Compaq made other, later, and possibly better servers. They were, methinks, the
major player in the EISA camp. If prices for EISA had been lower, volume
probably would have been higher, which would have made the connectors less
costly, hence making the EISA more numerous. That didn't happen, however. Even
so, I never personally saw an EISA system that wasn't for sale.
Dick
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Boffemmyer IV" <john_boffemmyer_iv(a)boff-net.dhs.org>
To: <classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 30, 2001 9:29 PM
Subject: Re: VLB SCSI?
YES! I own an annoying Compaq Proliant 2000 server,
pure EISA with a P90
and a backplane for all the other baords (CPU, RAM expansion, etc.) It has
a nice 2 channel Fast-20 Narrow SCSI controller and a nifty Ethernet card
that has all the connectors (AUI, TP and 9pin D-sub) so, with a
daughtercard, it turns into 16/4 TokenRing.
At 10:39 PM 10/26/01, you wrote:
Compaq made plenty of EISA based Pentium servers.
Chad Fernandez
Michigan, USA
Richard Erlacher wrote:
> EISA
> was, by the time the Pentiums came out, pretty much a dead duck.
----------------------------------------
Founder, Lead Writer, Tech Analyst
and Web Designer Boff-Net Technologies
http://boff-net.dhs.org/index.html
---------------------------------------