Click Here
home features news forums classifieds faqs links search
6071 members 
Amiga Q&A /  Free for All /  Emulation /  Gaming / (Latest Posts)
Login

Nickname

Password

Lost Password?

Don't have an account yet?
Register now!

Support Amigaworld.net
Your support is needed and is appreciated as Amigaworld.net is primarily dependent upon the support of its users.
Donate

Menu
Main sections
» Home
» Features
» News
» Forums
» Classifieds
» Links
» Downloads
Extras
» OS4 Zone
» IRC Network
» AmigaWorld Radio
» Newsfeed
» Top Members
» Amiga Dealers
Information
» About Us
» FAQs
» Advertise
» Polls
» Terms of Service
» Search

IRC Channel
Server: irc.amigaworld.net
Ports: 1024,5555, 6665-6669
SSL port: 6697
Channel: #Amigaworld
Channel Policy and Guidelines

Who's Online
18 crawler(s) on-line.
 134 guest(s) on-line.
 0 member(s) on-line.



You are an anonymous user.
Register Now!
 yoodoo2:  30 mins ago
 vox:  43 mins ago
 amigakit:  1 hr 3 mins ago
 tlosm:  1 hr 5 mins ago
 21stcentury:  1 hr 12 mins ago
 bhabbott:  1 hr 21 mins ago
 pixie:  1 hr 23 mins ago
 BigD:  1 hr 32 mins ago
 kiFla:  1 hr 42 mins ago
 kolla:  2 hrs 14 mins ago

Hardware News   Hardware News : Mai Logic's Articia system controllers and IBM PowerPC 750 family solutions
   posted by Alkemyst on 30-Jun-2003 21:55:36 (1929 reads)
Mai Logic's "Ready for IBM Technology"-certified Articia family system controllers and Teron series evaluation systems are developed to propel the IBM 750CXe, 750FX, and 750GX PowerPC® microprocessor family into the broader global marketplace for embedded industrial controls, military, multimedia, consumer electronic appliances, blade servers, thin client systems, storage, networking, and communication applications. With leading-edge CPU bus speed capabilities and enhanced AGP, PCI-X, SDRAM and DDR support, the combination of the Articia chipset and IBM PowerPC 750 series processors offers a most desirable solution to the performance-intensive applications marketplace.

http://www-3.ibm.com/chips/products/powerpc/newsletter/jun2003/ppc_process_at_work.html
    

STORYID: 624
Related Links
· More about Hardware News
· News by Alkemyst


Most read story about Hardware News
Commodore USA's Final Challenge to the Community

Last news about Hardware News
New full-sized C64 in production.
Printer Friendly Page  Send this Story to a Friend

PosterThread
Gopal 
Re: Mai Logic's Articia system controllers accelerate a
Posted on 30-Jun-2003 22:30:39
#1 ]
Regular Member
Joined: 15-Apr-2003
Posts: 196
From: Norway

"Availability now at $3,900 for the first board, $2,340 for each additional board thereafter"

...lol

I´m glad It´s not the AmigaOne (or is it? What currecy is that then ;)

Gopal


_________________

 Status: Offline
Profile     Report this post  
herewegoagain 
Re: Mai Logic's Articia system controllers accelerate a
Posted on 30-Jun-2003 23:20:18
#2 ]
Elite Member
Joined: 8-Jan-2003
Posts: 3270
From: Charlotte, NC

Quote:
I´m glad It´s not the AmigaOne (or is it? What currecy is that then ;)


Basically, yes. But AmigaOne has some added Rom stuff for OS4. That is the cost to buy one evaluation board. Obviously, the cost goes down when making alot of boards in a run.

 Status: Offline
Profile     Report this post  
Bodie 
Re: Mai Logic's Articia system controllers and IBM Powe
Posted on 1-Jul-2003 1:04:48
#3 ]
Super Member
Joined: 9-Jan-2003
Posts: 1439
From: Azjol-Nerub

AmigaOne MkII?? I would like to see MAI and Eyetech leap frog a generation and offer AGP 8x etc...

 Status: Offline
Profile     Report this post  
herewegoagain 
Re: Mai Logic's Articia system controllers and IBM Powe
Posted on 1-Jul-2003 1:39:34
#4 ]
Elite Member
Joined: 8-Jan-2003
Posts: 3270
From: Charlotte, NC

Quote:
AmigaOne MkII?? I would like to see MAI and Eyetech leap frog a generation and offer AGP 8x etc...



Me too. But I've not heard anything to indicate that they will.

 Status: Offline
Profile     Report this post  
[ home ][ about us ][ privacy ] [ forums ][ classifieds ] [ links ][ news archive ] [ link to us ][ user account ]
Copyright (C) 2000 - 2019 Amigaworld.net.
Amigaworld.net was originally founded by David Doyle