Caltech Cosmic Cube Explained

The Caltech Cosmic Cube was a parallel computer, developed by Charles Seitz and Geoffrey C Fox from 1981 onward.[1] It was the first working hypercube built.[2]

It was an early attempt to capitalise on VLSI to speed up scientific calculations at a reasonable cost. Using commodity hardware and an architecture suited to the specific task (QCD), Fox and Seitz demonstrated that this was indeed possible.

In 1984 a group at Intel including Justin Rattner and Cleve Moler developed the Intel iPSC inspired by the Cosmic Cube.[3] In 1987 several people in the group formed a company called Parasoft to commercialize the message passing interface developed for the Cosmic Cube.[4]

Characteristics

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Cosmic Cubism from Engineering & Science, March 1984 http://calteches.library.caltech.edu/3419/1/Cubism.pdf
  2. Book: Anderson, A. John . Foundations of Computer Technology . 1994 . CRC Press . 978-0412598104 . 378 .
  3. Web site: The Intel Hypercube, part 1 . October 28, 2013 . Cleve Moler . Cleve Moler . November 4, 2013 .
  4. http://wotug.org/parallel/documents/misc/timeline/timeline.txt History of Supercomputing
  5. http://www.netlib.org/utk/lsi/pcwLSI/text/node13.html Birth of the Hypercube