The RISCstation 2000 was announced in June 1994 by NEC with an availability slated for the end of that summer with the release of Windows NT "Daytona" at a price between US$6000 to US$10000.[2]
Historical development
The RISCstations were based on a modified Jazz architecture licensed from MIPS Computer Systems, Inc. (and which was originally designed by Microsoft). Although architecturally similar to contemporaneous Intel 80386-based personal computers (including, for example, a PCI bus), the RISCstations were faster than the Pentium-based workstations of the time.
Although based on the Jazz design, the RISCstations did not use the G364 framebuffer, instead using a S3 Vision 968-based video card or a 3Dlabs GLiNT-based adapter in a PCI slot.
Form factor
All RISCstations used a standard IBM AT-style tower or minitower case, a motherboard which also met the AT form factor standard, and PCI peripherals (such as the video card) for peripheral expansion.
Like all Jazz-based MIPS computers (such as the MIPS Magnum), the RISCstations ran the ARC console firmware to boot Windows NT in little-endian mode. The MIPS III architecture was capable of either little-endian or big-endian operation.
However, Microsoft stopped supporting the MIPS architecture in Windows NT after version 4.0. RISCstations ceased production in 1996.
In addition to Windows NT, NEC ported a version of Unix System V to the RISCstation.
Although support is lacking from Linux/MIPS for the RISCstation series, they are supported by NetBSD as NetBSD/arc[3] and had been supported by OpenBSD, prior to the termination of the port in 1998.[4]
Single-processor system with a MIPS R4400 microprocessor
RISCstation 2250
RISCstation 4400
Dual-processor SMP system with two 250 MHz MIPS R4400 microprocessors
Pricing
In March, 1995, a dual-CPU configuration of the RISCstation 2000 was priced at about $14,000, and came equipped with two 150 MHz MIPS R4400 CPUs, 64 MB of RAM, a 1 GB SCSI hard drive, a 3x CD-ROM drive and a 17-inch NEC-brand CRT monitor.[5]
Apiki, Steve; Grehan, Rick (March 1995). "Fastest NT Workstations". Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. An article from BYTE Magazine comparing the RISCstation 2000 to competing Windows NT workstations