Message-Id: <199610271603.LAA12717@delorie.com> From: "Troy D. Van Horn" Subject: Re: 386Max & DPMI 1.0 To: chambersb AT juno DOT com Date: Sun, 27 Oct 1996 10:03:49 CST Cc: trvanhor AT SNOOPY DOT UCollege DOT edu, djgpp AT delorie DOT com In-Reply-To: <19961027.224846.8183.1.chambersb@juno.com>; from "Benjamin D Chambers" at Oct 27, 96 1:48 am > > On Thu, 24 Oct 1996 23:15:05 +0200 Marek Habersack > writes: > >machine: > > am386DX 40, 8MB RAM, CD-ROM 4x, modem on COM2, 1MB 8900CL/D gfx > >card, > > Quantum/HP HDD 270MB + WD HDD 400MB, local bus hybrid motherboard > >(for > >386 or 486), no FPU, 128 cache. > > umm........ > how can you have a DX machine without an FPU? > Isn't that the definition of DX? > > ...the ConfusEd One... > Intel changed the definition of DX from the 386 to the 486 chips. On a 386, DX meant it had a 32 bit data bus, and an SX had a 16 bit data bus. No 386 had a build in FPU, you had to add a seprate 387 FPU. When the 486 came along, DX meant it had an FPU, and SX meant it didn't. All 486s have 32 bit data busses. Troy...