Linked by Thom Holwerda on Tue 13th Nov 2012 22:24 UTC
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K7 was designed also by people who came from Alpha team, it uses the EV6 bus of Alphas (there were some plans for Alphas on Slot A, IIRC - too bad they didn't come to fruition, it could be interesting)
Samsung did ship a series of motherboards using the irongate/irongate-2 chipset (AMD 751/761 Northbridge), the UP1000, UP1100, and UP1500. They were, for all intents and purposes, pretty much identical to standard Athlon motherboards - they were PCI/AGP boards using standard PC southbridge chips. They just had different sockets (originally Slot B and later Socket B - which had more pins than the standard AMD packaging design to hold Samgung fabbed Allpha EV67/EV68 processors).
Edited 2012-11-16 21:40 UTC
Ah yes, Slot B; though Socket B is new to me. And did I remember correctly about some plans for Slot A (and/or Socket A?) Alphas? The world of computing could be somewhat different if we had those...
Oh well, too bad the Itanium was so successful... (in persuading most of the competition to exit the market)




Member since:
2005-07-06
Sparcs were better too
Early to mid-90s ...but IIRC P6 largely bridged the gap. BTW, K7 was designed also by people who came from Alpha team, it uses the EV6 bus of Alphas (there were some plans for Alphas on Slot A, IIRC - too bad they didn't come to fruition, it could be interesting)
MIPS is used in plenty of routers and such.
Generally, WRT x86 versus ARM - curious that the former started as something meant really for the embedded market, the latter as a desktop processor for Acorn Archimedes ...but they both came to dominate the "other" market.