Juho L |
01.09.2006 07:00 AM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by AlexHall74
You all should be using multiplexed circuit boards from vintage Bosch microwaves for motherboards and TI-81 chipsets for your memory arrays.
All that with a floppy disk jukebox is not only more powerful than a sissy-pants Wintel/Mac shite machine but infinitely more stable.
Don't make me write up the calculus to prove it.
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Yeah! I use that kind of setup and it really beats all because it's meant to do what it does, like my setup is designed for music production (you can see it from stickers on the case with a picture of a half-eaten pear stating 'for musick' and 'gooder for musick than anything else').
Although I didn't do the mistake using microwave circuitboards and TI-81 memory arrays. I did some research and noticed that most modern processors have heaps of commands and you really don't need even one fifth of those. Afterall you only need add, sub, mov and rotating. So I picked up stable 8085 chipset and made an array of ten 8085's. I use a 4x8 relay pack as a memory buffer to feed the humongous series of massive 32K ROM chips. I did the base code for the machine and it runs like a dream. I planned to bring it to the next olympics, but there's some kind of rule that the participant must be a human. I bet it's again a Microsoft and/or Apple conspiracy.
We all know how poorly all OS's are written on consumer computers. They're designed to all kinds of useless stuff like image editing, virus scanning, playing a game (deers, bears, badgers, etc). My machine only does running and recording. That's why it's the best. Want a proof? Well, when I ran my own benchmark program I noticed that dual Mac G5 and dual core Ahtlon 4500 couldn't even get pass the relay pack accessing test - And memory functions should be the best part on those machines. Bah!
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