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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!olivea!gossip.pyramid.com!pyramid!infmx!aland
- From: aland@informix.com (Colonel Panic)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Subject: Re: The Death of x86 Arch. ?
- Message-ID: <1992Dec30.064135.8443@informix.com>
- Date: 30 Dec 92 06:41:35 GMT
- References: <1gqsv5INNiel@hpscit.sc.hp.com> <1992Dec29.234248.28259@informix.com> <1992Dec30.032305.21871@netcom.com>
- Sender: news@informix.com (Usenet News)
- Organization: Helen Keller Bondurant's Performance Driving School for the Blind
- Lines: 32
-
- In article <1992Dec30.032305.21871@netcom.com> timbol@netcom.com (Mike Timbol) writes:
- >In article <1992Dec29.234248.28259@informix.com> aland@informix.com (Colonel Panic) writes:
- >>In article <1gqsv5INNiel@hpscit.sc.hp.com> matthias@nsr.hp.com (Matthias Kamm) writes:
- >>>Imagine this:
- >>>You're "upgrading" operating systems and currently use MSDOS 5.0
- >>>and want to keep the investment you've made in PC s/w safe. Will you
- >>>run your software on an x86 platform, or buy a "PC" running windows
- >>>NT with an Alpha processor, say, with 10x the computing power! I'd
- >>>BAG the antiquated x86 family and go with RISC.
- >>
- >>Eh? You're expecting to run your x86 DOS 5.0 executables on an Alpha
- >>machine running NT? What else did you ask Santa for this year?
- >
- >Actually, this will work, provided the application doesn't directly access
- >the hardware (as many games do). But for things like WordPerfect and
- >Lotus 1-2-3, there shouldn't be any problem.
-
- If you're saying that NT on Alpha will be running as an x86 emulator,
- then 1) that surprises me, and 2) I would then dispute the "10x the computing
- power" figure quoted by Mr. Kamm.
-
- Plus, I think you're seriously underestimating the number of DOS apps that
- directly access hardware. Also, any of *those* applications should run
- just fine in DOS-under-UNIX implementations *today*. So, what exactly
- is the NT advantage?
-
- --
- Alan Denney aland@informix.com {pyramid|uunet}!infmx!aland
-
- "The mist clung to the mountain the same way a thirteen-year-old girl clings
- to her boyfriend, although the mountain wasn't thinking about "getting lucky."
- (1990 Bulwer-Lytton Fiction Contest entry)
-