ShaBLAMM! NiTro-VLB
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The ShaBLAMM! NiTro-VLB was a computer system (using a MIPS R4600 CPU) implemented on a VESA VLB peripheral card and designed to function when connected to a host computer system using an Intel i486. The NiTro-VLB conformed to the ARC standard, and was produced and marketed by ShaBLAMM! Computer as an "upgrade" card for accelerating Windows NT.
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[edit] Characteristics
The NiTro-VLB is notable for various unique characteristics among personal computer accessories. For example, although the system was marketed as an "upgrade" for computers already using a 486 processor, the NiTro-VLB was in fact of an entirely different architecture (specifically, the MIPS RISC architecture) from the IA32-based 486. Further, as a "parasitic" or "symbionic" coprocessor, the NiTro-VLB was designed to coopt the host 486 processor from running, and used four megabytes of the host 486 motherboard's system memory as a DMA buffer (although the NiTro-VLB required its own separate DRAM main memory, in addition to any memory installed on the host 486 motherboard).
This type of "parasite"/"host" upgrade card configuration, in which an entire motherboard and processor are implemented on an expansion card designed to connect to a host motherboard's expansion slot. However, such configurations are rare among computer systems designed to run Microsoft Windows.
[edit] Specifications and benchmarks
The NiTro-VLB's MIPS R4600 processor, running at 100 MHz, was rated at 73.8 SPECint92 and 63 SPECfp92 (which are similar figures to the first-generation Pentium running at 66 MHz). Faster and costlier versions were designed to run at 133 MHz or 150 MHz.
[edit] Sales
Initially, the NiTro-VLB system was priced at $1095 for a 100 MHz card with no main memory, $1995 for a 100 MHz card with 16 MB of main memory and a copy of Windows NT, and $2595 for a 150 MHz card.