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Allied owned the New Idea farm equipment brand and formed a new division called White-New Idea. The White combine line was sold to Massey Ferguson in the late 1980s. As it happened, Massey Ferguson later spun off the combine division into Massey Combines, then later re-absorbed the company after various lawsuits.
1990 - Announced 486 systems using IBM's Micro Channel architecture and merger talks with CPT. [4] 1992 - Discussed a merger with Everex Systems but these talks ended and a 51% stake was bought by investor group Marjac Investments. [5] August 1994 - A chapter 7 petition was filed against the company by creditors.
New Idea is a long-running Australian weekly magazine aimed at women, now published by Are Media. [1] History. The magazine was first published in 1902 [2] by ...
New versions of the Mustang muscle car will begin shipping next week and more than two thirds of the orders include the big, 5-liter V-8 engine, Ford said Friday. Demand for roaring engines ...
MiTAC was founded in Hsinchu Science Park on 8 December 1982. By 1985 MiTAC was promoted as an independent computer brand. MiTAC adopted SMT technology in 1989 and developed the world's fastest 80386-based personal computer with 286, 386, and 486-based products.
Back at Aero Hobbies, news of the article did not travel as far as Santa Monica, and Switzer did not tell the group he had shared the group's idea with Gygax, so when the new Thief class appeared in the first D&D supplement, Greyhawk, the group assumed Gygax had stolen their idea. Their response was to write The Manual of Aurania, a collection ...
The company's first PC related product was the PC Speeder, a device designed to increase the clock speed (and thereby the performance) of the 8086 processor. The company then began work engineering a motherboard to retrofit the soon-to-be-introduced Intel 386 processor on their existing 286 platform.
The i486SX was a microprocessor originally released by Intel in 1991. It was a modified Intel i486DX microprocessor with its floating-point unit (FPU) disabled. It was intended as a lower-cost CPU for use in low-end systems—selling for US$258—adapting the SX suffix of the earlier i386SX in order to connote a lower-cost option.