Path: utzoo!attcan!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!ucbvax!adt.UUCP!madd From: madd@adt.UUCP (jim frost) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi Subject: Re: Experiences with 4D/2xx as timesharing systems? Message-ID: <8904111716.AA07491@adt.uucp> Date: 11 Apr 89 17:16:49 GMT Sender: daemon@ucbvax.BERKELEY.EDU Organization: The Internet Lines: 35 > Aren't there any other companies with multiprocessors? Sure. Sequent, Encore, and IBM come to mind immediately. SGI beats all of them in price/performance although the Encore is set up for heavy use, not as a workstation, and performs very well as a large multiuser machine, making it very competitive in that kind of market. I hear bad things about Sequent reliability and IBM <-> UNIX still strikes me as an oxymoron even with AIX and OSF so you can basically throw them out. What it comes down to is "what are you looking for". SGI beats them all in the workstation and superworkstation market, no questions asked, competitive even without the geometry engine. Even though it's SysV, it's not very SysV and many BSD programs can be built with few changes. You can configure a 4D as multiuser but it probably won't support many. Encore is not in the workstation market, but instead has machines which support hundreds of online users in a very cost-effective manner. Unfortunately their best market is education where there isn't always a lot of money to be had. There are probably other companies which have similar products but I haven't dealt with them at all. Apologies if I missed any big ones. >What about Connection, Convex, and others? >Those are multiprocessor machines. I think you can throw out Connection. It's not a multiprocessor machine like you're accustomed to and the entire design of the system is such that it probably won't ever support UNIX (makes for good reading though -- twelve dimensional architecture). It's really a great thing for heavy-duty parallel computation tasks in batch mode, not interactive or multiuser. jim frost madd@bu-it.bu.edu