KEITH@SYSD.SALFORD.AC.UK.UUCP (10/01/87)
The currrent issue of Personal Computer World (the nearest thing the UK to Byte) contains more info on the Atari/Perihelion Transputer development. Apparently, Atari actually arranged for Guy Kewney to meet with Perihelion ! Briefly, a Transputer is a 32 bit microprocessor designed by the UK company, Inmos. It has two especially important features: - it uses a reduced (fast) instruction set (RISC technology) - it was designed to easily interwork, in parallel, with other Transputers The T800 version of the Transputer also contains a floating point processor (I believe, working in parallel with the main processor) and 4 Kbytes of very fast on chip memory. There is an "official" contract between Atari and Perihelion, no details of this are forthcoming but the gist of it is that Atari has the rights to the machine and Perihelion retain rights to the Helios operating system. Atari will then license Helios from Perihelion. The machine is to be provided as an upgrade to the ST and as a stand-alone box about the size of a Mega-ST. The PCW coverage is claiming the single Transputer machine will be 10 times as powerful as an IBM AT (more if measuring floating point operations). "The key aim will be to make genuine animation possible at very high resolution" (Whatever that means !). The system will support probably the most important feature of the Transputer, that is you will be able to add additional Transputers either as a LAN of Atari Transputer systems, or as a multi-processor machine. The PCW writer expects "1 Mbyte of screen memory driven by a bit blitter, and 4 Mbytes of system memory, upgradeable to 64 Mbytes" (he infers that this capacity will be supported in the system box !) Finally, he reports that Atari are planning to run a seminar (where ?) towards the end of the year explaining in detail what the machine will do and how to exploit it. As to the aim of pricing this machine at around 1000 pounds ($1600), another article I have seen makes me believe that this might be possible sometime in '88. A Transputer board (20MHz T800, 2Mbytes memory, Occam compiler) is being introduced by a company called "Microway" in September, price 1750 pounds. With the bulk-buying power of Atari, who knows ?
rnss@ihuxy.UUCP (10/02/87)
In article <KW.FFSA.011087@SALF.D> KEITH@SYSD.SALFORD.AC.UK (Keith Wolstenholme) writes: >Briefly, a Transputer is a 32 bit microprocessor designed by the UK >company, Inmos. It has two especially important features: Any one got address and phone numbers for Inmos ? Do they have any reps in the U.S. ? TIA -- Ron Schreiner AT&T Bell Labs ...ihnp4!ihuxy!rnss
cs2551as@charon.unm.edu (cs2551as) (10/03/87)
You know folks that there is already a transputer board available for the ST. It's put out by KUMA in Great Britain. There was an article on it recently in STart magazine by Tom Hudson ( of Degas fame ). I talked their local rep in the US and he said that they were coming out with a t800 version. So why wait for Atari ? diana eichert