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juanm

macrumors 68000
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May 1, 2006
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Fury 161
Dunno anyone here remembers, but SGI used to sell IRIX-based workstations designed for media professionals back in the mid-90sto mid-2000s, to run software such as Inferno or Flame, at resolutions that then seemed amazing such as HD or even 4K later on. They used to cost $10K to $50K, but could climb much higher, IIRC.

They were aimed not at creative professionals individuals, but at media and VFX companies, who were the only ones who could justify paying those prices for dedicated HD compositing suites.

Sounds familiar?

product-106886.jpg
 
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Man, I used to drool over those SGI workstations. I worked in a medical imaging lab, and there were dozens of these in use. Each model had a distinctive, crazy case, including a machine the size of a small fridge that was bright pink.

The good old days!
 
I never used an SGI workstation, but I used to drool over them at conferences back in the day.

I suppose they were far more powerful (compared to an average PC of the time, I mean) than anything Apple is willing to offer with the new Mac Pro.
 
I never used an SGI workstation, but I used to drool over them at conferences back in the day.

I suppose they were far more powerful (compared to an average PC of the time, I mean) than anything Apple is willing to offer with the new Mac Pro.

ifyou have the budget to top it up, 28 cores , 1,5 TB and 4 gpu, starts to be a decent power machine....
 
I had a love/hate relationship with the Octane2. Autodesk software basically required it and you basically needed support contracts just to be able to work. Crash at 3am? Call to Canada... Then they only certified specific hardware on top of it. People who think Apple is restrictive with hardware never experienced those incompatibility issues. Importing offline EDLs, conforming, mismatched tape names... I'm starting to twitch just thinking about those headaches all over again, especially when it was with the disorganized producer who labeled everything as TAPE and showed up with three crates of DigiBeta.
 
ifyou have the budget to top it up, 28 cores , 1,5 TB and 4 gpu, starts to be a decent power machine....

Yes, the Mac Pro can be a very powerful machine. But I had the impression that an SGI workstation (at similar prices) was even more powerful (compared to average PCs) back then.
 
I have an Octane on the table behind my desk that actually runs all the time. It was bought new at work and has protein modeling software on it. I know of Octane 2 and O2 in the building also running the same software. I also have an O2 that doesn't work in my office, and an Iris Indigo that I need to find a mouse for(not trivial) then install a hard drive and a copy of Irix.

For reference, since I have this handy-prices paid

Iris Indigo $7853 4/92

Octane2 $6549.95 5/04

I actually can't find the Octane on the inventory to know what was paid for it-I doubt it was under $5K(threshold for the sheet I have) so it may have been bought with other money. The O2 also isn't on there, but that MAY be because it was under $5K.
 
I have an Octane on the table behind my desk that actually runs all the time. It was bought new at work and has protein modeling software on it. I know of Octane 2 and O2 in the building also running the same software. I also have an O2 that doesn't work in my office, and an Iris Indigo that I need to find a mouse for(not trivial) then install a hard drive and a copy of Irix.

For reference, since I have this handy-prices paid

Iris Indigo $7853 4/92

Octane2 $6549.95 5/04

I actually can't find the Octane on the inventory to know what was paid for it-I doubt it was under $5K(threshold for the sheet I have) so it may have been bought with other money. The O2 also isn't on there, but that MAY be because it was under $5K.
Out in interest, what interface does the mouse use which makes it so hard to find?
 
Out in interest, what interface does the mouse use which makes it so hard to find?

It LOOKS like a PS/2 mouse, but is not compatible. In fact, I've been told that plugging a PS/2 mouse in will damage it.

The interface is proprietary to the Iris Indigo-later ones used PS/2 for the mouse and keyboard both.
 
If the new MP was using in-house Apple-designed CPUs and GPUs I think this would be a better comparison.

It's an exotic machine because of the case and cooling design but most of the fundamental components are off-the-shelf or close to it.
 
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I was also very much reminded of the SGI Octane, same focus on bandwidth and multi-processing capabilities and basically meant for video instead of 3D. You could configure them with dual CPU's and dual GPU's. I suspect once you load up the Mac Pro with those MPX multi-GPU modules and install enough RAM and SSD storage to really work with it then you're not going to be all that far from the Octane's pricing anymore.

I sold my Octane 2 dual-600 V12 model a few years back to an enthusiast, there's apparently still a community out there for these. Disposed of my operating system CD-ROM's (over 20 discs for a single install set!) last month or so.

I can still hear the racket the damn thing made. A computer so noisy I felt a sign of relief every time I shut it off. ;)
 
I was at the first presentation of the O2 and Octane. Very powerful at the time. SGI created their own high bandwidth unified memory architecture.
 
Sounds like you never had much contact with 'swmgr', 'inst' and 'sash'. Behold - the terrible trinity!

But yeah, they had a cool, stable OS with a userfriendly GUI at a time when elsewhere you had to deal with system hangs, blue screens and guru meditations.
 
By not to mention the Silicon Graphics F220 flat panel display that looks like the forefather to the 2019 Mac Pro handles. Oh, and the Tezro, one of the most striking workstations ever built. Both pictured here.
Tezro F220.jpg
 
If the new MP was using in-house Apple-designed CPUs and GPUs I think this would be a better comparison.

It's an exotic machine because of the case and cooling design but most of the fundamental components are off-the-shelf or close to it.

^^^THIS^^^
 
The world has moved to all Intel/AMD based - nobody's doing custom CPUs at the high end any more... This isn't off the shelf hardware in the sense of "related to what you can find at Best Buy" any more than a SGI is. It does use the same chip architecture in a very broad sense, but it's an exotic version of it...
 
Dunno anyone here remembers, but SGI used to sell IRIX-based workstations designed for media professionals back in the mid-90sto mid-2000s, to run software such as Inferno or Flame, at resolutions that then seemed amazing such as HD or even 4K later on. They used to cost $10K to $50K, but could climb much higher, IIRC.

They were aimed not at creative professionals individuals, but at media and VFX companies, who were the only ones who could justify paying those prices for dedicated HD compositing suites.

Sounds familiar?

product-106886.jpg

Haha I thought and said the EXACT same thing when I saw them announce the new Mac Pro, a proper power house system..... on your desk!
You can buy them for paunuts now and their are a bunch of SGI enthusiasts too out there! Hmm bit like Apple fans apart from the Macs cost peanuts bit haha...
 
The world has moved to all Intel/AMD based - nobody's doing custom CPUs at the high end any more... This isn't off the shelf hardware in the sense of "related to what you can find at Best Buy" any more than a SGI is. It does use the same chip architecture in a very broad sense, but it's an exotic version of it...


There are Power9 work stations, servers, and supercomputers out there.

One that's made a big splash in semi recently was the raptor talos 2. There's something about 176 threads out of two 22 core processors to make you tingle a bit.
 
I had an O2 in one of the labs I worked in in Pisa. There was no AC and the machine would overheat once in a while. I also had a Mac Clone on my desk, one of the earliest available. What a time to be alive.
 
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