Originally posted by: Peter
Originally posted by: rayster
The Via C3's are descendents of totally integrated chips that Cyrix developed in the mid-late 90s to help drive themselves out of business. The average person needs a large screen Palm. They surf, read email, download porn and music and occasionally create a document or spreadsheet, all of which the relatively dinky processors in a Palm or a Pocket PC can do. But as someone who used to sell computers, once some yokel's brother tells him that he needs "at least 1 megahertz of memory and a 4 gig cdrom, plus a couple of hard drives" to run Word, you won't sell him anything that doesn't have near workstation specs on the side of the box (and I remember when "workstation" and "PC" were not equivalent). It might be different now that people bying multiple PCs. You might be able to sell them on the idea of a fast rig for games, the kids, productivity; and smaller, cheaper "task" computers elsewhere.
Wrong on the C3. When VIA bought Cyrix and Centaur, they did let the Cyrix team do a prototype run of their MIII which was a descendant of the standalone socket-7 MII. This was to be marketed as "VIA Cyrix III", and even made it to press release and sample shipments. Production yield was awful though, no cure in sight, VIA pissed the Cyrix team off, and most of them left and/or were released. The C3 as we know it is a descendant of the WinChip core designed by the Centaur team, with a very low instructions-per-clock rate (as opposed to the Cyrix chip) and an even worse floating point unit - but in turn very simple to manufacture and extremely low in power consumption.
Btw, not all of Cyrix was sold to VIA ... the mentioned "integrated" Cyrix core stayed with National Semiconductor, and still is alive and kicking, in new clothes as "Geode", in various versions for different types of appliances and computers.
Luckily my folks here trust me in giving them adequate gear for the task. Been using the ultra weak and ultra cheap 787CL with a couple of really budget constrained people. Does the job. Even though C3's ultra slow floating point unit has to manage the AMR modem too, and VIA's ancient PLE133 chipset is no speed demon either.
That's the point of the machines we're talking about here - even the slowest possible combination of today's stuff is still plenty fast enough for the classic tasks in home or office computing.