KIRK@pucc.Princeton.EDU (Kirk D. Alexander) (09/13/89)
September 12, 1989
The Interactive Computer Graphics Laboratory (ICGL) at
Princeton University is interested in selling eight of its
Silicon Graphics 3020 Engineering Workstations. The asking
price for all of the units listed below is $10,000.00 each.
(may be negotiable)
All of the machines are Motorola 68020 CPU's running AT&T
Unix System V with Berkeley 4.2 enhancements. Displayable
resolution on all machines is 1024x780. There are two
configurations, with and without tape drivers:
3 each of
#W-3020 Iris 3020 Workstation
#H-ZC2 Z Clipping
#H-DM24A 1024x1024x24 Display Memory (total=32bits)
#H3-FPA Floating Point Accelerator
#C3W-TCP Ethernet Interface
#D-60-RS 60HZ/RS170A Display Format & Monitor
70Meg Winchester Disk, 4 Meg System RAM
#C3W-IBM Link Interface
The original list price of Configuration I was about
$59,000. The list price of the a drive was $2100. This
was in June of 1986. Princeton has been spending about
$3000 per year per unit for basic maintenance. Commercial
prices for such maintenance may be higher. Tape drives are still
available from SGI now if you want to add one
Kirk Alexander, Manager (kirk@phoenix.princeton.edu or kirk@pucc.bitnet)
Interactive Computer Graphics Laboratory
E-420 Engineering Quadrangle
Princeton University
Princeton, N.J. 08544
(609) 258-5420blbates@AERO4.LARC.NASA.GOV ("Brent L. Bates AAD/TAB MS294 x42854") (09/13/89)
What is the difference between a 3020 and a 3030? Is it just the size and number of disks? -- Brent L. Bates NASA-Langley Research Center M.S. 294 Hampton, Virginia 23665-5225 (804) 864-2854 E-mail: blbates@aero4.larc.nasa.gov or blbates@aero2.larc.nasa.gov