Speculations could run rife this long after the event, but some may have germs of truth in them. Recalling the reported difficulty that Apple engineers had in getting some capacities incorporated into MLBs, even to the point of having to resort sometimes to subterfuge (Classic II, perhaps?), it is just possible that the SE/30, as the 'wickedest' of the closed-box AIOs, did have some grand things conceived for it as possible aftermarket upgrades. If that was canned, it still left the way open for a company such as DayStar to be invited, overtly or covertly, to consider a plug-in CPU replacement. DayStar did offer to replace soldered-in CPUs with socketted CPUs at one stage, but they and others settled for the PDS in the end.
I have seen the SE/30 referred to as a 'condensed IIcx', which makes it clear that if the IIcx can be made into a zinger (mine has a DayStar 33MHz PowerCache), the SE/30 might have done at least as well with a socketted adapter and a suitable accelerator-card, and thereby saved the PDS for other expansions. The saddest part, however, is the apparent disappearance of all things to do with CPU-oriented plug-ins, with the PDS-oriented not far behind.
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I have seen the SE/30 referred to as a 'condensed IIcx', which makes it clear that if the IIcx can be made into a zinger (mine has a DayStar 33MHz PowerCache), the SE/30 might have done at least as well with a socketted adapter and a suitable accelerator-card, and thereby saved the PDS for other expansions. The saddest part, however, is the apparent disappearance of all things to do with CPU-oriented plug-ins, with the PDS-oriented not far behind.
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