IIRC, it's possible it's associated with scanner/OCR processes. One of my
colleagues had a set of three or four ISA cards, each of which had four 68030's
on it, each with what I then saw as a significant amount of RAM for its task.
He was using that together with a pretty fancy set of software for a MAJOR
automatic transcription task, and, from what I gathered, it did a good job.
I don't know about your board, but the ones I saw were fully packed on both
sides. It was, for the time, VERY impressive to see. The results were pretty
impressive, too, as he'd converted about 6000 pages of text into a searchable
document on a set of CD's.
Kurzweil is associated with speech-to-text and similar processing tasks, (see
www.kurzweiltech.com/aboutray.html ) and multi-processor boards are known to
speed such tasks up.
Dick
----- Original Message -----
From: "Iggy Drougge" <optimus(a)canit.se>
To: "Classic computing" <classiccmp(a)classiccmp.org>
Sent: Monday, August 13, 2001 6:45 PM
Subject: 68020 ISA card
Found an interesting card in the trays of a small
computer shop. It's an 8-bit
card with a 68020 on it. The card is full-length, with a piece sandwiched onto
it at one end. It's by a Xerox company with a German name; Kurzweil?
Any leads as to what this might be?
--
En ligne avec Thor 2.6a.
[E]xcept in the works of Gunnar Asplund, architect of the Stockholm Exhibition
of 1930 and the Stockholm crematorium, Sweden has never contributed much to
the revolutionary developments through which modern architecture made its
initial impact on the world.
J.M. Richards, Modern Architecture