Workstation def
der Mouse
mouse at thunder.mcrcim.mcgill.edu
Sun Jun 2 06:41:26 AEST 1991
In article <1991May31.143233.25042 at linus.mitre.org>, cazier at mbunix.mitre.org (Cazier) writes:
> I would like to get a feel for what netters consider a "workstation."
> Since the DOS and Mac's have increased in power with the development
> of the '386 and 030's, it would appear that the PC vs. workstation
> lines are a bit blurred.
Quite so. As far as I can tell, a workstation is anything that's sold
as a workstation. Nothing more complicated than that. The technical
differences between a workstation and a personal computer are slight
and getting smaller all the time; the only remaining difference I can
see is that one is sold as a personal machine for $1200 and the other
as a workstation for $5000.
> Would a good definition of a workstation include or exclude the PC
> and Mac's?
Macs - and most "workstation"s - are PC. A high-end workstation can
support multiple users without bogging down, but the low-end ones sure
can't.
If you really want technical differences...I would say that a
workstation generally has a better display (typically a million pixels
for a low-end workstation, which is high-end as PC displays go), more
I/O bandwidth (though that distinction is going away), and more storage
(both core and disk), typically isn't even offered without some sort of
network interface, and does multitasking out-of-the-box.
Hmmm, that $1200 versus $5000 begins to make sense.
Oh yes, the personal computers are generally better documented, since
the third-party software developers demand it.
der Mouse
old: mcgill-vision!mouse
new: mouse at larry.mcrcim.mcgill.edu
More information about the Comp.unix.questions
mailing list