Relay-Version: version B 2.10 5/3/83; site utzoo.UUCP Path: utzoo!mnetor!seismo!rutgers!clyde!cbatt!soma!masscomp From: masscomp@soma.bcm.tmc.edu (Stan Barber, Moderator) Newsgroups: comp.sys.masscomp Subject: Summary of Masscomp Users' Society Annual Meeting part 1 Message-ID: <3066@soma.bcm.tmc.edu> Date: Sun, 3-May-87 05:55:51 EDT Article-I.D.: soma.3066 Posted: Sun May 3 05:55:51 1987 Date-Received: Tue, 5-May-87 05:45:40 EDT Organization: Masscomp Users' Society Lines: 72 Approved: masscomp@soma.bcm.tmc.edu This is the first of many installments summarizing what happened at the 1987 Annual MUS meeting held in Braintree, MA from Tuesday, April 27th until Thursday, April 30th. Initially, I will summarize those things I personnally took notes on. Any other persons who want to submit summaries, please do so. Tuesday, Doug Rowan (VP Sales and Marketing) gave a talk on Masscomp. Basically, the company is doing well. Machines in the field are averaging 14 months MTBF with about 800 customer accounts. Recent product annoucements include 3 CPU capability on the 5600 (not the 5700!) and favorable benchmark comparisions between the 5450 and a Sun 3/160. Later that day, Dave Cane (VP for R&D) gave a talk on near-term (3 yr) developments. Here is some of the points I recorded. 1. Look for new Masscomp computers to use the VME bus as the I/O bus. A path will be available for owners of the Multibus line to upgrade to the VME-based archtecture. The MI bus will still be used for all "high-speed" interconnects (e.g. memory, FPA, VA, etc). 2. The 68030-chip will likely be the basic CPU for the VME-based line of computers. 3. Multiprocessor capability will be available on all computers in the VME-based line: from the smallest to the largest. The largest computer may be capable of having 12 processors on the bus with the possibility of many VME busses to increase I/O bandwidth. 4. They are looking into offering a very low-cost product that will be VME-based but have the CPU, memory and disk controller on one VME board. Since the card count will be low and the package small, this computer should be cheaper than the current 5300. 5. NFS should be available at the end of the calender year (more on networking in another summary). 6. Diskless nodes may be supported. This might be useful for creating "dedicated" computers that are basically data-acq stations that take to a network and ship the data direct to disk on another machine. 7. Look for a new DACP product line that will give 10x performance over the currect product line. Two products will likely be offered. One will be a programable DACP, but much faster and the other will be an ASIC (Application Specific Intergrated Circuit) system that will not be programmable (i.e. code is not down-loaded at boot), but will be optimized for what many customers do with DACP now. This product will also be faster and probably about the same cost as the current DACP. 8. Also, DACP modules may be developed to plug directly into VME instead of the current STD bus. 9. Look for a better solution to the hardcopy from the graphics screen problem (software) in the Summer 88 time frame. 10. A vectorizing FORTRAN compiler is being considered as is more work on ADA. 11. Work will be done on the VA-1 product line to being the increment in performace more in line with expectations (i.e. the VA should be much faster than the FPA for vector calculations when the vector size is greater than some number like 60 or so [my opinion on the number --sob]). This is the end of summary 1. If you were there and you disagree with my statements here, please drop me a line. Stan Barber, President Masscomp Users' Society Moderator of comp.sys.masscomp