Y-my-R wrote:@Crash, what you described totally makes sense. Use up parts supply, and if the previously used component is no longer available, move to the current one as long as the mainboard supports it. I guess that CPU with the 366 MHz processor I have, is just one of the later production models. Also very cool, that you used to work at Mackie and knew Bob Tudor and all!
Speaking of ribbon cables... I don't know if this is true, but I just recently spoke to another guy who used to work for Mackie, and he said that Mackie sourced the cables with the connectors on them, and the sockets on the boards from different vendors, and that's what supposedly lead to a less-than-ideal fit, and those ribbon cable issues down the road. Sounds kinda crazy... but it wasn't the only crazy story he had (nothing else was about the d8b), so maybe it's true
Anyway, thanks for sharing those screenshots, M-A! AMD for the win!
Y-my-R wrote:@M-A, that's so cool that you're running an AMD processor in your d8b! I really wouldn't have thought that this works! Awesome! Could be that AMD support was really already built into the OS... or maybe the OS is not doing anything that makes use of anything that is different between the instruction sets. Regardless, it's great to know that this actually works!!
Maybe it's the AMD, that makes things boot and react faster, etc.
Y-my-R wrote:The 300Mhz has an SD Card for the OS, the 166MHz has the spinning HD that came with it. They both take about the same amount of time to boot.
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