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No, I was talking about 8 bit chips. The Motorola 68000 was an excellent chip. Its registers were a full 32 bits. It had a good instruction set. The datapath was only 16 bits. Most of the workstation companies used the 68010 because of its onboard memory management module needed for multi-tasking/multi-user systems. I worked for 2 companies that used it in their workstations, Raytheon Data Systems, which could never get anything out the door, and Cadmus Computer. Cadmus developed several things. We had a version of NFS (before Sun) that was tightly integrated into the kernel using the Ethernet protocol. Another thing they developed was a Macintosh like window system that they sold to Apple before they went out of business. The Atari XT and the Commodore Amiga were 68000 boxes. "Tom Buskey" wrote: > There was also the m68000 (unless you meant the 68000 when you wrote > 6800 above). The Macintoshes started on them (with 128k of RAM!). Sun, > Apollo, HP, and others based thier workstations on them. There's some > rumors that IBM considered it for the PC but rejected it because > Motorola was the only source. -- Jerry Feldman <gaf at blu.org> Boston Linux and Unix user group http://www.blu.org PGP key id:C5061EA9 PGP Key fingerprint:053C 73EC 3AC1 5C44 3E14 9245 FB00 3ED5 C506 1EA9
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