SGI and the death of “beautiful computing”

01 April 2009

indigo2

I sort of grew up with SGI (Silicon Graphics) computers during my university years and beyond. There was a time, for a span of some 12 years in my academic life, when I had a SGI machine either on my desk, or somewhere close by. Most of my research was done on SGI machines, and data visualized on its fabulous graphics system.

So, today was a sad, sad day for me. With a lot of regret today I read the obituary of SGI. An once mighty Silicon Valley company, with peak sales around 4 billion US dollars, now got sold for a paltry $25 million to Rackable Systems. This is the end of “beautiful computing” as I knew it.

For Silicon Graphics machines were as much work of art as they helped produce. For, do you know, there was a time when the Hollywood dream machine rode fanciful on the able shoulders of SGI. But that was then. Cheap and plentiful hardware and “utility computing” has taken its toll. The sheer power of combined masses of the Intel and AMD, NVidia and ATI, has steamrolled past the fragile beauty of SGI.

I am sure the management of SGI is to be blamed aptly. But I will leave it to others to do that job.

I will only bemoan the beautiful computing machines that have once graced my desktop, and computer rooms, and provided number crunching and graphics horsepower. But, most of all I remember being ecstatic the day I got my brand new SGI Indigo. No, I haven’t felt quite that way with my MacBook Pro, though it comes close at times.

And, no, please don’t even talk to me about the “functionally ugly” IBM PC.

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  1. Alastair May 6th, 2009 at 22:15 | #1

    I think the management of SGI could have done little. It is no longer a workstation world. On the bright side, the same forces that destroyed SGI have put computing power in the hands of a lot more people. Let’s hope some of them use it to make beautiful things.

  2. Ed May 14th, 2009 at 22:16 | #2

    SGI was even more beautiful from the inside. We made dream machines that looked great and brought computing to life. It was serious fun, and we got paid, and for a while made a significant contribution to the advancement of computing as we know it today - check out the history of google earth?

    I left the IT industry the day the music died.

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