Thank you.
I dare to add a comment about
Dr. David Patterson's "Fifty (or Sixty) Years of Processor Development… for This?" mentioned above:
Quote:
The Intel 8086’s performance lagged that of its closest microprocessor rivals: the elegant Motorola 68000 (a 32-bit processor in 16-bit clothing) and the 16-bit Zilog Z8000.
Indeed, the 8086 was slow, but its competitors were also slow. The 68000 was much faster on 32-bit and large array operations. However, for processing bytes, the 68000 might even be slightly slower. I mean the cases where the 68000 and 8086 use the same clock speed. The 68000 was available at higher clock frequencies and this gave it more performance benefits. However, these benefits were offset by its higher price tag and very low FP performance. The 8087@5 MHz can easily outperform the 68000 at higher frequencies. The NEC V20 and V30 were accelerated versions of the 8088 and 8086 respectively, and they made the 68000 performance advantage visible on more rare occasions. The 80286 just closed the "68k performance advantage" topic.
IMHO it is still known not much about the Z8000 performance. We have a cryptic revelation from Masatoshi Shima that they intentionally were producing the Z8000 at lower frequencies because they didn't want the Z8000 to be faster than the 8086. This indirectly suggests that Z8000@4MHz has the performance close to the 8086@5Mhz. Maybe it is true but without thorough benchmarking it is just a suggestion.
I also dare to claim that the IBM PC was actually the best PC in 1981. Its CPU is at least 2-3 times faster than the 6502@1MHz. Maybe the TI-99/4A has slightly faster processor but it had only 256 byte of fast RAM and slow serial ROM interface. The Atari 800 performance might be almost two times greater than the Apple II performance and it was very close to the IBM PC performance...
The CGA graphics is much better than the Apple II, Commodore VIC-20, Tandy Coco, TI-99/4A graphics. The Commodore PET didn't have graphics at all. Only the Atari 800 had competitive graphics but Atari management wanted to sell more Atari 2600s than advanced new models. There were contacts between Atari and IBM managements then - one can think that this could affect Atari marketing...
Maybe only the IBM PC's audio system was completely inferior compared to the Atari 800, Tandy Coco or TI-99/4A.
But as it was mentioned afore the IBM PC had the best keyboard for that time and it was also an important factor.