Originally posted by CICSMaster
Firstly, I believe that IBM owns the intellectual property that is referred to as RISC 6000 - which is what the G4 is based on.
Secondly, Motorola are licensed to produce chips and to adjust the design for specific applications subject to IBM approval.
Thirdly, IBM sells a supercomputer based on 256 RISC 6000 chips per box. The chips however are not the same as the chips in the Apple computers. They are engineered to IBM standards for the supercomputer marketplace and are a little bit more expensive.
But then again, I could be wrong.
Firstly, I believe that IBM owns the intellectual property that is referred to as RISC 6000 - which is what the G4 is based on.
Secondly, Motorola are licensed to produce chips and to adjust the design for specific applications subject to IBM approval.
Thirdly, IBM sells a supercomputer based on 256 RISC 6000 chips per box. The chips however are not the same as the chips in the Apple computers. They are engineered to IBM standards for the supercomputer marketplace and are a little bit more expensive.
But then again, I could be wrong.

*sighs* Apple really has made some hurdles for themselves to get speed higher, haven't they?
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