EISA boards
Conor P. Cahill
cpcahil at virtech.uucp
Sat Dec 15 01:41:53 AEST 1990
In article <6316 at crash.cts.com> jca at pnet01.cts.com (John C. Archambeau) writes:
>This is the precise reason that I want to avoid EISA. If you all thought I
>was screaming because of the recommendations of EISA over MCA I got. You
>ain't seen nothing, if I would have gone EISA (haven't bought the system yet)
>over MCA and something like this would have happened, I would have screamed a
>hell of a lot more. :)
One example of some hardware incompatibility (and there was no obvious
explanation for the problem) and you are sure that EISA is terrible?
Some things to remember with EISA at this time:
1. It is fairly new, so there may be problems with some
implementations (the same kinds of problems that exist with
some ISA implementations).
2. Most OSs have not yet been tested/modified to work correctly with
EISA (don't know if this is true for ESIX, but ISC2.2 requires
a fix disk to work correctly with EISA).
I'm not saying EISA is "the" way to go, just that like any new toy, you can't
expect to run at the cutting edge of technology and not experience some
problems.
>Such behavior is no where near acceptable for a Unix box.
Yup. But if the Unix vendor does not say thier product will work with
an EISA board, you are on your own. The same goes for unknown ISA boards.
>Of course, WangTek tape drives (save their DAT's) aren't that great of a
>machine. I remember adding one to a customer's Sun SPARCstation 1+ and it
>never quite did work 100% of the time. Finally, it died completely a couple
Oh my god, the VME bus must be the problem (if they still use VME?) :-)
(this is what you sound like when you sound off about EISA with the
slightest hint that someone had a problem.)
--
Conor P. Cahill (703)430-9247 Virtual Technologies, Inc.,
uunet!virtech!cpcahil 46030 Manekin Plaza, Suite 160
Sterling, VA 22170
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