You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   26-50   51-75   76-100   101-125   126-136    
 
Author Message
25 new of 136 responses total.
mdw
response 51 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 15 04:25 UTC 2002

STeve Andre' said he wants to install obsd on remmer's old machine.
Since he's already got obsd running on many similar machines, he's the
logical choice.  If he can't get to it for some reason, I'll do it.
keesan
response 52 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 15 12:32 UTC 2002

Has anyone yet found the time to work on the faster modem bank, or at least
to do something about the flaky modem at 761-3000? (Switch it with one at the
end of the queue).
cross
response 53 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 15 16:18 UTC 2002

Regarding #50; No, this is an engineering descision, not something based
on someone's personal preference.  All the evidence so far suggests that
OpenBSD on AMD x86 hardware is the appropriate choice, not OpenBSD on
UltraSPARC.  Even Marcus' own recent statements in the garage group echo
that sentiment.  Perhaps you'd care to spend some time reading through the
garage group to see where things stand?
mdw
response 54 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 16 01:01 UTC 2002

That's cross's interpretation of what I said, not my sentiments.
russ
response 55 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 16 04:03 UTC 2002

Speaking of faster modems, I've only identified one of the seven
Grex modems which reliably runs sz at anything close to the speed
you'd expect from a 14,400 BPS data rate.  Most of them run at less
than half that, yet all the modems are supposed to be the same.

Seems pointless to upgrade the modems when the other problems go
un-addressed.  
cross
response 56 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 16 16:07 UTC 2002

Regarding #54; I quote from your most recent statements on the matter
in the garage group:

        As things stand, I'd say that sparc64 openbsd is certainly
        stable enough to get real work done, and likely stable enough to
        run in production for a non-demanding job and accumulate 100+
        day uptimes.  There are some performance issues that might be
        needed for a sufficiently demanding job, as well as perhaps
        other unknowns.  There are certainly still issues that need to
        be solved before grex could use this for the main login machine,
        with active hostile users on the "inside".

Well, perhaps it's my interpretation, but it seems pretty clear that
you're saying it's not up to snuff yet, what with the comments about
non-demanding jobs and performance problems.  However, feel free to
correct me if I'm wrong and that's not what you meant.
keesan
response 57 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 17 00:40 UTC 2002

Perhaps Marcus is implying that he is presently solving the issues?
mdw
response 58 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 17 01:08 UTC 2002

No, I'm being quoted out of context.  Someone asked me how I thought the
Sun port stood *today*.  The actual target we care about is 6 months - 1
year ahead, including both work we do on our end, work the openbsd folks
do at their end, work the hardware makers put into their hardware, as
well as whatever changes happen in the marketplace for new & used
hardware.
cross
response 59 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 18 19:36 UTC 2002

Regarding #'s 57 and 58; I think that it would be foolish to assume
that Marcus can fix the problems.  Don't take that as a slight of Marcus'
technical abilities, but rather as an indication of the size of the task.
It took the OpenBSD team something like 6 years to get the 32-bit SPARC
port to anywhere approaching production quality.  It's likely it'll take
them at least several years to do the same with 64-bit SPARC; no one
individual is going to be able to ``solve'' these problems in six months
or a year.

Regarding Marcus' statement about the hardware vendors: what does that
have to do with anything?  Sun isn't really helping the BSD developers.
It's going to take years to get the UltraSPARC port into production
shape.  Historical precedence dictates that you should look at the shape
of the OpenBSD SPARC-64 port now as a (close) approximation of the state
of the port in 6 months.

Besides, why would you *want* to use an architecture that's obscure and
has a dubious future?
mdw
response 60 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 20 03:10 UTC 2002

You mean like i386?
gull
response 61 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 21 02:53 UTC 2002

One thing i386 has going for it is that lots of vendors produce the 
stuff.  That means it's cheap and it'll be plentiful for a long time.  
With SPARC you're pretty much locked into buying from Sun.
mdw
response 62 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 22 04:20 UTC 2002

Er, there *are* several other sparc suppliers...  And the peripheral
market should be opening up now that they're not using their own
proprietary bus.
cross
response 63 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 22 16:19 UTC 2002

Marcus, please, don't let your personal opinion cloud your judgement.
x86 may not be the nicest architecture in the world, but it's far from
obscure, and it definately has a brighter future than SPARC.  Also,
while there may be more than one SPARC vendor, there's only one that
really matters, kind of like how there was more than one Alpha vendor
but only one really mattered.  I'm really rather surprised that you'd
say such things.
gull
response 64 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 22 20:48 UTC 2002

Or sort of like how there was (briefly) more than one Macintosh vendor...
styles
response 65 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 22 22:18 UTC 2002

hey, man, my starmax is still (not really) chugging along.
jp2
response 66 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 00:28 UTC 2002

This response has been erased.

mdw
response 67 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 00:50 UTC 2002

Design-wise: i386 *is* obscure.  It's far out of the mainstream of CPU
design, and in many respects isn't far from the IBM 7094 of the early
60's.  It also has a limited future, if the ia64 architecture takes off.
aruba
response 68 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 03:18 UTC 2002

I think it's fair to say that there will be lots of i386 hardware available
for longer than Grex will be on the machine we're talking about moving to
now.
gull
response 69 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 14:38 UTC 2002

I'm coming to the realization that this debate is pointless because
platform selection is a religious issue.  You're never going to convince
a member of the Cult of the Sun to consider the doctrine of the
Intelites. ;)
gull
response 70 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 14:39 UTC 2002

(Incidentally, a lot of people seem to be of the opinion that Intel has
blown the ia64 design.  It remains to be seen, of course.)
cross
response 71 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 14:48 UTC 2002

No, it's not obscure.  Obtuse, definately, but obscure implies uncommon,
and x86 is practically the most plentiful chip out there.

When SGI bought MIPS, Ken Thompson bemoaned the fact that i386 was going
to take over the world.  Phil Winterbottom said to him, ``they won,
we lost, deal with it.''  Words to live by.

The x86 chip isn't a great design, but it's cheap, it's fast, it's
reliable, and it's extremely well supported by software.  SPARC is none
of these things (well, perhaps reliable, but that doesn't matter if it's
not supported).

Of course, I suspect that grex will end up on a Sun anyway.  Too bad.
jp2
response 72 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 15:48 UTC 2002

This response has been erased.

cross
response 73 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 16:26 UTC 2002

Yeah yeah yeah.  I meant for end-user computer systems, as opposed to
embedded devices.  btw- is Z80 really still more common than 68k?
jp2
response 74 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 16:40 UTC 2002

This response has been erased.

gull
response 75 of 136: Mark Unseen   Apr 23 20:15 UTC 2002

TI-8x series programmable calculators use Z-80s, too.  The Nintendo
Gameboy uses a modified version of the Z-80.
 0-24   25-49   26-50   51-75   76-100   101-125   126-136    
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss