Greek: world's fattest designer?

                -----Original Message-----
                From:   Martin Cosgrave [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
                Sent:   15 July 1999 02:24
                To:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                Subject:        Fwd: GeeK: world's smallest web server?



                The latest contender for the world's smallest web server...

                ----------  Forwarded Message  ----------
                Subject: GeeK: world's smallest web server?
                Date: Wed, 14 Jul 1999 20:47:17 -0400 (Eastern Daylight
Time)
                From: Christopher Kline <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


                ------- start of forwarded message -------
                From: Rehmi Post <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
                To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                Subject: [Fwd: iPic chip announcement ..]
                Date: Wed, 14 Jul 1999 20:34:13 -0400

                I may have mentioned this to a few of you -- a friend at
UMass in
                thesis-avoidance mode for the last couple of months has
managed to fit TCP/IP
                into an 8-pin PIC.  Now he's added a 32k serial EEPROM and
written a simple
                filesystem for it to make the smallest web server I've ever
seen.  Wow.

                -------- Original Message --------
                Subject: iPic chip announcement ..
                Date: Wed, 14 Jul 1999 14:30:55 -0400
                From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
                CC: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                Hey folks,

                So many thanks for all your help with this insane project

                I just sent an announcement out. Please do let me know if 
                you have any comments.

                -------------------------------------

                Hello,

                I'd like to announce what is a really tiny implementation of
                TCP/IP stack and a really really tiny web-server.

                This is currently running on a PIC, a puny 12C5609 8-pin
device.
                The silicon itself, and this must be obvious to all on this
list,
                is about the size of a match-head.

                http://www-ccs.cs.umass.edu/~shri/iPic.html

                Yes, it is true genuine TCP/IP, with no sleight of hand, no
                proprietary protocol converters or other nonsense. It talks
SLIP
                and TCP/IP as its mother tongue, and is connected to a Linux
                router running SLIP straight out of the box. (slattach and
                ifconfig .. simple and straight).




                -- //Shrikumar
                   [EMAIL PROTECTED]

                ------- end of forwarded message -------
                --
                Experience is something you don't get until just after you
need it. 

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