Cray-1 Supercomputer 30th Anniversary


 
   

[Recorded Sept 21, 2006]The life and machines of Seymour Cray are explored at the Computer History Museum in a panel lecture celebrating the Cray-1's 30th anniversary. Panelists include: Bill Buzbee (Los Alamos, NCAR), Bo Ewald (Los Alamos, Cray) and Jack Worlton (Los Alamos). Burton Smith (Tera, Cray) will be the evening's panel moderator.In 1976, Cray Research, Inc. delivered its first supercomputer to the Los Alamos National Laboratory, birthplace of the atomic bomb. The Cray-1, as it was known, was the fastest computer in the world and was a blend of Cray's unique engineering style and an urgency for high performance computing borne of cold war competition between the United States and the Soviet Union. For the next 30 years, Cray defined the limits of the possible for supercomputers by building the fastest machines in the world. In spite of the enormous influence on science and engineering of his machines, Seymour Cray himself worked in small groups in rural America and shunned publicity. How could this one man and his hand-picked team of people build the fastest computers in the world? What does the Cray-1 tell us about the engineering, social and economic factors that coalesce into creating a stable technological artifact? Why did much larger computer companies abandon the field of supercomputing to this small but powerful foe? What, exactly, were these incredible machines used for? These topics and more are discussed.

Canal: Science & Technology
Añadido: November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am
Autor: ComputerHistory

Duración: 42:22
Puntuación: 4.95
Reproducciones: 7949

Etiquetas: Computer  Cray  Cray-1  History  Seymour  Supercomputer  

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Comentarios

joejoe133 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
c2d is 180 times faster than cray-1
doseryder (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
so a c2d 2.6 would be roughly 180 times faster (flops-wise)than a cray-1. Is cray-1a SMP system or a single-core processor system?Thx
joejoe133 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
cray-1 is 100mflops core 2 duo 2.6 is 18tflops
abecedddario (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Excuse me for my ignorance. Ho would you compare the speed of a Coreduo2 processor of today to a cray computer of the 80´s? Sorry for the silly question.:)
watchandlearn99 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
outfisherman you`re my hero!! I`ve always had the utmost respect for people in the lab who actually develop these machines. I really don`t imagine any better job than being responsible for developing the most powerful tools known to man. I hope I get a chance in my lifetime to ever work on these machines, since I`m getting into IT industry myself. Given a chance I`d choose science over boardroom any day.
outfisherman (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
Nice to see all Cray history is not lost.I worked at Cray in Chippewa Falls from'81 to '94 on the test floor. Best place Iever worked. The technology was at timesintimidating, yet one could not help havingan appreciation for the ultimate speed of themachine. I worked on the 1A, 1S, XMP, YMP, and the Cray-2. Hey "dairymairy666" - I bet I know you! (:-)(IF you were in the Cray Fishing League)
dairymairy666 (November 30, 1999 at 12:00 am)
whoever put this video up i got one thing to say.... I love you!! ;-)