[comp.sys.amiga.hardware] Transputer Graphics Board

greg@walt.cc.utexas.edu (Greg Harp) (07/10/90)

I may have missed this in my absence, but has the Digital Animation Productions
Video Graphics Transputer been discussed here?

Looking in my SCOPE magazine (Dallas-area users group -- The Society of
Computer Owners and PET Enthusiasts (puts a date on this group!)) I see
two articles on it.

Here is a paraphrased set of specs from the two articles:

The board comes with one T800 Transputer and a G300 Color Video
Controller.  There are a stock 2MB of RAM for EACH of these two chips.

The board is capable of 512 X 512 to 8192 X 8192 resolutions at 24 bits.
The board apparently produces some sort of video output at 1280 X 1024.

With some sort of (unexplained) optional other transputer board, this thing
is capable of 1K X 1K ray-tracing in about 7 seconds.  W/O the other board,
it take about 5 mins for the same.

I quote:  "The VGT operates at 10 RISC MIPS, with floating point speeds of
1.5 MFLOPS.  The board can draw 19MB of image per second, and can perform
bit-block operations (blit) up to 8MB in size."

The other Transputer board may be the SANG board which is discussed in the next
paragraph, which when fully loaded with T800s and RAM will pull 120 RISC MIPS.
Prices are listed as $6000 for the VGT.  The SANG with one T800 and
(either 2MB or 4MB -- not clear) RAM goes for $2000.  A SANG with four T800s
and 16MB runs $7000.  You can use FOUR of the fully populated SANGs
together!

The second article says that 8K by 8K imaged would require the four SANGs,
but that the result would be a theatrical-quality animation studio (with
SCSI film recorder) for about $20000, which is better than the current industry
amount of "several hundred thousand dollars".

These people are apparently trying to get the current Amiga ray-tracing s/w
adapted to the board (they were apparently trying to get the author of
Aegis/Oxxi's AniMagic s/w during the interview).

The address listed for this company is:

Digital Animation Productions
1010 Thatcher St.   Suite 16
Boston, MA  02113
(617)720-2038

Anyway, this sounds like really exciting stuff!  I don't consider the price
too steep considering the alternatives, and this is at least at the level of
anything PIXAR has produced. (And if you haven't been impressed by a PIXAR
production, then you plain can't be impressed!)

So, what has anyone else heard about this little wonder?

What, if any, competitors exist?  What about comparable (don't laugh)
PC or Mac boards?  Why doesn't CBM know about this? (or do they and are they
just sitting on it?)

I NEED ANSWERS!!!!! :-)

Well?

...greg...


        ___  Disclaimer:  The opinions expressed above are not my own, but
AMIGA! ////  the property of some higher-up power, to which I am only a tool.
      ////     "Welcome, my son.  Welcome to the machine." -- Pink Floyd
___  //// "Reality is only a simulation, and it's still in beta testing." -- Me
\\\\//// 
 \\XX//            Greg Harp                greg@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu

sam@ms.uky.edu (Mike Mills) (07/11/90)

greg@walt.cc.utexas.edu (Greg Harp) writes:

[stuff deleted]
>Anyway, this sounds like really exciting stuff!  I don't consider the price
>too steep considering the alternatives, and this is at least at the level of
>anything PIXAR has produced. (And if you haven't been impressed by a PIXAR
>production, then you plain can't be impressed!)

I saw one of these at AmiExpo Chicago last year...it was very FAST.  I may be
wrong, but it looked like the demo they were showing was ray-tracing and 
rotating an object in real time.


-- 
|  Mike Mills (aka "Sam")             | sam@ms.uky.edu  cn.mike@ukpr.uky.edu  |
|  (606) 231-7933                     |             BIX:  mike...             |
+-------------------------------------+---------------------------------------+
|               "There is always an alternative."  --Spock                    |

cole@anomaly.sbs.com (Cole Calistra) (07/12/90)

In article <sam.647630761@s.ms.uky.edu> sam@ms.uky.edu (Mike Mills) writes:
>greg@walt.cc.utexas.edu (Greg Harp) writes:
>
>[stuff deleted]
>>Anyway, this sounds like really exciting stuff!  I don't consider the price
>>too steep considering the alternatives, and this is at least at the level of
>>anything PIXAR has produced. (And if you haven't been impressed by a PIXAR
>>production, then you plain can't be impressed!)
>
>I saw one of these at AmiExpo Chicago last year...it was very FAST.  I may be
>wrong, but it looked like the demo they were showing was ray-tracing and 
>rotating an object in real time.

Yes, I also saw that demonstration.  It was put on by a company called Digital
Animation Productions.  They are located somewheres in Massechusetts.  The 
president of the company (or at least the head guy at the show) was Daniel
Ten Ton.  (Catchy name 8-).  I believe they have since been to other AmiExpo's
such as the Washington, DC. one.  If I'm correct they had more than just a 
transputer, they had a 2000 in a tower, and a few video cards that could get 
up to 8000x8000 some odd pixels with 16.2 million colors at once.  It required
TWENTY (20) megs of ram on the card though (got the spec sheet in front of me).
 
                           -cole@anomaly.sbs.coma
-- 
 =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
 |                            Cole C. Calistra                             |
 |                     UUCP:  uunet!rayssd!anomaly!cole                    |
 |                      INTERNET: cole@anomaly.sbs.com                     |
 |         Applied Vision Software - The Art of Amiga Development          |
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schweige@cs.nps.navy.mil (Jeffrey M. Schweiger) (07/12/90)

In article <33682@ut-emx.UUCP> greg@walt.cc.utexas.edu (Greg Harp) writes:
>I may have missed this in my absence, but has the Digital Animation Productions
>Video Graphics Transputer been discussed here?
>
[deleted]
>
>What, if any, competitors exist?  What about comparable (don't laugh)
>PC or Mac boards?  Why doesn't CBM know about this? (or do they and are they
>just sitting on it?)

> \\XX//            Greg Harp                greg@ccwf.cc.utexas.edu

I don't know if Digital Animation Productions is making this product or not.
At least at one time, there were apparently the US agent for Sang Computer 
Systems.  Sang makes what they claim is the first commericially available
borad featuring the new INMOS G300 Colour Video Controller.  They make
products for the PC world as well as an interface board for the Amiga and
the Atari ST.  There are a number of transputer related products for the
PC and the Mac.

I also note that Digital Animation Productions is not listed in the most
recent (Jan) edition of the Inmos Transputer White Pages, which serves as a
directory of companies producing hardware and development systems for
transputer based products.

-- 
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Jeff Schweiger	      Standard Disclaimer   	CompuServe:  74236,1645
Internet (Milnet):				schweige@cs.nps.navy.mil
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