I was digging around my room today and I found these three chips. Google failed to help find out what there chips are from. Sorry for blurry pics, my iPhone is my only camera and it's not very good at taking pictures of up close text.
[IMG]http://i563.photobucket.com/albums/ss72/Makol16_photos/d1715d8b.jpg[/IMG]
says:
NEC Japan
D8917F2001
[IMG]http://i563.photobucket.com/albums/ss72/Makol16_photos/54faa9b0.jpg[/IMG]
says:
IBM
IBM Confidential
06K4884ESD
IBM 9314P
C IBM2000 M
PPCDBK- BB400X3
A250002U
[IMG]http://i563.photobucket.com/albums/ss72/Makol16_photos/20e7bbbb.jpg[/IMG]
says:
F21
MoSys
MS3M32B-5
000001A1101 0027
[IMG]http://i563.photobucket.com/albums/ss72/Makol16_photos/754bc471.jpg[/IMG]
and I found a bunch of ram ranging from desktop DDR to laptop DDR3
[editline]08:17PM[/editline]
I was hoping someone here would know since idk where else to ask...
Do you know where you originally got them?
yep, they came in the mail in an envelope a few years ago (no idea from who) and now I just found them again in a bag filled with ram.
So you didn't intend to get them?
nope
eat them
1st one - Don't know
2nd one - Apparently it's a gamecube CPU
3rd one - Not entirely sure but something related to consoles/arcade machines. Probably RAM.
[QUOTE=abcpea;20507517]eat them[/QUOTE]
I knew someone was going to say eat them, probably because of the thread title says "chips"
[editline]08:30PM[/editline]
[QUOTE=M2k3;20507524]1st one - Don't know
2nd one - Apparently it's a gamecube CPU
3rd one - Not entirely sure but something related to consoles/arcade machines. Probably RAM.[/QUOTE]
cool, thanks
I think the first one might be a phone CPU.
Forgive my illiteracy and ignorance if this is false.
I'll take a picture showing their sizes more accurately
[editline]08:36PM[/editline]
[IMG]http://i563.photobucket.com/albums/ss72/Makol16_photos/6dcd933b.jpg[/IMG]
The MoSys is more than likely a surface mount, integrated memory chip. Judging on the gold tab ont he lower left corner, it is. MoSys doesn't make anything else IIRC.
The IBM is the CPU from a gamecube. Look at the part number and google it. (Heads up: the part number is 06K4884ESD)
The NEC, I'm not going to bother.
Send that RAM my way if you don't want it, babe
[QUOTE=Richard Simmons;20507999]The MoSys is more than likely a surface mount, integrated memory chip. Judging on the gold tab ont he lower left corner, it is. MoSys doesn't make anything else IIRC.
The IBM is the CPU from a gamecube. Look at the part number and google it. (Heads up: the part number is 06K4884ESD)
The NEC, I'm not going to bother.[/QUOTE]
ok, thanks
[editline]09:13PM[/editline]
now I'm wondering why I got a GameCube CPU in the mail...
[QUOTE=Makol;20508076]ok, thanks
[editline]09:13PM[/editline]
now I'm wondering why I got a GameCube CPU in the mail...[/QUOTE]
The gamecube was a piece of shit with no games except mario and mario party. I wonder why they gave it a CPU in the first place.
[QUOTE=Richard Simmons;20508155]The gamecube was a piece of shit with no games except mario and mario party. I wonder why they gave it a CPU in the first place.[/QUOTE]
lol, so true
[QUOTE=Makol;20508168]lol, so true[/QUOTE]
Don't forget The Legend Of Zelda. :D
[QUOTE=Vince W/Shamwow;20508243]Don't forget The Legend Of Zelda. :D[/QUOTE]
Wind Waker or the re-release of Ocarina of Time/Master Quest?
The first one is part of a game cube gpu.
[url]http://www.idhw.com/textual/chip/ati/chippicture.html[/url]
[url]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATI_Technologies[/url]
[quote=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATI_Technologies]In 2000, ATI acquired ArtX, which engineered the Flipper graphics chip used in the Nintendo GameCube game console.[/quote]
The first chip is codenamed "Flipper", and is an ATi based GPU for gamecube,
second chip is a rare engineer sample for a PPC architecture GameCube CPU,
the last chip is a 162Mhz 12MB 1-T SRAM chip, found inside of a Sega TriForce consoles
Does that answer your questions?
[QUOTE=B1N4RY!;20509153]The first chip is codenamed "Flipper", and is an ATi based GPU for gamecube,
second chip is a rare engineer sample for a PPC architecture GameCube CPU,
the last chip is a 162Mhz 12MB 1-T SRAM chip, found inside of a Sega TriForce consoles
Does that answer your questions?[/QUOTE]
yes, thank you very much
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