Adding a cache card
Michael Peirce
peirce at outpost.UUCP
Sat Jan 26 06:17:08 AEST 1991
In article <1991Jan24.233305.13194 at magnus.ircc.ohio-state.edu>, talley at hpuxa.ircc.ohio-state.edu (James T. Talley) writes:
>
> I have some questions about adding a cache card to a Mac IIci
> running A/UX 2.0. The Mac IIci in question has 8 meg of RAM, 80
> meg internal and 40 meg external hard drives. It will primarily
> be a network database/mail server. In other words, no one will
> be using Macish applications on the console on a regular basis.
>
> The questions are:
>
> 1) Is it worth adding a cache card? Will it enhance the speed of
> operation significantly for A/UX applications?
I can notice the difference, but it's not all that much. It depends
alot on what operations you are doing. It doesn't really help disk
I/O much, but CPU bound tasks can run quite a bit fast.
> 2) How hard is it to install? Do I just plug it in? Will I have
> to run newconfig? Do I have to start hacking the kernel with a
> hex binary editor? (Just kidding. :-)
I just plugged it in and went. I'm not (currently) running A/UX, but
I doubt there is any hassle involved.
> 3) Does anyone have any recommendations on a particular brand?
> Shall I just buy Apple's?
Apple's isn't shipping right now (but will be soon). They made a
few mistakes when they designed it :-) and had to recall there card.
I bought a MacCache at the MacWorld Expo. It works great and comes
with a little cdev that lets you turn it the cache on or off. I picked
up the 64K version. They also have a 32K version, but the cost is
the same so I went for the slightly greater performance the 64K provides.
The only warning I know of is that if you are using bus master NuBus
cards, make sure the cache you buy supports it. Evidently some don't
and you end up with a corrupted cache. The MacCache claims to be
NuBus master compatible.
-- michael
-- Michael Peirce -- outpost!peirce at claris.com
-- Peirce Software -- Suite 301, 719 Hibiscus Place
-- Macintosh Programming -- San Jose, California 95117
-- & Consulting -- (408) 244-6554, AppleLink: PEIRCE
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