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hmsp | 1 year ago

These things were so awesome back in the 90s. I got to use quite a few of them and even owned a couple in the early 2000s as they were being thrown away.

It always blew my mind that systems like SGI and SUN existed and yet somehow windows was allegedly cutting edge.

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pipeline_peak|1 year ago

Linux or Windows NT combined with gpu companies like Nvdia ate into everything that made SGI successful.

As a geek, I miss exotic Unix hardware with their shapes, colors, and RISC chips. As a nerd, who needs that when AMD64 and Nvdia get the job done.

hmsp|1 year ago

I once had a magical collection of chips from old Unix workstations - dec alphas and vax, dig and sun. I was responsible for cleaning out a large storage room of computers from the 70s-90s and I pulled all the processors I could because they were amazing objects to look at.

I remember throwing out handfuls of ram chips measured in the KB and thinking how much each handful originally cost.

I was like 19 when I did this and everything got lost to time in the end.

It sure was a fun time as a Unix geek playing with all this old hardware. We had a dec box running netbsd that had an absurd uptime - like 12 years or something. Labs of Sunrays running off of 8 processor mainframes. SGI’s around the edges.

But even then I was slowly replacing this stuff with Linux. There was just no competition and as much as I loved the legacy Unix stuff it wasn’t as nice or as easy to run as open source alternatives.

I’m glad I got to play in that world though.

fred_is_fred|1 year ago

I’m not sure it was a much considered cutting edge rather it was considered cost effective. 99.99% of office workers did not need this kind of workstation, windows systems were cheaper and became ubiquitous.

hmsp|1 year ago

Oh I agree.

I mainly meant “to the general public” this (windows 98) was cutting edge.

Almost no one even at the time knew what SGI was. In the late 90’s and early 2000’s even apples share was tiny.

It just blew my mind then how horrible the experience of using windows was compared to Unix and that windows won.

I had a job in 2001 running a bunch of computers: 1/3 windows, 1/3 Unix and 1/3 Mac - os9 mostly. The Unix and Mac just worked.

The windows computers broke so often I set them all up to use SMB shares for user file storage. Since they were all the exact same dell systems and all had the same software on them anytime one broke I’d just boot a Linux CD and use “nc” and “dd” to rewrite a functioning disk image to the system in question and bring it right back up to usable. Then it was just a matter of logging in the right SMB shares and the user just thought I’d fixed their computer.

It was a fun time.

pjmlp|1 year ago

They were super expensive, and even if IrisGL was a great achievement, there are many ways to put pixels on the screen.

throwaway48540|1 year ago

Windows NT - the OS to run on comparable computers - was cutting edge, and still is in many ways. Don't be fooled by the similarly named products made for 100x less powerful computers.

IntelMiner|1 year ago

What computers that ran NT in the 90's were "100x more powerful" than UNIX workstations, exactly?

anthk|1 year ago

NT and intel didn't catch up SGI/Mips and Dec/Alpha until the Pentium III, and in the case of the Alpha, even the 800MHZ one was subpar against the Alpha.