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→Commodity Computing in the Present Day: Is Intel and AMD not moving towards architectures that can scale to 8 to 16 sockets? 10 gigabit Ethernet has also been around for quite some time. |
→The 1980s to Mid-1990s: Nonsense |
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The [[IBM PC]] was introduced in 1981 and immediately began displacing Apple II's in the corporate world, but commodity computing as we know it today truly began when [[Compaq]] developed the first true IBM PC compatible. More and more PC compatible microcomputers began coming into big companies through the front door and commodity computing was well established.
During the 1980s microcomputers began displacing
By the mid 1990s, every computer made were based on microprocessors, and the majority of general purpose microprocessors were implementations of the x86 ISA. Although there was a time when every traditional computer manufacturer had its own proprietary micro-based designs there are only a few manufacturers of non-commodity computer systems today.
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