Achim Gratz via devel <devel@ntpsec.org>: > I visited DEC in Palo Alto one time and got to see the very first Alpha > mainboard (with an alcohol heatpipe made from a glass tube atop the > CPU).
Damn shame about the Alpha. That was a good design that DEC utterly botched the positioning and marketing of. Back around 1998-'99 when I was being Mr. Famous Guy I was a speaker at a conference run by investment bankers in NYC and found myself afyerwards in conversation with a man who told me he was DEC's product manager for the Alpha. I don't remember whether this as just before or just after Clayton Christensen published "The Innovators's Dilemma", but I already had some grasp on the idea of capturing markets with a low-end attack. And I *liked* the Alpha architecture; it made my compiler-jock heart all happy. I wanted it to win big. So I asked the guy what his plans were for getting Alphas into low-end systems in volume, e.g. other than big gold-plated servers. He said breezily he didn't have any. It wasn't so much the content as the tone that gave me a sinking feeling in the pit of my stomach. Not just that that was a bad answer, it was that he had *no idea why the question was interesting*. Utterly clueless. I knew right then the Alpha was doomed. And it made me sad. But a few years later some of the Alpha designers took their lessons to another company and it became ARM. So there's that. -- <a href="http://www.catb.org/~esr/">Eric S. Raymond</a> My work is funded by the Internet Civil Engineering Institute: https://icei.org Please visit their site and donate: the civilization you save might be your own. _______________________________________________ devel mailing list devel@ntpsec.org http://lists.ntpsec.org/mailman/listinfo/devel