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- Path: sparky!uunet!crdgw1!rdsunx.crd.ge.com!ariel!davidsen
- From: davidsen@ariel.crd.GE.COM (william E Davidsen)
- Newsgroups: comp.arch
- Subject: Re: Def of a workstation (a lark)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan5.151054.12967@crd.ge.com>
- Date: 5 Jan 93 15:10:54 GMT
- References: <1993Jan3.052930.27869@wam.umd.edu>,<1i5vdmINN3ek@cs.widener.edu> <1993Jan04.155544.18325@eng.umd.edu> <1993Jan4.224018.16370@netcom.com> <1993Jan05.004806.14107@news.mentorg.com>
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- Reply-To: davidsen@crd.ge.com (bill davidsen)
- Organization: GE Corporate R&D Center, Schenectady NY
- Lines: 25
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- In article <1993Jan05.004806.14107@news.mentorg.com>, mbutts@mbutts.mentorg.com (Mike Butts) writes:
- | The fundamental difference between a workstation and a well-configured 486
- | PC is the software-readable serial number (hostid) in the workstation.
- |
- | Think about it.
-
- You may be right. Certainly if you accept a Sun 4/100, or a
- Sun3/anything, or an HP 750 as workstations, you have a hard time
- finding something lacking in a good 486+UNIX setup.
-
- Oddly, when we split our site into two class B subnets (out of IP
- addresses) the "PC net" included a bunch of Suns used for NFS mounts
- from DOS and TOPS mounts from Macs. The workstation subnet includes a
- number of Intel based workstations. A lot comes down to "what you do
- with it."
-
- The person who said that a workstation must use a GUI certainly let
- out Sun, the default boot mode is single screen dumb terminal. I guess
- that makes the Mac a workstation because it *does* boot a GUI.
-
- For my money, if it runs UNIX (or POSIX) and supports TCP and NFS it's
- a workstation. Otherwise it's a something else.
- --
- bill davidsen, GE Corp. R&D Center; Box 8; Schenectady NY 12345
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