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- Path: news.micron.net!news
- From: Mustang@vrb.com (Aaron Smith)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.amiga.misc
- Subject: Re: Infoworld Amiga mentions.
- Date: Mon, 22 Jan 96 08:17:07
- Organization: Virtual Reality BBS
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <19960122.8AE2C30.75E6@vrb.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: vrb.com
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- Gassee's dual-processor BeBox challenges passe PCs
-
- By Sandy Reed
-
-
- Publication Date: October 9, 1995 (Vol. 17, Issue 41)
-
- Scottsdale, Ariz. -- Developers are being asked to leave the baggage that
- comes with legacy systems behind and jump to a state-of-the-art operating
- system unveiled by a former president of Apple Computer Inc.'s product
- division.
-
- Last week during the Agenda 96 conference here, Jean-Louis Gassee, who founded
- Be Inc. in 1990, launched BeBox, a system built around dual 66-MHz PowerPC 603
- CPUs and a pre-emptive multitasking operating system that sports an integrated
- database and a C++ framework for managing multimedia objects.
-
- "Box" is an apt description for the system. The $1,600 base system, shipping
- to developers in mid-October and retail channels in January, includes a case,
- cables, the dual-CPU board, an I/O board, the operating system, and
- application development tools from Metro-werks Inc., in Austin, Texas.
-
- Buyers have to complete their own systems using monitors, drives, and other
- devices acquired from what Gassee called the "PC clone organ bank." The system
- supports IDE, ISA, SCSI, and PCI devices. It can accommodate as much as 256MB
- of RAM, and 4-processor models are planned.
-
- Be's biggest challenge will be getting application developers' support for a
- proprietary OS.
-
- "PowerPC has a tough road, and it's hard to see organizations standardizing on
- mainstream OSes going to a proprietary OS," said Richard Zwetchkenbaum, an
- analyst at International Data Corp., in Framingham, Mass. "It sounds like a
- very big roadblock. Even if it's the best OS on the market, the technology has
- to fit within industry context and the user environment."
-
- However, Denise Caruso, president of Technology Media Group, in San Francisco,
- said the BeBox has a fighting chance given the growing importance of
- distributed computing and the Internet.
-
- "It's an interesting time to introduce a new operating system because the Web
- makes the operating system argument obsolete," Caruso said. "This could be a
- wonderful platform for development of Web applications."
-
- Gassee described Be's initial customers as "audio/video geeks" and
- "technophiles."
-
- "We're not playing the legacy game," Gassee said. "The way to find what the
- mainstream will do tomorrow is to associate with the lunatic fringe today."
-
- But the road from demo to desktop is littered with great technology. Gassee
- joked that the project has been called "Amiga 96," after the Commodore system
- that broke new ground technologically but failed to attract a mass market.
-
- Thus far, Be has attracted between 25 and 30 developers working on software
- that includes an application suite, an Internet browser, and multimedia
- authoring tools.
-
- But ISVs who get the system this month will have to use Metrowerk's
- CodeWarrior tools for the Macintosh. BeBox-specific CodeWarrior tools aren't
- due until January.
-
- Deborah DeVoe contributed to this story.
-
- "Amiga, computers for people who want more than just a PC."
-
- Finger mustang@vrb.com info@vrb.com recent@vrb.com who@vrb.com
- A3000 Warped 040/40Mhz 16MB/2gigs, 17 serial ports, OS3.1
- A4000Tower 060 or PPC soon!
-