Wow, those came out when I was there, I've done a ton of work on those
machines. The first Sun cluster was built from them. But I've never
seen that ad before, it's classic Sun.
On Wed, Jul 17, 2019 at 11:36:43PM +0800, Jason Stevens wrote:
Funny you mention that, I recently pulled this ad from
SUN:
https://books.google.com.hk/books/content?id=GTwEAAAAMBAJ&hl=en-US&…
These days, there???s absolutely no limit to the things you can add to your PCs.
Coprocessors. VGA cards. Large scale monitors. Network cards.
But no matter how many thousands of dollars you pour into your PCs, they still can???t
give you what you get with every Sun workstation. The screaming-hot performance. The
multi-tasking. The high-resolution graphics. And the built-in networking.
And now, we???re introducing a new workstation that makes all the shortcomings of your
PCs even more obvious.
SPARCstation??? IPC.
At $8,995*, it???s the lowest cost, full-color RISC workstation in the world. By far. In
fact, it???s about the same price as a high-performance 386 PC. But just look at the
difference???.
Sent from Mail for Windows 10
From: Larry McVoy
Sent: Wednesday, July 17, 2019 11:11 PM
To: arnold(a)skeeve.com
Cc: tuhs(a)tuhs.org
Subject: Re: [TUHS] Old 386 Unix Versions, was: Re: PCC for the i386
On Wed, Jul 17, 2019 at 02:10:14AM -0600, arnold(a)skeeve.com wrote:
emanuel stiebler <emu(a)e-bbes.com> wrote:
On 2019-07-11 18:50, A. P. Garcia wrote:
On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 12:31 PM Clem cole
<clemc(a)ccc.com> wrote:
Did Sun have anything to do with that? I seem to
recall something
called "Interactive Unix" for the 386, possibly marketed by Sun...
"Interactive Unix" was pretty nice back than.
Anybody remembers ESIX? Still have the document wall for that ...
Cheers
Sun had a '386 based system in early 90s-ish called the Road Runner.
I never saw it. It ran SunOS 4.x and I think was discontinued by the
time Solaris 2.x came along.
Yep, can confirm. I was a fan but the powers that were at Sun at the
time just didn't want competition for SPARC. Which was sort of silly,
a 386 was nowhere near as fast as the SPARC chips of the day, that was
when RISC actually made sense. But perhaps they had a crystal ball
and could see that x86 was going to be as fast or faster down the
road? I tend to doubt it, they really looked down on the 386.