SGI Announces MIPS and IRIX End of Production
ramakant writes "Considering the recent news regarding their dismal financial situation, it should come as no surprise that SGI announced end of production for MIPS based hardware and the IRIX operating system. From the article: "SGI launched the MIPS/IRIX family of products in 1988. Since then, this technology has powered servers, workstations, and visualization systems used extensively in Manufacturing, Media, Science, Government/Defense, and Energy. After nearly two decades of leading the world in innovation and versatility, the MIPS IRIX products will end their general availability on December 29, 2006." IRIX has always been my favored OS, and I'll be sad to see it gone. Hopefully my O2 will survive for many years to come."
Systems with a clean instruction set are apparently unpopular in the real world.
PowerPC is rather nice, but it's not as clean. (but it is easier to use)
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
MIPS is not going away. They are a seperate company that now focuses on the high-end embedded market.
MIPS is popular because it's unpatented (except for a few less common instructions, which aren't taught in Computer Organization and Design anyway). A common term project in computer architecture courses is to design a reduced implementation of the MIPS architecture on an FPGA; some students go beyond this and end up with Plasma. The ARM architecture, on the other hand, is still patented.
The most popular ARM platform simulator nowadays seems to be VisualBoyAdvance.
MIPS isn't going away. MIPS is very popular for embedded video processing. TiVo is MIPS (now, at least), the PSP is MIPS, and many DVD players are based on a MIPS. MIPS is still popular because the ISA isn't patented and there are a number of compatible cores out there.
SGI MIPS-workstations are going away, MIPS itself is not going anywhere, It's still running in millions of embedded devices, and more will be announced in the future.
Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
Apollo, DEC, Amdahl, Prime, RCA, Remington Rand, GE, Univac, Perkin Elmer, MassComp, Concurrent Computer, Compaq, Sequent, Encore, Xerox, Scientific Data Systems, Wang, GO corporation...and so many more.
The only lesson you could profit from in all this carnage is knowing when to sell your shares, when to find a good merger rather than waiting for the bankers to hold a fire sale of your patent portfolio.
SLASHDOT: news for people who can't concentrate on work or have no life at all and got tired of yelling back at the TV.
also of importance at the bottom of the article is:
SGI ported their graphics code to linux years ago, so that they could eliminate the cost of maintaining their own unix variant.
Even chkconfig reasonably standard in mainstream linux distros. IRIX is not worth the effort.
They can now concentrate on their core competency, which is presumably better graphics hardware than their competition.
I guess Erwin will have to start shopping for spare parts on ebay...
I am an anonymous coward.. err.. don't really feel the need to create an account. But, as an SGI employee I can attest to Linux scaling very well on SGI. How about 1024 Itanium2 processors as a single system. No, this is not some cluster machine. One copy of linux runnuing on 1024p with many terabytes of memory.
Then there is a 4096 processor machine without manky infiniband interconnect or myrinet nonsense that you can run MPI programs against.
And if you really want a big cluster machine, how about 10240 processors addressable via MPI over infiniband.
I will answer. None at all.
This announcement is about the end of MIPS as a server and workstation platform. The vast majority of CPUs are not used for server or workstations. They live in toasters, DVD players, digital cameras, microwaves, and so on. In the real world very few people ever write assembly programs that run on a server or a workstation. However in the embedded space assembly is still pretty common.
MIPS isn't dead. MIPS servers are dead. MIPS lives on in many devices.
See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
I think they should release IRIX under the GPL and let the community maintain it!
I believe that is called Linux. SGI has already released bunches of IRIX to Linux including ccNUMA code and XFS and I'm sure other goodies as well.
They tried that. Didn't help.
SGI also tried making overpriced Windows desktops. That also flopped. Nice cases, though.
I'm still waiting for opensolaris' complete sources to go through
See cvs.opensolaris.org. Every bit that Sun can release has been released.
I use Friend/Foe + mod-point modifiers as a karma/reputation system.
Yes, based on a preliminary injunction, which is apparently quite easy to get in Germany. Their evidence has not actually been presented in court.
i.e. you lose.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
That would be FSN (http://www.sgi.com/fun/freeware/3d_navigator.html ) which has an open-source clone on SourceForge.
FSV: http://fsv.sourceforge.net/