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Well, I think GWA refers to the controller almost exclusively.

Ground Work Architecture as I understand it refers to the fact that the components such as memory, hard drive, networking, etc. in the controller, are shared by the system and accessed as needed.

This is why the old systems needed 2 network connections for printing and scanning and now we only need one (because they didn't have this).
GW (Or Next Generation Architecture) refers to the entire system! This is the whole thing, not just the controller, or copier or scanner etc. It is the design of the operating system of the machine and the ease of upgrade and use. IE... You can have a 2090, 2105 with a Fiery, yet the machine is still Next Generation architecture.

On the 3850, however, none of this applies since it is an exclusively fiery system

Graham

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