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Archived from groups: comp.sys.intel,comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware.chips (More info?)
Johannes H Andersen wrote:
<snip>
>
> And PC1066 RDRAM doesn't seem very fast. Luckily I avoided this era from Intel;
> the 820 chipset cos Intel ~$250M or so? Just shows that chip making isn't always
> plain sailing.
You are confusing 820 and 850? 820 was, well, amazing, but not in a
positive way, unless you really want to be impressed at just how much
Intel marketing really can cope with. 850, in its time, was the chipset
of choice for performance, and it wasn't abandoned because of a lack of
performance, AFAIK, but for reasons having to do with...marketing.
RM
Johannes H Andersen wrote:
<snip>
>
> And PC1066 RDRAM doesn't seem very fast. Luckily I avoided this era from Intel;
> the 820 chipset cos Intel ~$250M or so? Just shows that chip making isn't always
> plain sailing.
You are confusing 820 and 850? 820 was, well, amazing, but not in a
positive way, unless you really want to be impressed at just how much
Intel marketing really can cope with. 850, in its time, was the chipset
of choice for performance, and it wasn't abandoned because of a lack of
performance, AFAIK, but for reasons having to do with...marketing.
RM