The M6100 PICA is a system logic chipset designed by Acer Laboratories introduced in 1993. PICA stands for Performance-enhanced Input-output and CPU Architecture.[1] It was based on the Jazz architecture developed by Microsoft and supported the MIPS Technologies R4000 or R4400 microprocessors. The chipset was designed for computers that run Windows NT, and therefore used ARC firmware to boot Windows NT. The chipset consisted of six chips: a CPU and secondary cache controller, a buffer, a I/O cache and bus controller, a memory controller, and two data buffers.
PICA was used by Acer in its Formula 4000 personal workstation,[2] which NEC sold under the OEM name RISCstation Image.
References
edit- ^ Halfhill, Tom R. (June 1993). "Mips Challenges Intel on Its Own Turf". Byte. Vol. 18, no. 6. p. 80.
- ^ Seymour, Jim (31 May 1994). "Acer Formula 4400". PC Magazine. Vol. 13, no. 10. p. 148-159.
- "Acer Launches Set For Building R4400 NT Machines". (29 March 1993). Computergram International.
- Seymour, Jim (31 May 1994). "RISC workstations: ready for the desktop?". PC Magazine. Vol. 13, no. 10. p. 125.