At 01:11 PM 5/1/2009, you wrote:
>Mark Wendt (Contractor) wrote:
> > I sysadmin'd a bunch of those behemoth Alpha 8400's.  They really
> > were a joy to administer.  DEC did those ones right - we hardly ever
> > had any hardware maintenance to worry about.  Clustering was a
> > wunnerful thing for system(s) uptime, especially on critical
> > production machines.  Too bad they let that all slip away.
> >
> > You are talking about CISC, right? ;-)
> >
> >
>VAX was CISC, but done with a clean sheet, and following and expanding
>on the general PDP-11 layout.
>
>Alpha was a very clean RISC design.
>
>I'm not sure X86 can even be called CISC, more like cobbled
>abomination.  Have you ever heard of Virtual DMA Services on the X86?
>Doing some digging many years ago, I discovered there is a virtual IBM
>PC (original 8088, 4 MHz clock, interrupt controller chip, DMA
>controller chip, etc) implemented in all 386, 486 and Pentium chips.
>This allows those games that were loaded from DOS but then took over the
>whole system to be played on Windows 3.1 and later.  Yucchhh!  So, all
>the I/o ports and  auxilliary chip registers are implemented to
>virtualize a game's playing with the DMA controller.
>
>Jon

They changed to RISC when they made the Alpha chip, and also to 64 
bit'dness.  Remember the MIPS processor?

Yeah, that doesn't surprise me about the Intel's chips.  When they 
Complex, they really mean complex.

Mark 



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