sad sad sad
Justin Zygmont
jzygmont-tEQKYFGiemxAYG7eUwYNkWD2FQJk+8+b at public.gmane.org
Mon Oct 20 21:25:56 UTC 2003
On Mon, 20 Oct 2003, Robert Brockway wrote:
> On Mon, 20 Oct 2003, Lennart Sorensen wrote:
>
> > On Sun, Oct 19, 2003 at 12:06:38AM -0400, Justin Zygmont wrote:
> > > it's been a sad day today, my 386 just breathed it's last. In memory of
> > > "the good days" when 100MB drives were monsters, I saved the 386sx bios,
> > > dip chips (ram), and the VLSI chipset. If only electronics could speak,
> > > the things that motherboard could tell. An expensive and often
> > > envied CPU in it's hayday, 386sx-16 managed to see MS and DR-DOS, SCO
> > > UNIX, and slackware linux before it's dying day. 386 was almost 14.
> >
> > I never admired the 386SX, only the DX. Chopping of half the data bus
> > of a a poor defenseless 386 just seemed cruel, all to satisfy the
> > marketing weenies. :)
>
> They were pin-compatible with late model 286s which meant they could get
> them to market quickly (by shoving them in 286 boards & makign sure the
> board didn't collapse under the higher clockspeed :) I'm not sure if
> anyone actually upgraded a 286 to a 386SX (ie, replacing the chip) but it
> was supposed to be possible.
not very likely, many boards back then weren't even socketed. sx's were a
great value for the price.
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