SPARCStation 1 - Definition. Was ist SPARCStation 1
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Was (wer) ist SPARCStation 1 - definition

EARLY 90S PERSONAL COMPUTER
Sparcstation 1; SparcStation 1

SPARCStation         
FAMILY OF SPARC-BASED COMPUTER WORKSTATIONS AND SERVERS BY SUN MICROSYSTEMS
Sparcstation; SPARCStation; SPARCserver; Sparcserver; Sun SPARCstation; SPARCcenter; SPARC-station
<computer> A family of workstations from Sun Microsystems based on the SPARC architecture. Models include the SPARCStation 1, 1+, SLC, SPARCStation ELC, IPX, SPARCStation 5, SPARCStation 10 and SPARCStation 20. (1994-11-23)
SPARC Xterminal 1         
  • A "SparcStack" of SPARCstation 5 machines in [[The Evergreen State College]] advanced [[operating system]] lab
WORKSTATION PRODUCED BY SUN MICROSYSTEMS
SPARCstation 4; SparcStation 5; Sparcstation 5; Sparcstation 4; SparcStation 4; SPARC Xterminal 1; SPARCserver 5
<computer> Sun's lowest cost networked Unix desktop, it is board-upgradeable to a SPARC 4. It comes with a choice of frame buffers: 8-bit colour, Turbo GX, or Turbo GX plus. This product was expected to replace the SPARCclassic X. UK availability was planned for March 1995. (1995-02-08)
SPARCstation 2         
  • Fujitsu-MB86903-40
  • Weitek SPARC Power µP
COMPUTER SOLD BY SUN MICROSYSTEMS
Sparcstation 2; SparcStation 2
The SPARCstation 2, or SS2 (code named Calvin, Sun 4/75) is a SPARC workstation computer sold by Sun Microsystems. It is based on the sun4c architecture, and is implemented in a pizza box form factor.

Wikipedia

SPARCstation 1

The SPARCstation 1 (Sun 4/60, code-named Campus) is the first of the SPARCstation series of SPARC-based computer workstations sold by Sun Microsystems. The design originated in 1987 by a Sun spin-off company, Unisun, which was soon re-acquired. The SPARCstation 1 has a distinctive slim enclosure (a square 3-inch-high "pizza box") and was first sold in April 1989, with Sun's support ending in 1995.

Based on a LSI Logic RISC CPU running at 20 MHz, with a Weitek 3170 (or 3172) FPU coprocessor, it was the fourth Sun computer (after the 4/260, 4/110 and 4/280) to use the SPARC architecture and the first of the sun4c architecture. The motherboard offered three SBus slots and had built-in AUI Ethernet, 8 kHz audio, and a 5 MB/s SCSI-1 bus. The basic display ran at 1152×900 in 256 colours, and monitors shipped with the computer were 16 to 19 inch greyscale or colour.

Designed for ease of production to compete with high-end PCs or Macs (its principal competitors were the IBM PS/2 Model 80, the NeXT Computer, and Sun's own 3/80), it sold for between about US$9,000 (with no hard disks), to US$20,000 — and in the first year around 35,000 units were sold.