SGI Origin 350

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Our SGI Origin 350 system is complete with 8 MPX units and the Infinite Reality graphics expansion module.
 
From SGI website :
SGI® Origin® 350 technical servers are the only mid-range systems that enable truly modular, single-system configurations, providing completely independent scalability of I/O bandwidth, system bandwidth, computational performance, memory, storage, and visualization capabilities. Using the revolutionary SGI® NUMAflex® architecture, SGI Origin 350 technical servers deliver sustained, multi-dimensional performance in compact, affordable, rack-mountable components.

SGI Origin 350SGI Origin 350 compute module and compute expansion
As a standalone technical server, the compute SGI Origin 350 compute module boasts two or four processors, up to 8GB memory, 4 PCI-X slots1, two drive bays, and integrated power, all in 3.5 inches of rack space. As problem sizes grow, simply cable in additional compute modules for additional computational power, or expansion modules for I/O bandwidth, memory, storage, graphics, or system scalability.
 
SGI Origin 350 - MPX BrickMPX PCI, PCI-X & Memory Expansion
Some applications require more memory, without the CPU overhead. The memory expansion module adds 8GB of additional memory capacity, as well as four additional PCI-X slots, in 3.5 inches.
 
SGI Origin 350 - G-BrickGraphics Expansion
For many technical applications, visualization is the key to enhance collaboration and faster time-to-insight. SGI Origin 350 technical servers can be configured as SGI® Onyx® 350 visualization systems, with InfinitePerformance graphics cards inserted in dedicated slots in compute modules, or with additional modules for InfiniteReality graphics.
 
 
For more information visit the SGI Website :
http://www.sgi.com/products/remarketed/origin350/overview.html
 
 
Press Release from ZDNET :
 
SGI's midrange Unix server gets an update
SGI announced on Tuesday its Origin 350 Unix server, a descendant of the two-year-old Origin 300 that has more new processors, additional memory capacity and faster input-output capability.
The system can be purchased with between two and 32 processors and with as many as 62 PCI-X slots for plugging in high-bandwidth devices such as Fibre Channel or gigabit Ethernet network cards. It can accommodate as much as 64GB of memory.
 
Like the Origin 300 introduced two years ago, the 350 comes in rack-mountable four-processor modules, each 3.5 inches tall, that can be stacked together to form a single large system. The systems also accommodate special-purpose chassis for extra memory or input-output slots.
SGI is aiming the system at broadcast and military customers who need a fair amount of computing power in a small space, such as a mobile broadcast or operations centre. For government and defense markets, SGI's Origin 350 systems can be stacked in a single rack along with storage components that collectively can receive, process and archive data.
 
In the late 1990s, SGI attempted to penetrate the general-purpose server market but was rebuffed by bigger players such as IBM, Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard and by a tight economy. The company now is focused on its core market, which is high-performance technical computing, particularly projects with intense graphics demands such as visualising data or creating three-dimensional models of new cars.
 
The new system comes with the faster MIPS R16000 processors, compared to the R14000 processors in the Origin 300, Addison Snell, SGI's product manager for high performance computing, said in an interview. In addition, it can accommodate double the memory -- as much as 8GB per four-processor node.
 
A lower-end Origin 350 with four processors and 2GB of memory costs $34,580. With eight processors and a separate expansion cabinet for more input-output slots, the price climbs to about $78,000, Snell said.
 
SGI's Origin 350 systems use the company's own Irix version of the Unix operating system, as well as its MIPS processors running at 600MHz to 700MHz. In January, the company debuted its Altix 3000 system with 64 Intel Itanium 2 processors that runs Linux.

Manufacturer: SGI
Date: April 2003



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This exhibit has a reference ID of CH1613. Please quote this reference ID in any communication with the Centre for Computing History.

 

SGI Origin 350


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