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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.laptops
- Path: sparky!uunet!sun-barr!ames!nsisrv!nssdcs.gsfc.nasa.gov!williams
- From: williams@nssdcs.gsfc.nasa.gov (Jim Williams)
- Subject: Re: Anyone seen a Gateway 2000 Handbook?
- Message-ID: <1992Jul30.140636.27056@nsisrv.gsfc.nasa.gov>
- Keywords: handbook
- Sender: usenet@nsisrv.gsfc.nasa.gov (Usenet)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: nssdcs.gsfc.nasa.gov
- Organization: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Maryland
- References: <13268@gazette.bcm.tmc.edu> <13269@gazette.bcm.tmc.edu> <1992Jul29.215718.23325@news.Hawaii.Edu>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Thu, 30 Jul 1992 14:06:36 GMT
- Lines: 60
-
- In article <1992Jul29.215718.23325@news.Hawaii.Edu> todd@uhunix.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu (Todd Ogasawara) writes:
- >
- >The Gateway Handbook (which a Gateway rep says will not ship until August)
- >is a doubtful candidate to run Windows 3.0 or 3.1 in my opinion.
- >
- >1. It has a C&T 286 clone CPU. I've seen Windows 3.0 and 3.1 run on
- > various old 10 & 12MHz 386 boxes. The words "slow" and "sluggish" do
- > not even begin to describe the feeling you get when trying to do
- > anything on such units. I understand that turning off TrueType display
- > to the CRT speeds things up a bit. But that seems to defeat the purpose
- > of a WYSIWYG environment to me.
-
- The processor in the Handbook is NOT a 286 clone. It is an 8086
- (8088) clone. It does NOT have protected mode. The Gateway ads are
- very misleading on this. I mentioned this to the Gateway salesperson
- I spoke to yesterday and he was quite defensive about their ads.
- I've seen at least two reviews of this machine that have gotten that
- wrong, so obviously, many people are being mislead by Gateway's claim
- of "286-class performance". The upshot of this is that Windows 3.0
- would run on the handbook in Real mode only and Windows 3.1 wouldn't
- run at all.
-
- >2. The 20MB disk drive is just too small to run Windows applications
-
- The ad in front of me lists the hard drive as 40MB. That's still
- pretty small.
-
- >3. If Windows does not support the Handbook's double scan mode (640x400),
- > you would be stuck looking at a 620x200 B/W screen (no shades of gray
- > either). That would be pretty hard on the eyes.
-
- I tried to find out when I called Gateway yesterday if the double scan
- display emulates the 400 line AT&T/Olivetti adaptor, or in some other
- way make all 400 lines available to graphic applications, but the
- salesperson I spoke to didn't know.
-
- >I think the Gateway 2000 Handbook is a pretty interesting looking
- >sub-notebook. However, I don't think anyone would want to try to work with
- >Windows 3.x on it for any length of time.
- >On the other hand, it would probably be a good candidate to run something
- >like Q&A 4.0 or some reasonble collection of DOS apps that could be
- >squeezed onto a 20MB hard disk.
-
- C&T is supposedly working on a real 286 version of their chip. With
- that chip and a 60 MB disk, the Handbook would be much nicer for
- graphical applications such as Windows. The current version ought to
- run Geoworks, I suppose, but I'm not very familiar with that product.
- If I got the current Handbook, I'd probably stick with character based
- apps.
-
- >Todd Ogasawara, U. of Hawaii, Psychology Department
- >BITNET: todd@uhunix
- >INTERNET: todd@uhunix.UHCC.HAWAII.EDU
-
-
- --
- Spoken: James W. Williams Company: Hughes STX
- Internet: williams@nssdcs.gsfc.nasa.gov Phone: +1 301 286-1131
- USPS: NASA Goddard Space Flight Center; Code 633; Greenbelt, MD 20771
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