Deciphering DRAM chips. . . How many bits?
I salvaged some DRAM chips from a pile of old computers in a certain, distinct engineering building on the Princeton campus.
They were from a 7200/90, but whatever. I'm curious about the size of these chips, and I remember hearing somewhere that the amount of bits is listed on the DRAM packaging (little black chips on the DIMM board).
Of greater interest are the 5 SGI indy's lying in the same pile. . . .
They were from a 7200/90, but whatever. I'm curious about the size of these chips, and I remember hearing somewhere that the amount of bits is listed on the DRAM packaging (little black chips on the DIMM board).
Of greater interest are the 5 SGI indy's lying in the same pile. . . .
Comments
<strong>I salvaged some DRAM chips from a pile of old computers in a certain, distinct engineering building on the Princeton campus.
They were from a 7200/90, but whatever. I'm curious about the size of these chips, and I remember hearing somewhere that the amount of bits is listed on the DRAM packaging (little black chips on the DIMM board).
Of greater interest are the 5 SGI indy's lying in the same pile. . . .</strong><hr></blockquote>
I'll take an SGI, please...
The SGI's are quite old. The Indy debuted in 1993. I'm not sure how good these are, but they are guaranteed to be somewhere between PPC 601 and PPC 604 speed, depending on the model. We're going back tonight with screwdrivers to inspect. It's mostly the novelty factor that makes them cool: They're MIPS SGI's. . . old school. . . painted blue.
FSAA... back when it was a high end luxury!