-----Original Message-----
From: cctech [mailto:cctech-bounces at
classiccmp.org] On Behalf Of allison via cctech
Sent: Thursday, December 06, 2018 9:13 AM
To: cctech at
classiccmp.org
Subject: Re: [rescue] Sun2/120 SunOS 3.2 suntools movie (was: advise on Sun2 disk
install)
On 12/06/2018 07:28 AM, Liam Proven via cctech wrote:
On Thu, 6 Dec 2018 at 12:44, Tony Duell
<ard.p850ug1 at gmail.com> wrote:
I don't think anyone is questioning that
it's a workstation, and that it was
made by Sun.
I think the problem is over 'first' and that a Sun-2 is not going to be the
'first' model.
Ah! Excellent point. I have to admit, I was totally
unfamiliar with
the very early Sun products. I was happy with my little ZX Spectrum
back then, and being about 14, wasn't paying much attention to the
world of academic Unix usage. :-)
Looking up the SUN-1, I see that it lacked a graphics adapter, and was
a text-only machine. I didn't know that. That alone means that it's
not really what I think of when I think of a Sun workstation: no
windowing system means that for me it's not really a workstation.
But as a single-user Unix machine, yes, it unquestionably qualifies,
and I need to redefine my terms and my thinking a little...
During my days at DEC in the later 80s the definition of workstation was 1MIPS processing
power,
1M pixels, Desktop or desk side (fairly compact). Graphics and processing power were
high
and lots of ram and sufficient local disk as well. Most of the machines were RISC based,
Sun (sparc), MIPS, or ARM powered.
Allsion
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And cost no more than a "megapenny" ;->.
See the CMU "3M" definition:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3M_computer
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