Reply 40 of 49, by swaaye
wrote:The Voodoo3 that was mentioned by swaaye on a 486 came as a surprise to me. I doubt there would be any performance boost in 2D graphics on a 486 though as compared to the Matrox G200.
On a 486 it's hard to notice the difference between the slowest GUI accelerators and the fastest. What's more noticeable is being able to at least run decent resolutions and color depths and so a G200 is definitely better than a 2MB Cirrus Logic card in that case. 😀
G200 is super fast anyway. You would probably need to run like 1600x1200x32-bit on an Athlon to feel it lag compared to something faster. That's not to say that G200 is special though as it's similar to a Banshee and TNT (they are all very fast).
wrote:The reason for the avatar is to enourage anyone with this processor to come forward. I've been looking for one on and off for more than a decade. If I cannot get one to put into use myself, I'd at least like to see some test results with proven stability. If anyone else out there has one, please PM me -- if not for sale, I'll at least offer to test it FOC to the highest degree of professionalism.
I have the Cx5x86 120. It is an interesting chip but I've found that there's just not much point in choosing it over the AMD 5x86 due to compatibility and its lack of a speed advantage against the Am @ 160.... Also the special advanced features are unfinished and buggy and so might as well not be there.
One big issue with Cyrix chips like the 5x86 and 6x86 is that they have some incompatibilities with some programs and drivers. Patches needed to be released to make them work in some cases. So that's a red flag. Extra compatibility headaches suck. The POD has the same problem but on a hardware level (board compatibility is ugly with them). AMD 5x86 is just a revised 486 with a big writeback cache so it's pretty bulletproof.