Tera Computer Company Explained

Tera Computer
Type:Manufacturing
Foundation:1987
Products:Computer software and hardware

The Tera Computer Company was a manufacturer of high-performance computing software and hardware, founded in 1987 in Washington, D.C., and moved 1988 to Seattle, Washington, by James Rottsolk and Burton Smith.[1] The company's first supercomputer product, named MTA, featured interleaved multi-threading, i.e. a barrel processor. It also had no data cache, relying instead on switching between threads for latency tolerance, and used a deeply pipelined memory system to handle many simultaneous requests, with address randomization to avoid memory hot spots.[2]

Upon acquiring the Cray Research division of Silicon Graphics in 2000, the company was renamed to Cray Inc.[3]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://www.cray.com/About/History.aspx Cray Inc., History
  2. Web site: 1999. Multi-processor Performance on the Tera MTA. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20120222015429/http://cseweb.ucsd.edu/~carter/Papers/tera2.html. 2012-02-22.
  3. News: 2000 . Supercomputer maker to buy Cray, change name. cnet news.