On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 03:38:51AM -0800, davis
wrote:
Ray Arachelian wrote:
Just out of curiosity, were there any machines
out there that were
built from multiple MC68000's CPU's?
In 1983, Metheus corp, did the classic 68k X 2 cpus to fix the double
bus fault problem on their VLSI design workstation.
I never could figure out how you could get the system into a double page
data/code/stack fault in the exception handler, but it's a known
problem. It just seemed like a lot of bad hardware and OS chicken
shit/walk the line porting of BSD.
I suspect the double 68K bus fault problem solution was a common
Berkeley/USC grad hack.
I have a Perkin-Elmer workstation (7350?) that has a dual-68K bus-fault
recovery design. It's running System III UNIX. We bought it, way back,
as the cheapest way of getting a multi-user cross-development platform
for our products after COMBOARDs.
It has a console screen and keyboard, and four serial ports for dumb
terminals. ISTR the disk is SASI (but there's probably a SASI<->ST506
converter buried in there somewhere). I _think_ it shipped with a 15MB
disk, but mine had its disk replaced when it was still a full time
development platform, so might have 20-30MB at present.
The screen is mostly text (there might be some limited graphics capabilities),
but has the curious feature of "soft buttons" built into the monitor's
frame, so you apparently _have to_ use their monitor (it's not a generic
sort of plug, either - perhaps a DB25 or DA15).
It booted up the last time I turned it on. I tried to sell it at a hamfest
a while back, but couldn't get an interest in it.
Ah well... fun little box.
-ethan
Hi Ethan,
Didn't HP have a 68K box that had buttons around the crt? Sort of a
poor-man's touchpanel?
totally Off-T:
You replied before I sent the message. Are you playing with alien junk
you found out at the site the Norwegians blew up?
Unseasonable weather:
It's still cold here(Goldendale Wa, USA) with low 20's at night and
occasional snow.
The cherry, pear and apple growers are probably going to get wiped out
this year.
Cheers,
Jim