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yarc zuma se nubus card

YARC made various products for the pre-press publishing market. The card you own is probably a PostScript RIP processor.

 
Another common application for YARC's RISC co-processor cards was as a dedicated 3d-rendering accelerator. The MacRageous card is one that comes to the top of my head as going in a NuBus Mac to accelerate apps like StrataVision 3D.

Apparently this board is a general-purpose PowerPC coprocessor board; something a programmer can write code for and hand off difficult computations to the PowerPC chip on the card.

MacWeek said:
ewbury Park, Calif. - Mac in-house developers can catch the PowerPC wave with a new coprocessor board from YARC Systems Corp.

The Zuma coprocessor, which runs on any NuBus-equipped Mac, includes a PowerPC 601 RISC chip running at 50, 66 or 80 MHz with a 32-Kbyte cache and a 64-bit data bus. It comes with 16 Mbytes of high-speed dynamic RAM and supports full 32-bit access to the Mac motherboard or other NuBus-based peripherals, YARC said. The company said users can install up to four Zumas in a single Mac.

The Zuma is available stand-alone or bundled with a suite of native PowerPC development tools.

Unlike a PowerPC accelerator, Zuma speeds only applications written to take advantage of it.

The 66-MHz Zuma is $3,595, or $4,495 with the developer tools. The 80-MHz is $4,995 and sold only with the developer bundle. Pricing for the 50-MHz version has not been set.

YARC Systems Corp. is at 975 Business Center Circle, Newbury Park, Calif. 91320. Phone (805) 499-9444; fax (805) 499-4048.
 
From the sound of it, they don't really have "drivers" per se - more a situation where you sit down and write them yourself.

 
According to one of my better reference books, MacRenderman, Infini-D, & PresenterPro were written to take advantage of Yarc Nubus boards when installed.

 
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