System upgrade options/suggestions desired.
Erik Ch. Ohrnberger
erik at echocen.UUCP
Tue Feb 27 17:14:03 AEST 1990
I am throwing this to the collective net wisdom in the hopes that its
experience will aide me in making the more informed decisions possible.
The goal:
By the end of 1990, have a system running Unix that will support
small to medium X11 development. Of course these upgrades must
dwell in the realm of bugetary limitations (this is all comming out
of my own pocket!).
The current system:
16MHz 80386 system with a Micronics mother board
40 MB Seagate ST-251-1 (MFM), 30 MB for Unix, 10 MB for DOS (the DOS
partition is being used less and less)
3 MB RAM (2 MB 32 bit, 1 MB 16 bit based on 256Kb chips)
Sony 1302 VGA multisync monitor
8 bit Video Seven analog VGA card
The first goal: (acheived)
Start learning Unix by doing things on it. I now have a version of
Unix running, and I am learning about it by doing.
The Second Goal: (scheduled March 1990)
Upgrade the disk capacity so that I can start working on and with
the fine software and tools from the FSF. Current considerations
are a SCSI or ESDI hard disk 80MB to 150 MB. It would be nice to
be able to have DOS make use of this second hard disk for future
system flexability, although it is not a hard and fast requirement.
I feel that even in this short time, I'm already hooked on Unix.
The Third Goal: (scheduled July 1990)
Add a tape drive that supports a popular tape cartridge format in
order to exchange tapes with a wide variety of systems. Speed and
capacity are not really important issues, as I'm moving up from
flipping 30 or so floppies back and forth to two or three tape
cartridges it will feel like living in the lap of backup luxury!
The Fourth Goal: (A Christmas Persent to myself 1990! or earlier or
possible)
Add 8MB to 12MB of 32 bit RAM. From the information that I have
been hearing, these are the real RAM requirements for this type of
X11 work for this type of system.
The Fifth Goal:
Increase the CPU horsepower. This may not be possible, and it may
turn out that by the time that this becomes serious bottleneck, a
new system may already be in the works. On the other hand, if it
is and easy and reliable solution, it may be more economical to
upgrade the system as it will be in existance.
A mouse, as they are usually only $100.00 or so, would be added
somewhere in there. From my DOS experience, I prefer a bus mouse, but
I don't know if such devices are the best way to add mice for Unix. As
I have significant experience in the DOS arena, I am biased towards a
bus mouse, not giving up one of those precious COM posts.
I have not had any experiences in purchasing and using used equipment,
but I'm willing to give it a try (how to you purposefuly destroy a hard
disk or RAM?)
Please post or e-mail. If I get request for a summary, I'll gladly
post them. If you want or need more information from me, don't hesitate
to ask. Flames and e-mail should be sent to my home address.
Thanks in advance!
Erik. B-)
--
Erik Ohrnberger Work: uunet!edsews!edstip!ohrnb
2620 Woodchase Court Home: sharkey!nucleus!echocen!erik
Sterling Heights, MI 48310
More information about the Comp.unix.questions
mailing list