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Date:      Thu, 28 Jun 2001 16:26:42 +0200
From:      Brad Knowles <brad.knowles@skynet.be>
To:        Rahul Siddharthan <rsidd@physics.iisc.ernet.in>, Stuart Krivis <ipswitch@apk.net>
Cc:        chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: So what happens to FreeBSD now?
Message-ID:  <p05100358b760edb74c9a@[194.78.241.123]>
In-Reply-To: <20010628151228.N9802@lpt.ens.fr>
References:  <200106260901.AA23134284@stmail.pace.edu> <20010626084126W.jkh@osd.bsdi.com> <p0510031eb75e868cb1bd@[194.78.241.123]> <2425994267.20010627160101@163.net> <p05100337b75fdc404cc5@[194.78.241.123]> <20010628103439.C9802@lpt.ens.fr> <2515701.993712862@[192.168.1.60]> <20010628151228.N9802@lpt.ens.fr>

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At 3:12 PM +0200 6/28/01, Rahul Siddharthan wrote:

>  the $1299 Apple comes with:       I can configure a $1314 Dell system with:
>  12.1 inch TFT XGA display         14 inch TFT XGA
>  500 MHz G3                        700 MHz PIII
>  64MB SDRAM                        128 MB SDRAM
>  10GB UltraATA hard drive          10GB UltraATA hard drive
>  CDROM drive                       CDROM drive
>  10/100BASE-T ethernet             10/100+56K internal modem
>  56K internal modem

	You're not comparing models with like features, like sizes and 
weights, like battery lifes, etc....  This comparison is totally 
meaningless.

	If you want to make a proper comparison, you've got to get as 
close to exactly the same configuration as possible on both machines.

>           Whichever way you calculate, I don't see a price difference
>  of $1000, or anything else particularly compelling about the iBook.

	See my other post on this subject, which does a more proper 
comparison of like with like.

>  I haven't used a PPC myself, but from what benchmarks I've seen, the
>  difference isn't *that* great.  Besides, the real bottlenecks in a
>  system are elsewhere: RAM, disk I/O, etc.  That's why I don't mind
>  using a Celeron, especially on a laptop.

	PowerPC is able to do a lot more work per Mhz than Intel or 
Intel-compatible chips.  Therefore comparing Mhz of one chip to Mhz 
of another is a completely and totally wasted operation.

>  Well, but the chip's the same -- I don't see why Apple would mind if
>  IBM is aiming for more power.

	No, read the other messages.  The chip is *NOT* the same.  IBM 
has the Power4 multi-chip CPU architecture that they are most 
interested in.  For desktop machines, they're mostly taking old 
versions of the G3 chip and ramping up their speed, which is not what 
Apple needs.

	For Motorola, they're mostly interested in the embedded market, 
which needs ultra-low power drain, so they're not investing nearly 
enough time, money, or effort into development of the G4 chips that 
Apple *does* need, or the new G5 chips that Apple will soon need.

	Therefore, Apple needs to be able to take their destiny into 
their own hands, and create their own chip designs that are optimized 
for the desktop and laptop markets, and then be able to farm out the 
fabrication to appropriate companies.

-- 
Brad Knowles, <brad.knowles@skynet.be>

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