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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!menudo.uh.edu!nuchat!steve
- From: steve@nuchat.sccsi.com (Steve Nuchia)
- Subject: Re: Free software and the future of support for Diamond products
- Message-ID: <1992Sep14.230555.25686@nuchat.sccsi.com>
- Keywords: Diamond, free-software
- Organization: South Coast Computing Services, Inc. Houston
- References: <1992Sep12.035549.4743@zeos.com> <1992Sep13.142036.26842@nuchat.sccsi.com> <c3xn+a=.kwan@netcom.com>
- Date: Mon, 14 Sep 1992 23:05:55 GMT
- Lines: 44
-
- In article <c3xn+a=.kwan@netcom.com> kwan@netcom.com (Kwan-Seng Low) writes:
- >In article <1992Sep13.142036.26842@nuchat.sccsi.com> steve@nuchat.sccsi.com (Steve Nuchia) writes:
- >>not buy undocumented hardware. Vote with your wallet.
-
- >I'm not sure what you really mean here, undocumented hardware. Any documented
- >hardware would expose most of the vendor's proprietary design, at least the
-
- Hogwash. My beard has hardly any grey in it, and I have worked on
- systems where every board and every peripheral came with a reasonably
- thick manual. These manuals used to have chapter titles like "theory
- of operation" and "programming model". Sometimes they had complete
- schematics, more often just very good block diagrams. Sample code too.
-
- In the PC market you get a little bifold pamplet that tells you how
- to take the lid off your computer without sticking any appendages
- in the fan. Grrrr.
-
- > If none of the vendor willing to reveal how to set clock on their s3
- >based card, maybe us the users might consider design our own.
- ...
- >in any large electronics shop (e.g. Fry's in Bay Area). Complete schematics,
- >parts list, how to obtain it, complete doc. on how to build it, everything
- >available on public domain.
- > People has been selling hardware kit for some time, come to think about
- >it, it's something that can be done. In this case, we just have a very narrow
- >focus; we want to build a public domain hardware design that's specifically
-
- I've done that once for a serial board (though I do hold copyright on the
- design files) and it works OK. My serial board comes with schematics
- and PAL equations, and is available as a kit or assembled. The netlist
- and Orcad files are available if somebody wants to customize it.
-
- I think it would be very difficult to compete with the mass-produced
- VGA cards. If I was going to build a video card I would either shoot
- for radical simplicty or build something that you could run the whole
- X server on.
-
- > any response is welcome, just want to test this idea is making sense.
- >It would eliminate the dependence on vendors when it come to writing display
- >driver.
-
- The idea makes sense technically, but not economically in my opinion.
- --
- Steve Nuchia South Coast Computing Services, Inc. (713) 661-3301
-