Seymour Roger Cray (September 28, 1925 – October 5, 1996) was an American electrical engineer and supercomputer architect who designed a series of computers...
30 KB (3,606 words) - 02:33, 30 December 2024
computer designer Seymour Cray as Cray Research, Inc., and it continues to manufacture parts in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, where Cray was born and raised...
38 KB (4,042 words) - 04:32, 24 December 2024
Cray-1 addressed these problems and produced a machine that ran several times faster than any similar design. The Cray-1's architect was Seymour Cray;...
35 KB (4,537 words) - 18:00, 12 October 2024
The Cray-3 was a vector supercomputer, Seymour Cray's designated successor to the Cray-2. The system was one of the first major applications of gallium...
22 KB (2,576 words) - 02:49, 4 September 2024
Hobby tunneling (section Seymour Cray)
fun, although some have given additional reasons for their activities. Seymour Cray, for instance, said that the work of digging helped him to think about...
23 KB (2,595 words) - 03:52, 30 November 2024
Andrew Cray was born in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin, the child of Steven and Ardis Cray. He was the grandchild of Seymour Cray, the founder of Cray Research...
11 KB (974 words) - 02:53, 3 December 2024
engineer Seymour Cray who developed a series of fast computers, then considered the fastest computing machines in the world; in the 1970s, Cray left the...
53 KB (6,662 words) - 19:06, 1 October 2024
replacing the Cray X-MP in that spot. It was, in turn, replaced in that spot by the Cray Y-MP in 1988. The Cray-2 was the first of Seymour Cray's designs to...
16 KB (2,149 words) - 04:03, 26 May 2024
series of computers at Control Data Corporation (CDC) were designed by Seymour Cray to use innovative designs and parallelism to achieve superior computational...
39 KB (3,537 words) - 02:20, 5 November 2024
and for several decades the fastest was made by Seymour Cray at Control Data Corporation (CDC), Cray Research and subsequent companies bearing his name...
81 KB (7,903 words) - 22:04, 21 December 2024
The CDC 7600 was designed by Seymour Cray to be the successor to the CDC 6600, extending Control Data's dominance of the supercomputer field into the 1970s...
26 KB (2,522 words) - 07:02, 30 January 2024
Radio's Kineplex modems. Kineplex was a parallel-tone, multicarrier modem. Seymour Cray is credited for developing the first NTDS processor, the AN/USQ-17. However...
14 KB (1,906 words) - 22:15, 29 January 2024
the machines designed at Engineering Research Associates (ERA), which Seymour Cray had been asked to update after moving to CDC. After an experimental machine...
54 KB (6,275 words) - 23:59, 21 December 2024
Falls is the birthplace of Seymour Cray, known as the "father of supercomputing", and the headquarters for the original Cray Research. It is also the home...
29 KB (2,802 words) - 13:10, 14 December 2024
Rand corporation in October 1953. It was the first computer for which Seymour Cray was credited with design work. Even before the completion of the Atlas...
11 KB (1,136 words) - 21:10, 30 November 2024
introduced their own mainframe, the CDC 1604, in 1958. Designed primarily by Seymour Cray, the company soon followed the 1604 with a series of increasingly powerful...
10 KB (1,143 words) - 01:37, 31 May 2024
member of the CDC 6000 series was the supercomputer CDC 6600, designed by Seymour Cray and James E. Thornton in Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin. It was introduced...
42 KB (4,627 words) - 20:37, 6 December 2024
Bhend, Kent Steiner, Raymon Kort, and Neil R. Lincoln. Discussion topics include CDC 1604, CDC 6600, CDC 7600, CDC 8600, CDC STAR-100 and Seymour Cray....
13 KB (1,506 words) - 23:33, 14 October 2024
Bill Dally (category Seymour Cray Computer Engineering Award recipients)
series. He received the ACM/SIGARCH Maurice Wilkes Award in 2000, the Seymour Cray Computer Science and Engineering Award in 2004, and the IEEE Computer...
13 KB (1,202 words) - 23:06, 28 December 2024
John L. Hennessy (category Seymour Cray Computer Engineering Award recipients)
John Leroy Hennessy (born September 22, 1952) is an American computer scientist who is chairman of Alphabet Inc. (Google). Hennessy is one of the founders...
24 KB (1,824 words) - 16:01, 24 December 2024
The CDC 1604 is a 48-bit computer designed and manufactured by Seymour Cray and his team at the Control Data Corporation (CDC). The 1604 is known as one...
16 KB (1,330 words) - 08:01, 8 October 2024
doing so. CDC management eventually gave up and folded the company. Seymour Cray left CDC in the early 1970s when they refused to continue funding of...
10 KB (1,328 words) - 03:52, 16 October 2024
The CDC 8600 was the last of Seymour Cray's supercomputer designs while he worked for Control Data Corporation. As the natural successor to the CDC 6600...
9 KB (1,421 words) - 23:08, 24 July 2023
6600. One of the most famous computer architects to emerge from CDC was Seymour Cray. After a disagreement with CDC management regarding the development of...
18 KB (2,249 words) - 03:34, 31 July 2024
behavioral geneticist Seymour Cassel (1935-2019), American actor Seymour Cocks (1882–1953), British Labour Party Member of Parliament Seymour Cray (1925–1996),...
4 KB (494 words) - 07:29, 25 December 2024
been developed for the AN/USQ-17 by Seymour Cray for the United States Navy. This was the last machine that Cray designed before leaving UNIVAC to join...
7 KB (781 words) - 08:16, 18 December 2024
compatibility mode in which it did not use the 13th bit. The 160 was designed by Seymour Cray - reportedly over a long three-day weekend. It fit into the desk where...
9 KB (1,002 words) - 18:27, 8 October 2024
Data System (NTDS), was designed as a more reliable replacement for the Seymour Cray-designed AN/USQ-17 with the same instruction set. The first batch of...
3 KB (349 words) - 16:48, 26 December 2024
department has strong roots in the early days of supercomputing with Seymour Cray of Cray supercomputers. The university also became a member of the Laser...
112 KB (10,635 words) - 15:31, 1 January 2025
Cray (born 1957), American artist Graham Cray (born 1947), British retired Anglican bishop Robert Cray (born 1953), American blues musician Seymour Cray...
486 bytes (99 words) - 22:09, 1 March 2019