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The Future of Linux
14 July 1998
Door Prizes
Due to the problems with registering, the door prizes were handed out on the
basis of birthdays instead of tickets. They included quite a number of copies
of Red Hat, not only for Intel but also for Alpha and SPARC, some red hats,
possibly some t-shirts and at least one boxed, stainless steel mug with an
Intel logo on it. In addition, there were free VA Research t-shirts and
copies of the July 1998 issue of Linux Journal for (almost) everyone,
and Intel was busy handing out Bunny People key chains in the demo area.
Demos
VA Research had a number of
lust-inducing machines on display, all running
Linux and a host of interesting window managers and applications (including
Quake II,
the Persistance of Vision ray-tracer
(POV-Ray), the GIMP, a Linux kernel compile,
SMP-aware
xosview, some image viewers, possibly Rasterman's Enlightenment GUI, etc.). All of the
machines were running 400 MHz Pentium IIs; the Xeons each had 1 MB
of onboard L2 cache (per chip, that is) running at full (400 MHz) system
speed.
- VArStation
YMP: a dual Xeon-400 with a Symbios Ultra2 SCSI subsystem
- VArServer
1000: a dual PII-400 with the 440BX chipset, 512 MB of
RAM and 5 hot-swappable SCSI disks
- VArServer
4100: a quad Xeon-400 with 1 GB of RAM, a Mylex
DAC960PJ RAID controller, 10 (12?) 9 GB Quantum Atlas III SCSI
disks, and a $43,750 price tag, according to the web page
- VArStation
28: a PII-400 with the 440BX chipset, 256 MB of RAM, a
16 MB Matrox Millenium II and a 4 MB(?) Diamond Monster 3D
(3Dfx Voodoo) running Mesa for accelerated OpenGL support and Quake II
at 640x480 at a high frame rate (apparently the 3D card was incapable
of higher resolution, even though Quake's settings screen claimed
it was running at 1280x1024)
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Last modified 20 July 1998 by
newt@pobox.com , you betcha.
Copyright © 1998 Greg Roelofs.