Sujet : Re: What is an N-bit machine?
De : jgd (at) *nospam* cix.co.uk (John Dallman)
Groupes : comp.archDate : 28. Nov 2024, 23:08:27
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <memo.20241128220827.12904a@jgd.cix.co.uk>
References : 1
In article <
viao3r$na9e$4@dont-email.me>,
ldo@nz.invalid (Lawrence
D'Oliveiro) wrote:
Apple went through the same sort of thing. Yet it managed the
transition much more cleanly.
Apple simply demanded all software become 32-bit clean. The fact that
they didn't forsee the problem and warn software writers not to use the
high 8 bits rather implies they weren't paying attention.
This in spite of having an installed base that was orders of
magnitude larger than the IBM System/360 family.
Apples and oranges. IBM had fewer but much larger customer organisations,
and could not afford to upset them much. Most IBM mainframe shops write
some software themselves; that wasn't the case for Apple users in the
1980s.
John