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Posted by Jay G. on 06/13/06 23:11
On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 20:35:33 GMT, Roy L. Fuchs wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 05:42:01 -0500, "Jay G." <Jay@tmbg.org> Gave us:
>
>>It's odd that when I google for 'i80186 "motor controllers"', nothing comes
>>up. Likewise with 'i80186 "industrial process controls"'. Yet, when I
>>google for 'i80186 server," several hundred hits come up.
>
> That is due to the fact that you are a retard.
>
> http://mysearch.intel.com/corporate/default.aspx?culture=en-US&q=80186&searchsubmit.x=20&searchsubmit.y=8
Wow, an Intel site mentions 80186 in some of its articles. I'll call
Guiness.
Thanks for the link though, I found this article due to it:
http://www.intel.com/support/netport/vintage/sb/cs-015152.htm
"Q: How fast is the NetportExpress XL print server?
A: Very fast. The XL was designed with high-performance printing
in mind. It is built around an Intel 80186 microprocessor"
Or this chestnut:
http://www.intel.com/technology/magazine/communications/nc03021.pdf
"Doug was the general manager responsible for Intel’s embedded 80186,
80386, and 80486 product lines"
Think of it, Intel selling their PC chips for *more* than PCs! I bet
you'll try to claim that 80386 and 80486 chips weren't PC microprocessors
either.
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_80186
>
> You were too stupid to leave the i out.
>
> 376000 hits on google.
Let's see:
103 hits for '80186 "motor controllers"'
3 hits for '80186 "industrial process controls"'
53,200 hits for "80186 server"
One of the "motor controllers" links has this to say:
http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~chuck/robotpg/robofaq/18.html#18.3
"It looks a lot like a DOS machine."
> Typical use: Embedded designs.
Typical use, not only use. An embedded can mean a *lot* of things,
including servers.
> Also note the odd GAP in Intel's CPU museum...
>
> http://www.intel.com/museum/online/hist_micro/hof/index.htm
>
> Where is the 80186?
Are you trying to argue that the 80186 isn't a microprocessor because it's
not in Intel's "Microprocessor Hall of Fame"?
Wiki lists it in their history of Intel microprocessors:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Intel_microprocessors#80186
It's in this one as well:
http://www.internetradioindex.com/i-probe/ip_intel_1.html
-Jay
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