Hi there, first post!
I'm currently reading "How the ThinkPad Changed the World" by Arimasa Naitoh ("father" of the ThinkPad), and there is something interesting on page 45:
quote:
"To save time and money, we started with a chipset code-named Spice that we had developed for other products in the Japanese market. Mitsuo Tabo, the technical leader of chipset development in those days, reminds me that this new chipset became nicknamed Spice II because it evolved from the first Spice. We thought we were being very clever by giving each chip a spice code name. The display controller chip was Cinnamon, the clock in the central processing unit was Mint, the memory controller was Laurel, the peripheral controller was Allspice II, the low power small computer system interface controller was Basil, and the power management and system management controller was Ginger."
So, is this just a coincidence or did Linux Mint and the Cinnamon desktop take their names from these chipsets?
Book:
https://www.amazon.com/ThinkPad-Changed ... 1510724990
ThinkPad 700C chipsets: the origin of the names "Mint" and "Cinnamon"?
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ThinkPad 700C chipsets: the origin of the names "Mint" and "Cinnamon"?
Last edited by LockBot on Wed Dec 28, 2022 7:16 am, edited 1 time in total.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Reason: Topic automatically closed 6 months after creation. New replies are no longer allowed.
Re: ThinkPad 700C chipsets: the origin of the names "Mint" and "Cinnamon"?
since I've bought a whole bunch of Thinkpad's some years back,
& they do run really well with Linux Systems.
the later later versions, are not as good, from what I've read.
it's sure is interesting on how those names were used, back in the early days,
but that would be by pure chance.
& they do run really well with Linux Systems.
the later later versions, are not as good, from what I've read.
it's sure is interesting on how those names were used, back in the early days,
but that would be by pure chance.
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