80186 (I love it)

From: Hans Franke <Hans.Franke_at_mch20.sbs.de>
Date: Tue Nov 21 04:14:26 2000

> It was thus said that the Great Hans Franke once stated:
> > Shure ? I had to go thru the same kind of decision, and I
> > learned to love the 186 - shure, one needs a little push
> > to start, but later on it's just great - eventualy the best
> > _sixteen_ bit CPU around. If you look at the 8080/5, Z80,
> > 8086 and 80186 family, the 186 is the finest of all.

> > Sleak and simple - compared the 68K looks quite bloaded
> > and clumpsy (ok, it's 32 bit, but still the most compared
> > competition at it's time).

> Hardware or software wise? Because I know a lot of programmers (myself
> included) that consider the 80x86 line to be anything BUT sleek and simple;
> a collection of exceptions is more like it.

Soft and Handware - well, the Hardware is more or less simple
(Although the integrrated components where quite handy back then)

A simple programming model (shure, not a /370 ISA, but who's
perfect), a well tuned instructionset. in my eyes, the 186
(and 286) has been the summit of x86 development.

> -spc (Having programmed both, I enjoy the 68k much more ... )

Brr - If I have to do a VAX alike micro, I'll prefer the NS for
shure. I did all 3 in Assembly - 186 on PCs (and SBCs), 68k on
the Atari ST, and NS32032 on Unix servers.

Gruss
H.


--
VCF Europa 2.0 am 28./29. April 2001 in Muenchen
http://www.vintage.org/vcfe
http://www.homecomputer.de/vcfe
Received on Tue Nov 21 2000 - 04:14:26 GMT

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