Hands-on Review of the SGI Visual Workstations 64
An anonymous reader sent us a good review of those
SGI Visual Workstations that we all want to reformat and
stick Linux on. The review is that its a solid, and even
superior NT machine. Wonder what sort of Linux box it'll
make. I volunteer to test it! (Along with I bet just about
anyone else who reads this page)
Err, no thanks. (Score:1)
For "the low end box ... just below $4,000", SGI is once again trying to sell^H^H^H^Hpander overpriced, underpowered equiptment by cramming it into a "sleek-n-slick" shiny plastic box.
Right now you can pick up a VArStation YMP(dual 450) with a 16mb Matrox G200 for under $3800 which will easily bury SGI's VPC320(UP) offering. VA's YMP(dual 350) at "just below" $2800 also outdoes this monster.
What it comes down to is, you'd be hard pressed to find someone trying to charge more while offering less.
Their LCD screen, on the other hand, is the coolest thing I've ever seen.
Dont follow the link :( (Score:1)
More apps for Linux than NT (Score:1)
more easily use Linux to ray trace large numbers of frames for large production Movies. This machine will market to the CAD and hollywood industries, where linux already has a strong hold. Linux makes sense for this SGI workstation, and SGI knows it.
Wonder how NT is day to day... (Score:1)
Can anyone out there comment on their experiences with NTWS4.0SP3 (or similar)? Have you come across the same thing? What about anyone using the OS maybe at work on some high-powered Intel-based computers?
I'd be interested to hear...
Cheers,
Matthew
More apps for Linux than NT, or Off With Your Head (Score:1)
Photoshop
Premiere
After Affects
Infini-D
Strata Studio
run on i386 linux? (they run on NT and MacOS)
Please don't tell me that I can use the gimp to get my work done under linux. I'd rather use Photoshop 3 on a Mac IIci. Work would get done much faster and with much less pain.
I don't think linux makes sense for these workstations.
already saw this? (Score:1)
Or is this a different one?
no numbers = hype (Score:1)
until then, this thing is pure hype.
__
SGI's hardware optimization first rate. (Score:1)
Without that.. SGI is just another PC reseller now. Heavily optimized or not.. it's still NT.
The CEO (Beluzzo(sp)) used to be at HP, when they made their ill-fated decision to move away from doing real work.. and started reselling NT instead. As cool as SGI's hardware is.. I kind of doubt that it will really stay ahead of other PC systems for very long..
Linux already runs on them! (Score:1)
I wasn't just high when I read that SGI was going to be shipping Linux versions as well, was I?
This does not make sense...what would an 8 foot tall wookie from Kishi be doing living on Endor with a bunch of 2 foot tall Ewoks? It does not make sense!!! (Thanks Johnny Cochran... :)
Guess they're pulling a Corel (Score:1)
Wonder how NT is day to day... (Score:1)
SP4 doesn't seem quite so stable. It's crashed during boot a couple of times for reasons I cannot fathom, so when I migrate to my new box next week I'll be applying only SP3. Linux will be quite happy on the old box.
Oh who cares it's Linux (Score:1)
TCWWW! (Score:1)
=) Use NT day to day myself... (Score:1)
It would seem that perhaps running on a K6-233 May be part of the problem here... It also helps immensely if you have a SCSI system, compared to an IDE drive w/o ultra DMA or whatever it's called. NT, being a resource hog, barely runs in 64MB itself without swapping, add in an open Netscape window, some telnet windows, and a copy of Word, and maybe WinAMP in the corner, and you will definitely creep past 64mb...
However, this is where the disc drive subsystem and the CPU come in; it can be argued either way that NT is a 32 bit OS, as opposed to 95/98/3.1, and relies heavily on an optimized 32bit CPU like the PPro, P2, and Celeron, or vice versa that the CPU was tailored specifically for 32bit compute operations, and that the old Pentium line, and cousins and such, just aren't up to it-don't ask me, I've only run NT on a PPro 200 with a SCSI disc subsystem, and for my usage of Word, Netscape, email, telnet, and VC++, it works fine. For similar performance and usage on older hardware, Linux really does seem to be the way to go.
A lot of people think that SCSI is a rip-off, and stupid for being so more expensive that IDE, except that it takes 30% or so less CPU resources than standard IDEs; that can mean a lot for a swap happy OS like NT. However, spending an additional 70$ for another 64mb might be all that's needed to stop those swap stops you mentioned. Don't quote back numbers to me about ultra DMA IDE drives, and their bus mastering efficiency; I have no experience with that, though I would appreciate being informed and not flamed =)
-Twink
louisjr@cco.caltech.edu
What kind of programs would u run in linux that... (Score:1)
any free software that uses GL
GLquake and family
any ported commercial ware.
then theres the competitive price performance...
yes you con run this stuff on an SGI(irix), but
you would pay far more for far less performance.
seriously, some of us like to code GL stuff. some
of us even do it for fun, and think linux is a more fun environment than NT. (ok, so some may think NT is more fun, but they have nothing to
complain about)
and, yes there are many corps, studios etc who have in house software written for irix or some other unix that they would rather port to linux
than to NT.
Wonder how NT is day to day... (Score:1)
IMO, SGIs are fatally flawed for NT development (Score:1)