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Full Discussion: Where is the difference?
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Where is the difference? Post 15284 by cejoe on Tuesday 12th of February 2002 03:28:34 PM
Old 02-12-2002
9000 is the generic name HP gives to its unix workstations....sort of like IBM's RS/6000 designation. 735/125 and B132L are model names, like Dell calling a particular model a "Dimension 8100" and sticking the MHz of the CPU on the end.

The 735/125 will be slower than the B132L, moreso than the MHz difference would indicate since the 735 uses an older CPU generation. Neither is going to be terribly fast. You will probably see raw processing power similar to a Pentium (~150 MHz).

Either of these would make a nice affordable learner box and general purpose workstation. If you plan to do anything computationally intensive I'd look elsewhere, though I'm sure there are science labs etc. where these beasts are still in use crunching data. Similar hardware from other manufacturers...Sun Ultra 1 170, SGI indy, etc...
 

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FM(1)							      General Commands Manual							     FM(1)

NAME
fmscan - scan FM band for radio stations SYNOPSIS
fm [ -h ] [ -d device ] [ -t tuner ] [ -s freq ] [ -e freq ] [ -i freq ] [ -q ] DESCRIPTION
fmscan is a program to scan a frequency band for radio stations, using the video4linux interface introduced in 2.1.x series Linux kernels. It shows which ones have a accumulated signal strength of 50% or higher. OPTIONS -h Print a usage message to standard output, and exit. -d device Sets device as the device to tune. The default is /dev/radio0. -t tuner Sets tuner as the tuner on the selected device to adjust. The default is tuner 0. Most radio devices have only a single tuner. -s freq Starting frequency for scan, in MHz. Default: 87.9. -e freq Ending frequency for scan, in MHz. Default: 107.9. -i freq Increment between scanned channels, in MHz. Default: 0.2. -t percent Signal strength threshold to consider a channel. Default: 50%. -q Quiet mode. Suppresses progress output. BUGS
This process can take a while, and results vary greatly depending on the radio card in use. If your card's hardware cannot report signal strength, it will not produce useful results. This program may not do much if your radio card's driver doesn't support fine tuning in 1/16000 MHz offsets. By default, V4L2 assumes 1/16 MHz tuning units, which introduces evil rounding errors on many frequencies. Supports only tuner 0 on any given device. SEE ALSO
Additional documentation: /usr/doc/fmtools/README The fmtools homepage: http://benpfaff.org/fmtools AUTHORS
Russell Kroll <rkroll@exploits.org>, now maintained by Ben Pfaff <blp@cs.stanford.edu.>. This manpage written by Ben Pfaff. fmscan 1.0.2 FM(1)
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