Re: Any interest in a Floating Point Systems AP-120 array processor?

2021-03-01 Thread Boris Gimbarzevsky via cctalk
That appears to be an earlier model of a similar system we had at UBC 
which could crunch arrays of FP numbers at 10 Mflops. Had it 
connected to an 11/44 and just recall doing some frantic programming 
mainly involving using minimal code as had to use memory management 
to allocate memory pages to get data into array processor and then 
fetch results.  Realized at that time that a 56 Kb memory space was a 
bit limited for this type of work.  Did FFT far faster than 11/23 
(which took 1 second for 1024 points using DEC's code that shipped 
with MINC) but still had to do overnight runs to analyze a lot of our 
data.  Likely have bad memories of that part of my programming career 
as we were under some rather tight deadlines to analyze data to get a 
few papers published and I much preferred writing in PDP11 assembler 
as very rarely had to deal with running out of memory issues with 
data acquisition code.


Out of curiousity, decided to benchmark one of my old, really cheap 
PC laptops that got in 2010 and it managed 30 Mflops using double 
precision arithmetic.  10 Mflop performance no longer as impressive 
as it used to be.



I picked this up a number of years ago for reasons that entirely escape
me.  It's certainly neat, but I don't see myself ever actually using it and
it's large and heavy.

Documented here:
http://bitsavers.trailing-edge.com/pdf/fps/7259-02_AP-120B_procHbk.pdf

Mine appears to have a DEC-style interface but I'm unsure what it talks to
on the DEC side of things.

I can take pictures if there's interest, but it's fairly nondescript, just
a large white box with rack-mount ears and a small panel with some switches
on it.

It's in the Seattle area if anyone wants it, and it's free!  Shipping is...
not something I really want to think about right now.

- Josh





Re: Any interest in RLX blade servers

2021-03-01 Thread Grant Taylor via cctalk

On 3/1/21 1:02 PM, Johan Helsingius via cctalk wrote:
RLX Technologies pioneered the blade server concept between 1999 
and 2005 (when they got acquired by HP). I have two of their early 
RLX 24 blade enclosures, one fully populated with 24 transmeta-based 
processor blades, and the other with 19 blades.


I'd be interested in pictures if you have some handy.



--
Grant. . . .
unix || die


Re: Any interest in RLX blade servers

2021-03-01 Thread Cameron Kaiser via cctalk
> RLX Technologies pioneered the blade server concept between 1999 and 2005
> (when they got acquired by HP). I have two of their early RLX 24 blade
> enclosures, one fully populated with 24 transmeta-based processor blades,
> and the other with 19 blades.

Wait. Transmeta?? Which chip, specifically? I assume running in x86 mode.

-- 
 personal: http://www.cameronkaiser.com/ --
  Cameron Kaiser * Floodgap Systems * www.floodgap.com * ckai...@floodgap.com
-- The world is not enough. ---


Any interest in RLX blade servers

2021-03-01 Thread Johan Helsingius via cctalk

RLX Technologies pioneered the blade server concept between 1999 and 2005
(when they got acquired by HP). I have two of their early RLX 24 blade
enclosures, one fully populated with 24 transmeta-based processor blades,
and the other with 19 blades.

Julf