I have a few DSP Nubus boards used in 68K Macs for Photoshop work ( A pair
of AT&7T DSP16A), another nubus card with a pair of AT&T DSP32c's, and a
Nubus video card with a pair of DSP16As. Plus the early pro soundcards (like
the Audiomedia II Nubus) had DSPs onboard.
----- Original Message -----
From: "9000 VAX" <vax9000 at gmail.com>
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and Off-Topic Posts"
<cctalk at classiccmp.org>
Sent: Sunday, December 10, 2006 5:01 PM
Subject: Re: Any early DSP fans?
Ha, finally DSP32C showed up. Yes, I have an ISA bus
DSP32C board that is
ready to go to a good home. I do not have the software. Just for $5
shipping
cost.
vax, 9000
On 12/10/06, Richard <legalize at xmission.com> wrote:
>
>
> In article
<ddc584f50612100717j6a260d5cpe069e845360a89f4 at
mail.gmail.com>,
> "9000 VAX" <vax9000 at
gmail.com> writes:
>
> > I am wondering whether any member of this mailing list is interested
in
> > early DSP chips?
>
> I have several vintage machines that depend on AT&T DSP32C chips to do
> their business. The ESV workstation used them for per-vertex
> processing and scan conversion; a custom VLSI chip that I wrote test
> code for does span and frame buffer processing. The AT&T Pixel
> Machine uses the DSP32C to perform all its processing, I think.
>
> I also have a TMS320C25 development kit that I guess is "vintage" by
> now, although it wasn't at the time I bought it :-).
> --
> "The Direct3D Graphics Pipeline" -- DirectX 9 draft available for
download
>
<http://www.xmission.com/~legalize/book/download/index.html>
>
> Legalize Adulthood! <http://blogs.xmission.com/legalize/>
>