarcastic here (no :-)'s though?) -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Evan Torrie. Stanford University, Class of 199? torrie@cs.stanford.edu "And in the death, as the last few corpses lay rotting in the slimy thoroughfare, the shutters lifted in inches, high on Poacher's Hill..."