The Control Data Corporation
1957 founded by ex-ERA
employees in Minneapolis, Minnesota
1958 Seymour Cray joins CDC
1959 CDC 1604 first shipment. This a 48-bit machine close
to the von Neumann proposal, with added index registers.
Related to the ERA 1103A.
1959 CDC 160 first shipment. This is a 12-bit computer, the
first minicomputer. Strong influence on DEC PDP early models
as well as all further minicomuters. Used either stand-alone
or as frontend to the 1604.
1962 CDC 3000 family, not done by Seymour Cray (who is
working on the 6600 together with Thornton and a design crew
totaling 34, at Chippewa Falls). Upward compatible to 1604,
with added functionality, speed, and system variants.
1964 CDC
6600 first shipment. Speed is 50 times the 1604, depending
upon application somewhere around 1 MFLOPS, 60 bit words.
Marks the starting point of Seymour Cray machines dominance in
high performance scientific computation. Introduces larger
working store (set
of registers),
peripheral processors (closely related to the 160) for I/O,
very high bandwidth central memory (32 banks at 1000 nsec
cycle supporting a CPU at 100 nsec cycle). RISC-type instruction
set with 15-bit and 30-bit formats.
A single instruction (exchange
jump) saves and restores the full working store.
1965 CDC 6000 family. Comaptible slower and cheaper
processors, dual processors, extended core storage (2MW)
1969 CDC
7600 first shipment, 4-5 times the speed of the 6600,
largely compatible. The Cyber 960-31 operated by
cray-cyber.org is of about 1/2 the performance of this
machine, and software compatible to the 6600.
1972 Seymour Cray leaves CDC to found Cray Research,
Inc.
1974 Cyber 70 family
1976 CDC Star-100 vector computer, first delivered to
Lawrence Livermore Lab. Thornton is lead designer.
1978 Cyber 170 family
1980 Cyber 200 family, improved versions of the
STAR-100
1982 Cyber 180 family, 64-bit virtual memory family, with
60-bit real memory (6000, 70, 170) compatibility mode
1987 ETA-10, successor to Cyber 200 family. Neil Lincoln
chief designer. on ETA
systems on
the ETA-10 on the ETA
closing
Cyber 17/18/1700 minicomuters
Advanced Flexible Processor, CyberPlus VLIW machines
peripherals
4xxx series
A table of CDC mainframe machines may be found here
More on CDC and ETA on
CDC/ETA and others on CDC
including
CyberPlus |