Hi.
Just restating what I said in another forum. This is
the coolest thing I've seen in a long while.
Even though I'm an Ardent fan of sgi. SGI is left in
the dust by this machine.
/P
On Sun, Nov 25, 2018 at 03:42:53PM +0100, Camiel Vanderhoeven via cctech wrote:
Now that my mousepad problem has been solved, and I
have a fully working Ardent Titan with some interesting software on it ? the bundled
version of MATLAB, and BIOGRAF, a molecular modeling application ? I decided to make a
short video about this system in which I show the hardware and demonstrate some of the
software:
https://youtu.be/tMSnnt3iFz0
For those who haven?t heard of the system; the 1987 Ardent Titan (later renamed the
Stardent 1500) was the first system that combined vector processors (as in a Cray-like
architecture) and a graphics engine on the same backplane, and was the highest-performing
graphics supercomputer for a short while. In the end, however, a longer than planned time
to market and a forced merger with Stellar Computer caused the premature demise of the
company.
Cleve Moler, the inventor of MATLAB, worked at Ardent for three years, which is one of
the reasons the Titan was the only computer ever to come with MATLAB as part of its
bundled software. As I found out later ? after creating this video ? the version of MATLAB
on the Titan was unique, because it included a ?render? command, which would plot a 3D
surface using the Dor? graphics library. On other platforms, MATLAB could only render mesh
plots. It wasn?t until 1992 that the mainstream version of MATLAB gained 3D surface
rendering.
Cleve wrote a number of articles on his blog about the Titan, one of which
(
https://blogs.mathworks.com/cleve/2013/12/09/the-ardent-titan-part-2/) describes how the
Titan was used to create a video of a vibrating L-shaped membrane. With a little help from
Cleve, I?m trying to recreate this video. A first effort ? which isn?t quite right yet ?
can be seen here:
https://youtu.be/-XeabDqRAG8
I hope some of you enjoy these!
Camiel