SGI Indigo2: An $86,000 Workstation from 1995

Ғылым және технология

Diving into the Silicon Graphics Indigo² desktop workstation computer! This was a beast in 1995, and yes, "it's a UNIX system, I know this!" How do the pros and cons stack up, what games can you play on it, and is it worth the cost today?
● Check out SGI Depot:
www.sgidepot.co.uk/sgidepot/
● Consider supporting LGR on Patreon:
/ lazygamereviews
● Social links:
/ lazygamereviews
/ lazygamereviews
● Music used in order of appearance:
"Tuned In 2," "Dress Code Black 1," "On My Mind 1," "Peek A Boo"
www.epidemicsound.com

Пікірлер: 3 700

  • @topsecret1837
    @topsecret18375 жыл бұрын

    The fact that nobody here seems to mention is that this thing was capable of Standard High Definition a full decade before that went mainstream. Holy moly.

  • @CynHicks

    @CynHicks

    4 жыл бұрын

    Even crazier is that about the same time VHS tape had been modified to record and playback "Full HD." Unfortunately it was too expensive for most people. Just like this machine. Lol. Seriously though late 90s and early 2000s CRTs had no problem with resolution. Source material was the problem. Only way we could actually see HD video on them for the most part was while gaming.

  • @YEET-yh6qc

    @YEET-yh6qc

    4 жыл бұрын

    Not worth 30k but yeah sounds crazy

  • @davidewhite69

    @davidewhite69

    4 жыл бұрын

    The "Picasso II" video card for the Amiga 3000 came pretty close, for a tenth of the price, 1600×1280, SVGA, FBAS and S-VHS outputs, (S-VHS PAL only though)

  • @BenHelweg

    @BenHelweg

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@greggoog7559 12 bit doesn't imply HDR, although it is preferable for it. Long before the HDR that we know today, cineon was a thing and the main way to deal with high dynamic range material, i.e film. It was a10 bit workflow.

  • @override7486

    @override7486

    4 жыл бұрын

    Circa 2000 17-19" most "Flatrons" and "Trinitrons" on the market were 1280x1024 screens, with bigger CRTs going for 1600x1200 or similar and top one going up to 2560×1920. This were pretty expensive, for sure, mostly for DTP, 3D etc, but even midrange models back then could display nice clear image with muuuch greater refresh rate than what we have now (60Hz). Not to mention colour reproduction, input lag and so on. There's no point comparing LCD to CRTs anyway. CRTs rocks in every aspect (except size/power consumption) compared to LCD.

  • @erikkovacs3097
    @erikkovacs30973 жыл бұрын

    My dad worked for them in the 90's and I remember as a teenager being blown away by their headquarters in Mountain View (which is now Google's headquarters) they had theaters, kitchenettes everywhere with free food, a lap pool and people would bring their pets to work. I feel like the 90's was the golden age of Silicon Valley.

  • @bigchiefsmackaho387

    @bigchiefsmackaho387

    3 жыл бұрын

    It was, it really was.

  • @nickshomesales

    @nickshomesales

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes I too was there and I remember those exciting times.

  • @Jonathan-cz4ky

    @Jonathan-cz4ky

    3 жыл бұрын

    They have all that and more nowadays though, minus the pets for obvious reasons.

  • @Jeyeyeyey

    @Jeyeyeyey

    3 жыл бұрын

    *90's was the golden age everything is trash nowadays

  • @LucasStaffel

    @LucasStaffel

    3 жыл бұрын

    And here I am, amazed in 2021 because my new job is pet friendly and has a hammock, also I work from home whenever I want... Welcome to Brazil fellas... hahahaha

  • @thomasbriggs4718
    @thomasbriggs47183 жыл бұрын

    I spent nearly a decade producing animation on SGI boxes and to this day I have never found another OS that was as smooth and capable as IRIX. I miss it.

  • @bjtaudio

    @bjtaudio

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yes it was purpose built, but its cheaper now you can do amazing stuff on the cheapest laptop, so you don't need to be a million air. This means anyone can do what ever they want now.

  • @thanostimestone6813

    @thanostimestone6813

    3 жыл бұрын

    I worked with irix once, they had maya 1.5 on the machine and it rendered faster than Final Cut Pro on their power macs.

  • @studioruangsvara

    @studioruangsvara

    3 жыл бұрын

    yeah me too, but for VFX. with Tezro and Octane for Autodesk Flame

  • @doubtful_seer

    @doubtful_seer

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@bjtaudio while technically true, have you ever compared the render times?

  • @chrissre7935

    @chrissre7935

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@bjtaudio Maybe for some single car model. But not entire high poly scenes. I got scenes that require at least 64GB of ram to open and work.

  • @sawilliams
    @sawilliams3 жыл бұрын

    That was my workstation at one of my jobs. It was incredible, almost magical. It ran an IRIX version of AutoCAD.

  • @pedrooscarbh

    @pedrooscarbh

    3 жыл бұрын

    What do You do for living?

  • @sawilliams

    @sawilliams

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@pedrooscarbh I was a mechanical engineer in the aerospace/jet engine field.

  • @idipped2521

    @idipped2521

    3 жыл бұрын

    Funny i can do all the things this did on my $2000 laptop

  • @potterj09

    @potterj09

    3 жыл бұрын

    Would've been a nice cherry ontop for your severance package heh

  • @hikeskool

    @hikeskool

    2 жыл бұрын

    No you didn't 👌

  • @LazerLord10
    @LazerLord106 жыл бұрын

    I got a tour of NASA's ground control center recently, and they have a bunch of Silicon Graphics Indigo Iris systems still in use! I guess it's a case of 'if it ain't broke, don't fix it'.

  • @EduXicao

    @EduXicao

    3 жыл бұрын

    Its all about their mission.

  • @RaceboyYT

    @RaceboyYT

    3 жыл бұрын

    Those computers have most likely all been running 24/7 since new as well

  • @Wileylikethehawk

    @Wileylikethehawk

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hapa Nice Day Don’t get weird in here, man.

  • @MrCalverino

    @MrCalverino

    3 жыл бұрын

    its how they draw the fake planets

  • @Wileylikethehawk

    @Wileylikethehawk

    3 жыл бұрын

    MrCalverino Gotta have some way to make round things look flat, amirite?

  • @philipcooper8297
    @philipcooper82977 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for adding the values in the metric system as well.

  • @jruonti

    @jruonti

    7 жыл бұрын

    Agreed!

  • @CESkootchy

    @CESkootchy

    7 жыл бұрын

    Disagreed! Imperial Unit Master Race for life

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    Sure thing! Over half of my views come from outside the USA, so it only makes sense.

  • @SuperAsdf21
    @SuperAsdf213 жыл бұрын

    I used one of these as a high schooler doing an internship at a university in 1995. I was shown the early Internet with it, but it was mind blowing to access such a powerful computer. Their setup cost AU$200,000 at the time. It was like getting to play with a McLaren F1.

  • @JM-pg6zt
    @JM-pg6zt3 жыл бұрын

    Used to use this for my PhD in theoretical physics at MIT. In 1994 it seemed like a godsend machine however after about a year or two it started to become obsolete in the realm of theoretical physics making us move to the most current ibm machine.

  • @nerd2544

    @nerd2544

    2 жыл бұрын

    good old Moore's Law

  • @tinman3586

    @tinman3586

    7 ай бұрын

    Did you later take a job at Black Mesa?

  • @jovankabroz6858

    @jovankabroz6858

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@tinman3586 JM doesn't need to hear all this, he's a highly trained proffesionalist."

  • @roryos
    @roryos7 жыл бұрын

    When you mentioned 1 gig of RAM in 1995, I was like. Holy shit!!

  • @ambrosia7924

    @ambrosia7924

    7 жыл бұрын

    Ikr, my only '95 computer maxed out at 68MB, and forget graphics ram.

  • @waltherstolzing9719

    @waltherstolzing9719

    7 жыл бұрын

    I remember buying 4 MB for $100 in 1995.

  • @HeyLaserLips

    @HeyLaserLips

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yup! I upgraded from 4MB to 8MB in 1995 and it cost me around that. xD

  • @jacknicholson1288

    @jacknicholson1288

    7 жыл бұрын

    コンピューティング A E S T H E T I C What's odd is, It's acculy useable today even if you used windows 10, Obviously it's not much at all but still.

  • @EpicLebaneseNerd

    @EpicLebaneseNerd

    7 жыл бұрын

    in 1995, i had 4mb or ram.....enough to play doom :'(

  • @homebody0089
    @homebody00895 жыл бұрын

    The second you said "Circuit City" I felt all my joints age about 10 years.

  • @Dooblecaine

    @Dooblecaine

    3 жыл бұрын

    I still remember going into the CC and playing a 3do. They had it set up next to a playstation. It seemed cool but was super pricey. Went next door and got a free hotdog from the car dealership, they had a radio station out there livecasting. Fun times.

  • @CatfishBradley

    @CatfishBradley

    3 жыл бұрын

    I remember buying a new gamecube from CC, such an underrated console

  • @school_pizza

    @school_pizza

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lol I never went there but I would always look at their ads with gaming stuff I would never have as a kid

  • @johnconnorstopskynet

    @johnconnorstopskynet

    3 жыл бұрын

    We used to call it, "Jerk It City"

  • @takigan

    @takigan

    3 жыл бұрын

    ♫ Welcome to Circuit City, where service is state of the art ♫

  • @nomebear
    @nomebear3 жыл бұрын

    In 1995 I trained using SGI computers and it wasn't just the hardware that was outrageous, it was also the software and support. At the university that I attended, a SGI super computer about the size of a household refrigerator replaced a Cray super computer that took up a huge space in a building designed for it.

  • @squeakD
    @squeakD3 жыл бұрын

    I remember seeing one of these back in 95! It was me and a few friends looking at it.., and when the guy said it had 1gig of RAM.., we were speechless. For those of you not quite old enough to remember..., 1gig of RAM in 1995 was freakin insane! We laughed because, we didn’t think anyone would believe us about seeing a computer with 1gig of RAM. Plus that hard drive was also incredibly large for 1995!

  • @eastmanresearch3143

    @eastmanresearch3143

    3 жыл бұрын

    i had a ti extensa laptop in 1996 w/ 8mb ram and 120mb hard drive sporting a pentium 75. It was about $3200. Yeah, 1 gig of ram would still drive operating systems until windows 10.

  • @romannasuti25

    @romannasuti25

    3 жыл бұрын

    You can still get hardware at that level of absurdity these days (it's probably even easier too, if your credit card could clear the charge you could order it online), if you're willing to go through some special workstation manufacturers. IIRC, the best you can ge these days is: 1. dual 64 core processors (AMD EPYC Rome) 2. 4TB RAM (with the right motherboards and 128gb LRDIMMs) 3. at least quad if not octal Quadro cards, or more likely 1-2 Quadros and an assload of Teslas, way more than Windows will ever support 4. PCIe storage so fast (PCIe 4.0 x16 in an add-on card) that literally only Linux can use it to its full potential and you might wonder, "what ungodly software needs this kind of hardware??" and the answer is, beyond anything you should be doing on server farms like rendering and supercomputing, is usually DaVinci Resolve on Linux for 8K+ editing, color correction, and 2D/3D compositing.

  • @bmhater1283

    @bmhater1283

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@romannasuti25 Hell, what if you game on the setup? Will it have high amounts of FPS?

  • @portablerefrigerator4902

    @portablerefrigerator4902

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@bmhater1283 octo quadro should run raytracing max settings on cyberpunk at ~30fps

  • @jfk8540

    @jfk8540

    3 жыл бұрын

    If someone showed you a computer from nowadays you would think it came out of a UFO

  • @FloridaMann123
    @FloridaMann1235 жыл бұрын

    My family's first computer in 1998 had 64 MB of ram and a 4GB hard drive. 1 GB of ram and a 120 GB hard drive in 1995 would have been mind blowing.

  • @eliharman

    @eliharman

    3 жыл бұрын

    In 1995, compaq offered 1gb hard drives as a standard option for the first time and 16MB of 72pin EDO ram was high-end.

  • @wojciechkuske242

    @wojciechkuske242

    3 жыл бұрын

    Look at 1:40 4 GB 11 platers Seagate Barracuda. 15k HDD is available in XXI century, in 1999 space for SCSI is around 36-72 GB. So disc is upgraded, not original.

  • @dhammarosi

    @dhammarosi

    3 жыл бұрын

    86000$ is also mindblowing 😂

  • @greenaum

    @greenaum

    3 жыл бұрын

    I expect the 1GB RAM was added later, while it was still a useful computer but after the RAM wouldn't have cost the 80 grand Clint's figures give. That is, JUST the RAM would be $80K. Still every geek lusted after SGI's in the day. I once saw one in the wild in a small and amazing looking business, I would have happily touched the hem of root's garment. I revered them as a young guy, and I did Unix in college around the same period, this though on a minicomputer with Wyse serial terminals. The other end of expensive computers! Actually I'd like that mini for all the software me and my friends wrote and played with. I really coveted SGIs but never used one so I wouldn't have a purpose for it once I'd pressed all the buttons and lorded it over imaginary geeks like it was 1995. Most people couldn't justify it as a fun purchase cos very few people ever used one, or even saw one! Outside high-end graphics work.

  • @grzegorzswiatkowski391

    @grzegorzswiatkowski391

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@wojciechkuske242 Yes and CD-ROM is from 4.1999 look at 7.39

  • @frankpusateri5030
    @frankpusateri50306 жыл бұрын

    Back in the day, around 1995 , I worked at Bungie software. We used an indigo for much of our character creation and animation stuff for the Myth series. I hated unix shell but loved the machines capabilities and render features. We moved up to the 02 machines and then bumped them entirely for dec alphas. Wow so much money went poof!! Lol

  • @LiloVLOG

    @LiloVLOG

    5 жыл бұрын

    I loved Myth, thanks.

  • @eupher2

    @eupher2

    5 жыл бұрын

    Frank Pusateri: I have a question for you. Is it true Bungie only stopped making FPS because Jason Jones didn't want to anymore? Or was there other reasons for it? Not counting Halo, because Halo became a FPS.

  • @frankpusateri5030

    @frankpusateri5030

    5 жыл бұрын

    eupher2 he didn't want to stop as much diversify the output of the company. He and the rest of us had many ideas that went out of the scope of the fps genre.

  • @OlympiaMarketing

    @OlympiaMarketing

    5 жыл бұрын

    Haven't thought about myth in years... Loved that game. Thank you.

  • @icenesiswayons9962

    @icenesiswayons9962

    5 жыл бұрын

    After working on and with such a gem at the time, how could you ever sit down in front of an Intel based machine again unless it was comparable. If it were me I'd be talking junk about every other machine for the rest on my days. Would be like moving a mountain with a wheelbarrow after you driven a moto grade.

  • @bigtank2185
    @bigtank21853 жыл бұрын

    Amazed how well this machine was kept. 25 years old and it looks new

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    2 жыл бұрын

    To be fair it was pretty unusual to come across one in such good shape, but I also used T-cut which works wonders for any minor marks.

  • @jamesthompson7694
    @jamesthompson76942 жыл бұрын

    I bought the basic SGI O2 a few months back because I've always wanted to own an SGI ever since I could read (mid to late 90s). Only to learn from my dad a month later that when he was still working in the automotive industry (Chrysler specifically) they used SGI for AutoCAD and had he'd known I wanted one for so long he would have saved me one. I'm talking about the Octane line and a two racks of the servers.

  • @HelicopterDown
    @HelicopterDown5 жыл бұрын

    I almost spit my ramen out when you said 150 GB hard-drive in 1995, 150 GB is still usable even today.

  • @iamsk8

    @iamsk8

    4 жыл бұрын

    Helicopter Down i choked on my coffee when he said “1gb of ram”

  • @Danuxsy

    @Danuxsy

    3 жыл бұрын

    150gb is nothing today lmao, there are games that require 150gb.

  • @hexagonist23

    @hexagonist23

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Danuxsy Well, inefficient programming can lead to such games.

  • @Danuxsy

    @Danuxsy

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@hexagonist23 how is that related to the size of a game? You can only compress the data so much and most of that size is due to the massive textures and high poly models.

  • @larsandersson1355

    @larsandersson1355

    3 жыл бұрын

    That Harddrive is from 2006-ish tho, it's basicly a Seagate Cheetah 15k.5

  • @elneutrino90
    @elneutrino907 жыл бұрын

    1. Buy an old computer and lend it to LGR 2. Wait until he makes a video 3. It goes up in value 4. Sell it 5. $$$$$

  • @MakeItWithJim

    @MakeItWithJim

    6 жыл бұрын

    elneutrino90 I have an Apricot Portable

  • @xboys_archive

    @xboys_archive

    6 жыл бұрын

    elneutrino90 advertise it as used in video by lgr

  • @Roshan_420

    @Roshan_420

    4 жыл бұрын

    Stonks

  • @pandaDotDragon
    @pandaDotDragon3 жыл бұрын

    I worked shortly with SGI's hardware in the 2000s. For pure performances their stations were way behind high performance PCs. But the quality of their anti aliasing in OpenGL was astonishing. There were not any options to control the oversampling like in nvidia/amd cards but yet the frames were crystal clear. Still impressed by that.

  • @neilmccarthy6822
    @neilmccarthy68223 жыл бұрын

    I ran one of these for CAD development and thought it was truly the Rolls Royce of workstations. LOVED IT

  • @DoktorStrangelove
    @DoktorStrangelove7 жыл бұрын

    I was in journalism school at Iowa State in the mid-'90s. I took a tech writing course for an English credit. We had a group project for that class; one of my project team members was an engineer. I went to the engineering building to drop off some materials for him, and met him in their CAD lab. It was full of SGI hardware. My jaw dropped when I saw all that high-end gear and what it was all rendering on screen. Great video, as usual.

  • @alexm566

    @alexm566

    4 жыл бұрын

    what were they rendering?

  • @DoktorStrangelove

    @DoktorStrangelove

    4 жыл бұрын

    Engineering... stuff... I was a journalism major.

  • @DenebTM
    @DenebTM7 жыл бұрын

    WAIT, THE JURASSIC PARK FILE MANAGER IS REAL?! WHAAAAAAAAAAAT.

  • @Benrob0329

    @Benrob0329

    7 жыл бұрын

    *NIX FTW!!!

  • @Reloaded2111

    @Reloaded2111

    7 жыл бұрын

    What if I told you that the nmap hack from Matrix reloaded is real too?

  • @ThomasTortilla

    @ThomasTortilla

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yup! They were using this: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fsn_(file_manager)

  • @poshzombie

    @poshzombie

    7 жыл бұрын

    I remember when a lot of computer "geeks" made fun of that scene in Jurassic (including me). Goes to show how nerds with only a little bit of knowledge think they know everything xD

  • @fartcat8569

    @fartcat8569

    7 жыл бұрын

    Calvin H. They just got lazy and replaced the names

  • @rangerman375
    @rangerman375 Жыл бұрын

    My uncle was a senior design engineer at SGI in the 90's. I had the pleasure of getting a campus tour from him before I enlisted in the Army. Got to putz around on a Realitymonster (Superlabs 18 for anyone that remembers lol), and get some hate emails for him playing the tank game under his name on the network during lunch. Good times. I remember every time I visited over there, he had a new system (including one of these, I remember specifically) for cases where he wanted to work from home.

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    Жыл бұрын

    Cool! Can you recall what projects he worked on there?

  • @AllenArmstrong_1
    @AllenArmstrong_13 жыл бұрын

    I was a purchase manager for a now VERY big video game company back in ‘97. I remember haggling vendors and writing up PO’s for half dozen Indys and a couple of O2s every month. Fun part was after inventory, having the 3D artists show them off. “Yeah why don’t you test it out, load some stuff up and tell me if it’s working good for you.” :)

  • @Larry
    @Larry7 жыл бұрын

    I bought two of these things a few months ago from the Royal Navy of all things! Nightmare finding software for it, but I got a copy of Doom for it.

  • @mrnemo204

    @mrnemo204

    7 жыл бұрын

    Larry Bundy Jr Put it on the internet!

  • @Larry

    @Larry

    7 жыл бұрын

    They're missing a few parts (they were missing the HDDs for obvious reasons), but I certainly wasn't aware they were worth that much, I got 2 Indy's and 2 Indigo 2's for £50, plus another £50 to the bloke who delivered them. the Navy were going to throw them in the skip. Also got a webcam with mine, same stone grey!

  • @fen4554

    @fen4554

    7 жыл бұрын

    Haha, I bet it runs silky smooth. Keep pressing that + button.

  • @Cyphax55

    @Cyphax55

    7 жыл бұрын

    I have an Indigo 2 that's labeled Haliburton Identified (I always think of ol' Cheney when I see that), I'm thinking it was used in the US government somewhere? I don't know how it ended up in the Netherlands though. I have an IndyCam as well, and a lot of other stuff, it's been so long, some of it seems to have become rare. Bummer, I'm not sure if everything works anymore so it can't be fun replacing parts, although the hard drives can be emulated thankfully (it can then be run from a CF card instead) and if anything goes wrong with these, it's usually the hard drives. :)

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    7 жыл бұрын

    Larry, I could have helped you with the sw, but never mind. Very good price you got them for though!! 8) Ian.

  • @The8BitGuy
    @The8BitGuy7 жыл бұрын

    Reminds me of my Sun Sparcstation fetish I had back in the early 2000's. I used to put myself through misery to get them up and working as my main desktop computer just because "they were cool." But after a year or two of that, I went back to a regular PC.

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    I don't blame you there. These kinds of workstations are all kinds of cool, but a bit... obtuse.

  • @alanboro

    @alanboro

    7 жыл бұрын

    I like the interactions between you two

  • @masterhoshi

    @masterhoshi

    7 жыл бұрын

    I had a major desire for the Iris Crimson (first 64bit!) and was able to play with one in a creative department. Such amazing machines and SGI is a iconic company long ago.

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    7 жыл бұрын

    I have three Crimsons atm, but all have issues, just need a chance with some solid spare time to sort them out. It's probably just a PSU, and I obtained a spare from BAe. Would be fun to get one of them kitted out with an R4K/150 and RE gfx, especially since so far I've had to rely on other people to send me benchmark results for Crimson for my site. Ian.

  • @rfengr00

    @rfengr00

    7 жыл бұрын

    The 8-Bit Guy I too had that Sun fetish. Had an IPX all decked out with SCSI devices. Had that networked to an Indigo^2 and HP 9000 735. Got rid off all of it when I got married.

  • @ordersforsplitdogs4315
    @ordersforsplitdogs4315 Жыл бұрын

    Never have I ever appreciated a Porsche 911 reference as much as this.

  • @escher2112
    @escher2112 Жыл бұрын

    Ahhhh.... I love the Indigo2. My first workstation when I started in CAE/FEA back in 1998. I still have a backup of that machine on tape somewhere. Got me into collecting them throughout the early 2000's and I ended up with a Power Challenge L Deskside server and eventually a multi CPU Origin 3000 rack. SGI was an amazing company... I wish I had the room to pick up an INdigo2 Impact today...

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    Жыл бұрын

    Awesome! DO you still have the deskside and O3K?

  • @escher2112

    @escher2112

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mapesdhs597 I wish - damn things pull over a Kilowatt running.. it wasn’t feasible of more than a few hours a week.

  • @geewiz70
    @geewiz704 жыл бұрын

    LGR: "You'd have to be a very special unique blend of crazy geek to buy one of these" Me:

  • @JackFoxtrotEDM

    @JackFoxtrotEDM

    4 жыл бұрын

    Jochen Lillich You own an Octane? When did you purchase it and for how much?

  • @carso1500

    @carso1500

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@JackFoxtrotEDM one leg and one eye

  • @ArizonaGames

    @ArizonaGames

    4 жыл бұрын

    Nice, I recently picked up an O2

  • @madgrog

    @madgrog

    4 жыл бұрын

    @@JackFoxtrotEDM I have an Octane 2 too, brought 10 years ago for 200 euros and a bottle of jack daniels

  • @WildDiamond07

    @WildDiamond07

    4 жыл бұрын

    SGI Indigo2: HOLD MY BEER

  • @icecold1805
    @icecold18055 жыл бұрын

    Dude, I bet this thing can run Crysis on minium settings!.

  • @memenest468

    @memenest468

    4 жыл бұрын

    Lol i don't think so

  • @camulodunon

    @camulodunon

    3 жыл бұрын

    If the Xbox 360 could do it (which had 256mb ram), then this can probably do it to.

  • @Taima

    @Taima

    3 жыл бұрын

    idk about that chief. I had a 2.13MHz AMD Athlon XP-M 2800+ mobile CPU in my desktop (don't ask), 2GB RAM and a 128MB GeForce FX 5200. It was a fucking slideshow.

  • @Taima

    @Taima

    3 жыл бұрын

    Got a 256MB 6200 a couple years later and...it didn't really matter.

  • @camulodunon

    @camulodunon

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@Taima but with the right optimization, it can probably run Crysis. As shown in the 7th gen consoles.

  • @marccygnus
    @marccygnus3 жыл бұрын

    Oh wow this video brought back memories!! I worked for several years as a 3D graphics engineer (software) at the Human Interface Technology Laboratory (HITL) in Seattle, WA, which at the time (1991-94) was one of I think three places in the US doing full-time virtual reality research (back in the day... the - ugh - Jaron Lanier day...). They had a number of Indigo and Indigo 2 workstations, along with a VGX and an Onyx. Thank you for posting this!

  • @xjohnny1000

    @xjohnny1000

    5 ай бұрын

    Did you work on the VRD at WU? I was doing VR work in those days and that tech was fascinating.

  • @dimitrilensflareabrams2893
    @dimitrilensflareabrams28933 жыл бұрын

    One professor at my university still uses an sgi workstation for specialized work. He has the SGI CRT and the SGI keyboard to go with it.

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    2 жыл бұрын

    Do you know which model he uses? Tell him to beware of the PSU failing, they are getting pretty flakey now, especially Indigo2 and Octane. O2 still runs ok though.

  • @charliekahn4205

    @charliekahn4205

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's great for MIPS programming, especially in regards to the appearance of new MIPS-based chips from China

  • @dimitrilensflareabrams2893

    @dimitrilensflareabrams2893

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mapesdhs597 It might be an O2 funnily enough. I'm not sure.

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dimitrilensflareabrams2893 In that case he should be ok. :D And replacement PSUs for O2 are still dirt cheap anyway. O2's longevity problem is tyically more the mbd failing in some manner, or older 32MB memory SIMMs going wrong (tell him to watch out for errors in the SYSLOG that say, "Soft ECC error in the back side of DIMM slot ". The CDROM can also fail, should he be using it (can be repaired though, it's just a small plastic cog which snaps).

  • @dimitrilensflareabrams2893

    @dimitrilensflareabrams2893

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mapesdhs597 Thank you so much! I have a hunch he'll try to hang onto those machines for quite a long long time. At least until he finds a machine that will work for his purposes.

  • @mpuone
    @mpuone7 жыл бұрын

    This is the kind of videos I love seeing. Computers that weren't available to the general public and are mostly unheard of, but their work is seen everywhere. I'd love to see more videos like this, especially for console dev kits.

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thanks, I'm glad you enjoyed! Always hoping to get more of this kind of thing to show in the future.

  • @davethetech
    @davethetech7 жыл бұрын

    WOW.... so it wasn't a fake program for the movie Jurassic Park!?!? Incredible revelation !

  • @redzeppelin6

    @redzeppelin6

    5 жыл бұрын

    nah ah ah you didn't say the magic word

  • @mrblonde609

    @mrblonde609

    5 жыл бұрын

    WOW IT'S AN INTERACTIVE CD-ROM!

  • @noseswipe1697

    @noseswipe1697

    5 жыл бұрын

    "...clever girl..."

  • @amirabudubai2279

    @amirabudubai2279

    5 жыл бұрын

    Plot twist, you probably even used it yourself at some point. Nintendo used that browser for the file select on Mario 64.

  • @Eli_Santin

    @Eli_Santin

    4 жыл бұрын

    @Amir Abudubai You're thinking of buttonfly

  • @jurjenbos228
    @jurjenbos2283 жыл бұрын

    I used (a predecessor of) one of these at work. They had a pretty impressive multi player flight simulator, which came preinstalled :-) When Silicon Graphics heard that our company was a potential buyer, they came to Amsterdam with a cool road show in a giant truck showing off these machines. It was worth it, because the company bought more than 50 of them. And yes, it took more than a decade before I saw other workstations with this kind of power.

  • @icanhaskpop1239
    @icanhaskpop12393 жыл бұрын

    Years ago, I found one of these in a storage room at my employer's warehouse, which they once used for their R&D department. They let me take it home and it sat in my living room until 3 years ago when I moved. Probably should have kept it, (like that Commodore PET computer that sat in my garage for a long time) but I ended up giving it away because I was tired of looking at the damn thing and not knowing what to do with it.

  • @MrGencyExit64
    @MrGencyExit647 жыл бұрын

    Let's not forget OpenGL when discussing SGI. Beyond the N64, there's 3dfx who owed their existence to SGI. GLIDE was just a proprietary watered down version of OpenGL, which was an open source version of IrisGL (SGI).

  • @radivojevasiljevic3145

    @radivojevasiljevic3145

    6 ай бұрын

    And 3dfx dared to threat7sue people who made Glide emulators. Glide, a thing which simply renamed gl to gr prefix of OpenGL functions.

  • @OhThatsMal
    @OhThatsMal7 жыл бұрын

    $86,000?! sweet jesus and here I thought today's rigs were expensive!

  • @Jdp313

    @Jdp313

    6 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, but having 1gb of ram in 1995 is almost the equivalent of having 1 TB of ram in a modern computer these days. Just way over the top.

  • @Tallefer

    @Tallefer

    5 жыл бұрын

    ...and don't forget the inflation. :3 $86,000 in 1995 is equivalent to ~$142,000 in 2018

  • @TheBaldr

    @TheBaldr

    5 жыл бұрын

    These were not even top of the line. The Silicon Graphics Oynx was $100,000-$250,000

  • @tomooo2637

    @tomooo2637

    5 жыл бұрын

    Actually the Oynx and Oynx2 went up to 800,000 in normal spec - I wrote scientific software on the SGI from the beginning of the 90's and used/worked with all of them - including the crappy indy without the go. Then there was the challenge series of main-frames....

  • @RaymondUpenieks

    @RaymondUpenieks

    5 жыл бұрын

    Things haven't changed from the money standpoint. A professional graphics computer for content creation (not gaming) costs plenty. Back in early 90's I had almost $10K invested in the Amiga with VideoToaster/Lightwave/GenLock/Time Base Corrector/ etc,etc etc. Was offered 2 SGI's..power to create costs money. Did years ago, dies today.

  • @dmutant2635
    @dmutant26352 жыл бұрын

    Best workstation I ever used. I loved coming into work early to play on this machine. And portable too, only needed a small hand truck!

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    2 жыл бұрын

    I have a rare Indigo2 Carry Bag (original SGI bag I mean). The funny thing is, it was recommended that it be moved by two people. :D

  • @birdsniffingthefloor
    @birdsniffingthefloor3 жыл бұрын

    7:58 This menu is pretty much same menu used in Mario 64's file select screen. One my favorite little fun facts I recently learned : )

  • @T3rASys

    @T3rASys

    2 жыл бұрын

    and you'll never guess what the mips rabbit was named after

  • @LeastUnhingedYoutubeUser

    @LeastUnhingedYoutubeUser

    Жыл бұрын

    @@T3rASys its the sgi's microproc-🤭

  • @cliftongardner4367
    @cliftongardner43677 жыл бұрын

    I'm relieved to know that I'm not the only person that consistently measures the cost of overly-expensive products against contemporary Porsche 911's. I partly blame the Need For Speed series.

  • @haruruben
    @haruruben4 жыл бұрын

    10,000 is actually a pretty good value when you look at how much more powerful it was than standard systems of the time that cost $2000- definitely more than 5 times more powerful than common systems at the time

  • @livefreeprintguns
    @livefreeprintguns Жыл бұрын

    The pizza box design shown here and also on Sun SPARCstations are my all-time favorite case designs.

  • @CallardAndBowser
    @CallardAndBowser3 жыл бұрын

    I worked at General Motors Great Lakes Tech Center in the 90's and they used all the different versions and iterations of the SGI work stations over that decade.

  • @Yusuke_Denton
    @Yusuke_Denton7 жыл бұрын

    I smell an SGI tech tales coming this way! My closest experience with these was from elites on IRC bragging how they owned or worked on a silicon graphics workstation. There was at least one in every channel I frequented.

  • @Dodoid

    @Dodoid

    7 жыл бұрын

    Zabeus I have a tech-tales like series on my channel where I discuss SGI history, if you would like to see something like that.

  • @aahnecroth
    @aahnecroth7 жыл бұрын

    "I don't even know what i am doing, but i am having fun" that's the spirit

  • @thesaurusrext
    @thesaurusrext4 жыл бұрын

    This really helps ground my understanding of where tech was at the time - I was a kid and marketing material was all we had to guess how things worked. Thank you!

  • @htmelle
    @htmelle3 жыл бұрын

    I remember my Dad using one of these for ArcGIS work back in the 90's. What shocked me the most was the software licensing was almost as much as the hardware!

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    2 жыл бұрын

    That is sadly very true, it shocked me aswell, and I was a complete SGI nut back then. Annual licensing for Alias/Maya was insane, but other sw could be a lot more. People don't realise but often the hw was not the major cost factor for some sectors.

  • @aaronlippincott7385
    @aaronlippincott73857 жыл бұрын

    8:22 one of my favourite Unix commands, farrt

  • @6abial
    @6abial6 жыл бұрын

    8:00 that's exactly like the main menu in Super Mario 64 and LoZ OoC!

  • @SilverSpoon_

    @SilverSpoon_

    5 жыл бұрын

    yep that OpenGL demo was free software, and that SGI was literally a N64. of course they used the same coding!

  • @BigOlSmellyFlashlight

    @BigOlSmellyFlashlight

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@SilverSpoon_ the sgi was a really fast 80 thousand dollar n64

  • @amirabudubai2279

    @amirabudubai2279

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@SilverSpoon_ N64 was a heavily cut down SGI. One common feature of SGI work stations was that they featured dozens of processors. The N64 only had 3(the RCP was actually a separate DSP and GPU on one chip).

  • @JuniorBlitz

    @JuniorBlitz

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@SilverSpoon_ N64 is no where near the capabilities of the SGI. N64 mostly ran at native 240p.

  • @SilverSpoon_

    @SilverSpoon_

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@JuniorBlitz it's a console. It's here to do its job of booting a game and rendering graphics. It's like saying the PS5 can rivalize with a Ryzen powered desktop PC.

  • @marasmusine
    @marasmusine2 жыл бұрын

    I took Comp Sci between 1994 and 1997 and we used the Indigo. The web browser was Xmosaic. There was an impressive lightcycle game with 3D graphics. Those were the days.

  • @stevenconnor4221
    @stevenconnor42213 жыл бұрын

    I remeber these from my days as a tech in the university, our IT person was running it as a mail server, client logon authetification, cad machine, and numerous Academic uses.. but at the weekend it was.turned into our hexen games server where we could dial up from home and play each other ... ah ...great days .. imagine trying to do that nowadays with company equipmemt eek..

  • @mechanoid2k

    @mechanoid2k

    3 жыл бұрын

    Companies use remote desktop now. With what's been coming out about China's shenanigans it's no wonder companies don't allow employees direct access to networks anymore.

  • @magnus87
    @magnus877 жыл бұрын

    7:59 Super Mario 64 Menu :P

  • @thiccen_nuggets3645

    @thiccen_nuggets3645

    7 жыл бұрын

    exactly

  • @schtive81

    @schtive81

    7 жыл бұрын

    The software was used to develop Super Mario 64. Which is why it looks virtually identical. Mario 64 was developed on a combination of SGI Onyx and SGI INDY workstations. But this is the same OS used in those other machines.

  • @schtive81

    @schtive81

    7 жыл бұрын

    Star Wars: Shadows Of The Empire on the Nintendo 64 was developed using multiple SGI Indigo2 dev kits. You could potentially use it as a very expensive N64 homebrew dev kit and make your own crappy games.

  • @schtive81

    @schtive81

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Adam Demeter I've read that Rare used Onyx workstations. But I wouldn't be surprised if they had some Indigo's as well. Rare was really one of the first to use SGI workstations as game development software. That was the defining feature of Donkey Kong Country. I could only imagine that they had a big collection of different SGI machines.

  • @Elk810

    @Elk810

    7 жыл бұрын

    I knew I couldn't be the only person to notice that. Hell of a coincidence

  • @courtesyof24
    @courtesyof247 жыл бұрын

    Oh my, it's beautiful. And it's purple 💜💜

  • @vincebowman7963

    @vincebowman7963

    4 жыл бұрын

    And mine at work was $30,000.00 which included Alias Wavefront, Photoshop, DOOM and ported Adobe Illustrator.

  • @SuAlfons
    @SuAlfons3 жыл бұрын

    I worked on an Indigo and an Indigo2 at university. Modelled robot workcells. Still remember free scaling of icons in the file manager and the general look and feel of their Unix System (Irix). Felt like the king of the road on this machine. And it sat in a locked room for itself, so you had it all to yourself in a quiet place with a view out of the window...

  • @fogcat5
    @fogcat53 жыл бұрын

    nice! this brings back days of supporting engineers at nasa ames where we all had SGI Indigo2 desktops. That thing had an integrated ISDN interface. SGI made a lot of machines with cool strange colors. One funny thing about the indigo2 was that the large monitor was so heavy that when it was sitting on top of the machine, it would squeeze the case too much and the memory would flake out. Silicon Valley trivia note: the Googleplex building is the SGI headquarters office from back in the days when SGI aquired Cray computing.

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    2 жыл бұрын

    The 22" monitors were ok, but some places used much bigger ones and that was a problem, hence partly why O2 and Octane were such odd shapes.

  • @ClayMann
    @ClayMann7 жыл бұрын

    Note to teenage me, turns out that this is not the only computer you would ever need forever.

  • @Dodoid

    @Dodoid

    7 жыл бұрын

    Clay Mann My Octane still does OK for KZread and Reddit. Could probably do more if I knew how to use any 90s era graphics software.

  • @genericgreensquid6669

    @genericgreensquid6669

    7 жыл бұрын

    +Dodoid What graphics software? Are there any (basic) video editors for it? I assume if they made the CGI on the Indigos or an Indy (which I want), they must've also done the editing on the same machines.

  • @mankor76

    @mankor76

    7 жыл бұрын

    I use Blender 3d on my Indigo2 (lower end). It has a great built in video editor. For video Editing however I recommend the O2 it was purpose built for that.

  • @ClayMann

    @ClayMann

    7 жыл бұрын

    Dodoid I'm not knocking the computers, it's amazing they're still usable and a testament to how powerful they were back then. It's just that little kid me saw these and thought, if I could just save up enough, this would be the only computer you'd ever need to own. How could it get any better? lol

  • @Dodoid

    @Dodoid

    7 жыл бұрын

    Generic Green Squid All sorts of editing software is available. I use PiranhaHD but I'm not very good at it...

  • @Dodoid
    @Dodoid7 жыл бұрын

    Big fan of yours LGR, never expected to seen an SGI! I have 3 Octanes, and Indigo2, two Indys and an O2 myself so it's neat to see your take on it. By the way, I am doing a video series about the history of SGI over on my channel, and the most recent episode covers up to the release of the Indigo2, so that might be interesting to some of the people viewing this video (shameless plug).

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    Excellent, I'm gonna go check that out!

  • @Dodoid

    @Dodoid

    7 жыл бұрын

    The SGI C compiler is called MIPSPro, it's available for download and burning to CD here: archive.org/details/sgi_MIPSpro_All-Compiler_CD_May_1999_for_IRIX_6.5_and_later

  • @HPPalmtopTube

    @HPPalmtopTube

    7 жыл бұрын

    you're the younger kid talking about the computer recycling centre's SGI machines and the AIX machine ?

  • @waltherstolzing9719

    @waltherstolzing9719

    7 жыл бұрын

    gcc seems to be available as well (the GNU Compiler Collection)

  • @Dodoid

    @Dodoid

    7 жыл бұрын

    Terrence Vergauwen I bought my SGIs, but I do get some machines from computer recycling centres (some of my older Macs and some still half-decent PCs of mine came from recyclers). I don't have any AIX machines, but I did briefly mention the ThinkPad 800 in my ThinksGiving Special, though I had to rely on pictures from the internet.

  • @GilbertoFerreira
    @GilbertoFerreira4 жыл бұрын

    SGI is also know to be creator of solid rock filesystem named XFS, which was release in Irix 5. This amazing filesystem was ported to Linux in 2001.

  • @HighDefBNG
    @HighDefBNG3 жыл бұрын

    I always come away from your videos feeling good. I loved growing up with old PCs in the 90s. Thanks man, this thing is mental.

  • @kartiq
    @kartiq7 жыл бұрын

    In the late 90's, our graphics dept. had an SGI Octane, and after office hours we used to play Unreal Tournament at the highest settings on it, it was sweet!

  • @renerebe

    @renerebe

    6 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/c4mTtLhxpdK6edI.html

  • @spiderjerusalem100
    @spiderjerusalem1007 жыл бұрын

    So 1GB of RAM in 1995 probably cost about $20,000? Geez Lousie!

  • @personguy6517

    @personguy6517

    7 жыл бұрын

    Serpico's Beard most people were happy to have 12 mb of ram back then

  • @mgrein93

    @mgrein93

    7 жыл бұрын

    He said that 128Mb cost $10,000, so 1Gb would be nearly $80,000

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    7 жыл бұрын

    +mgrein93 At the time though, 512MB kits were not an option. Strangely, even 128MB kits weren't included on the price list I received in 1996, though the Indy list did have them, 6000+ UKP and that's with an academic discount and without VAT. By the time 512MB kits of that type were common and in use, SGI had already moved on to different tech with Octane and O2. Funniest RAM quote I saw was for a 256MB kit for POWER Challenge in 1995 at a radar research lab, about 26K. :D (40K in USD I guess) No wonder the Onyx I obtained was originally 1M when new (it had 2GB).

  • @JesusisJesus

    @JesusisJesus

    6 жыл бұрын

    I recall in the early to mid 90's a RAM manufacturing plant burned down, which sent RAM prices sky-rocketing. At one stage you could purchase 1MB RAM sticks for roughly $100 per Megabyte. It would be the equivalent of Samsung's OLED factory burning down now, which would affect not only Samsung, but it would force Apple to source their screens elsewhere at either a higher cost or lower quality, or both.

  • @700gsteak

    @700gsteak

    6 жыл бұрын

    I remember ram sticks at $100/meg. There was also Rambus trying to patent the important bits in the SDRAM spec and trying to sue the other manufacturers that sent ram prices sky high. Then around the 2000s those ram makers illegally ran a cartel to keep the price of ram high. eh.

  • @fridaycaliforniaa236
    @fridaycaliforniaa2369 ай бұрын

    Silicon Graphics, the manufacturer who initiated the OpenGL API development =) Also, there were some SGi workstations in the film Disclosure. And in that film, they were used with VR kits for... opening e-mails ! 😂

  • @jaybird0312

    @jaybird0312

    4 ай бұрын

    Brings new meaning to "...this meeting could have been an email." 😆

  • @ForgottenMachines
    @ForgottenMachines2 жыл бұрын

    I LOVE these phrases!!!! 4:18 ....locking into place with all the finesse of taking a sledge hammer to a bonsai tree... 5:55 ....and houses tons of technical titilation that's totally outside of my expertiese.... When combined with that pure buttery LGR voice....absolute magic!

  • @mp-zf4ur
    @mp-zf4ur7 жыл бұрын

    My uncles company had one of these in the late 90's for use in mining. I remember creeping upstairs to have a look at it and was pretty amazed but didn't know what to do with it. My uncle said it was a choice of buying a computer or buying a car.

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    7 жыл бұрын

    Quite scary that sometimes companies and individuals were faced with such choices, but then such was the nature of the advanced tech and the prices it could command. At one point in early 1997 I was contemplating a 12K loan (that's UKP) to buy an O2, but then SGI loaned me one for free (still use it) which I used to do OS bug-hunting and general IRIX testing for them for a while; it was the first loan they did to a private individual outside the US. Supplied as an R5K/200, it's now an R7K/600 maxed out up the wazoo with a 7-slot Avid PCI expansion box, two 300GB SCSI disks (I plan on replacing them with SSDs this year) and 1GB RAM using low-power single-sided 128MB DIMMs (hard to find). Ian.

  • @HPPalmtopTube
    @HPPalmtopTube7 жыл бұрын

    Awesome review Clint! I'm gonna pour a nice dram of glenfiddich to celebrate ;)

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    Thank you, Terrence! And thanks again for lending me this wonderful beast and providing the opportunity to talk about it :)

  • @rawrrawr1801
    @rawrrawr18013 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for all of your time and efforts you have invested in making this video available to the public.

  • @aaatechrescue
    @aaatechrescue Жыл бұрын

    I used one of these as a student in the early 2000's. In a hospital in Sydney for planniing stereotactic radiation therapy. I remember how heavy it was for it's size too, lots of hardware packed in the case, had an awesome, dense feeling. The software basically was 3d modelling of radiation beams from a linear accellerator for treating brain cancer. Prince of Wales in Sydney.

  • @DrButthugger
    @DrButthugger7 жыл бұрын

    Next up for LGR: "Just got a CRAY supercomputer, let's see if it can play DOOM"

  • @elitebuster2012

    @elitebuster2012

    5 жыл бұрын

    Linus Tech Tips would try to run Crysis and Rose of the Tomb Raider

  • @andrewnoonan4044

    @andrewnoonan4044

    5 жыл бұрын

    Sun had their own Super computer series - like the E10K.

  • @illilya

    @illilya

    5 жыл бұрын

    from what era? DOOM would probably need emulation, and run all within one core. it would be incredibly difficult to utilize the inherent power of a CRAY distributed system for something like emulated DOS DOOM. a CRAY from 2009? sure... because a single core from that era could run DOS emulation and play it but not one of the ones featured in "sneakers"; the big round thing that looks like a couch in the guy's office.

  • @andrewnoonan4044

    @andrewnoonan4044

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@illilya I do know one person who runs their own Cray at home - though a later one. But he does serious engineering work based from home so he has serious computing facilities. he even has his own electron microscope which he got running himself.

  • @illilya

    @illilya

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@andrewnoonan4044 it's really about the distribution of work. a Cray would only realize its strength if it was doing it across all of its resources but from what i found it seems like you'd need to write a DOS emulator that could use all the different resources and that... hasn't been done so far and to do it just so it could play Doom would be silly. only recently have games in windows even begun to use multiple cores, still just relying on the video card and all of their threads but not running anything in parallel across CPU cores.

  • @lrochfort
    @lrochfort7 жыл бұрын

    I used to work for DeBeers at a R&D station that developed diamond sorting machines. The electronics layout and 3D CAD design rooms were full of Indigo 2s and Octanes. The CAD and electronics layout guys thought they were SO special. They were all wired up to an SGI render farm. They were still in use until around 2002 when they were replaced with dual Intel CPU and Nvidia boxes. So when you break the cost down over their lifespan it's not so bad given all the neat stuff they could do that even the Intel's couldn't like fancy video production I/O stuff.

  • @oldfrend

    @oldfrend

    6 жыл бұрын

    no surprised a soulless diamond cartel could afford an SGI render farm XD

  • @BenoSaradzic
    @BenoSaradzic2 жыл бұрын

    I can't even describe the buzz I had each time I looked at my Indigo 2. No other computer or any thing, ever, would ever give me this fuzzy feeling I'd get after pressing on the power button hidden behind the hinged front cover. Seeing the SGI reflective chrome logo spinning on the screen and working with Wavefront Explore and Alias Power Animator was the closest I got to experiencing real world magic!

  • @fxbear
    @fxbear3 жыл бұрын

    I bought one when I opened my studio. $30k used. It paid for itself in no time.

  • @georgetazberik6834

    @georgetazberik6834

    3 жыл бұрын

    Right!? People here are are shocked by the MSRP without appreciating that SGI could charge that much because skilled professionals could use those tools to acquire quite a lot of profit out of the deal.

  • @WhyteLis21

    @WhyteLis21

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@georgetazberik6834 It's a workstation. So yeah, people with the wrong mind set wouldn't understand that. Even, current hardware like Apple Mac cost over 1000 plus more dallors, yet some people don't call them out as well. WTF? 😁

  • @greenaum

    @greenaum

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well yeah there's shitloads, unimaginably stupid amounts of money in cinema. And still a fuckton in TV, even if it's spread a bit wider nowadays. They need their CGI, and there's only so many people can provide that. Til the Chinese start producing supercomputers and the Indians chain their people to render farms.

  • @Teluric2

    @Teluric2

    3 жыл бұрын

    Softimage alias wavefront?

  • @HaroldCombs
    @HaroldCombs7 жыл бұрын

    Lots of memories here. First professional job was programming on IRIX 6.5.4 on an SGI Octane. It cost 3x as much as my car, and was generally a wonderful machine

  • @eddiehimself
    @eddiehimself5 жыл бұрын

    Seeing that Onyx system just makes me wish I could go back in time and give the Square team some fucking backup drives so they wouldn't go and delete all the backgrounds from the PS1 era Final Fantasy games :(

  • @sypeiterra7613

    @sypeiterra7613

    3 жыл бұрын

    I'm barely a fan of the final fantasy games and that hurt to hear

  • @tonitesteroni6227
    @tonitesteroni62273 жыл бұрын

    4:35 displaying KG instead of us having to Google. You're doing Gods work.

  • @Arrogan28
    @Arrogan284 жыл бұрын

    I worked on these at Sony Imageworks from 1997-2000. All the movies worked on there went through sgi machines. Actually all vfx houses were almost all sgi based machines during the time. Their end came with the first game cards for pc’s that came at the start of the century, and when sgi got a huge portion of nvidia shares and sent half their gpu team to nvidia. Even sgi saw the writing on the wall. But when sgi ruled it truly was a pleasure to use these machines. So ahead of their time....

  • @virustwin
    @virustwin7 жыл бұрын

    Clint, officially one of my favourite videos on youtube right now. i have always been fascinated with the sgi systems but you covered it perfectly. thank you!

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    And thanks for watching, I'm glad you enjoyed.

  • @comanderjuul
    @comanderjuul7 жыл бұрын

    I first thought this was a computer from an indigogo campaign somehow... :P

  • @Nate_the_Nobody
    @Nate_the_Nobody4 жыл бұрын

    A viewer Sent you something that expensive to do a video on Yeah, I'd agree with your "too trusting" assessment

  • @thomasneal9291

    @thomasneal9291

    3 жыл бұрын

    I've had friends loan me brand new cars. OMG! how gullible can they be? *rolleyes*

  • @PeteMyers
    @PeteMyers3 жыл бұрын

    The boys at Boeing call them "Barney Boxes"

  • @ColonialPuppet
    @ColonialPuppet7 жыл бұрын

    you should do a Tech Tales on SG! that would be awesome.

  • @d4v3tm

    @d4v3tm

    7 жыл бұрын

    are they still around?

  • @teh_supar_hackr

    @teh_supar_hackr

    7 жыл бұрын

    no, they disapersed in may 11, 2009.

  • @prfo5554

    @prfo5554

    7 жыл бұрын

    You should also do Tech Tales on Digital Equipment Corporation, Tandy Corp., and Sun Microsystems.

  • @Adamant_Consternation

    @Adamant_Consternation

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yes please!

  • @prfo5554

    @prfo5554

    7 жыл бұрын

    I think a video on Tandy would be particularly interesting since they made more than computers and were originally a leather company. However, eventually they bought out Radio Shack and then when Radio Shack became profitable they spun-off their leather manufacturing division. Then things went south for Tandy Corp. in the 1990's and they went out of business in 1999, but the Tandy Leather Company which the spun-off as it's own company in 1975 still exist.

  • @Redhotsmasher
    @Redhotsmasher7 жыл бұрын

    Over 20 kilos?! Wow, this thing could concievably have weighed more than the CRT it was hooked up to back in the day. That's one heavy ass computer.

  • @matthewkriebel7342

    @matthewkriebel7342

    7 жыл бұрын

    Redhotsmasher no, since the display options were 18 and 20 inch CRTs displaying 1280x1024 or 1600x1200. Back when PCs had 15" at 800x600. Man it was a joy to use one of these "real computers". You want horror, look up how heavy an Octane was. Manual says two-man lift.

  • @Dodoid

    @Dodoid

    7 жыл бұрын

    Matthew Kriebel People were surprised when I lifted an Octane over my head in my Octane video. It was heavy, certainly heavier than my Indigo2, but not so bad that I couldn't move it or lift it up for the camera.

  • @SamuliTuomola_stt

    @SamuliTuomola_stt

    7 жыл бұрын

    Yea, weight is one thing I don't miss about old computers. Random trivia: SGI's CRTs often got damaged when moved because it's stand swinged back which was hard to see while lifting it, and then when set down the stand cracked with all the weight on it's edge or it might've toppled over :/

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    7 жыл бұрын

    I put my back out in 2001 after moving an SGI FW900 superwide monitor (used for Onyx2) up a flight of stairs on my own. Much heavier than the usual 20 or 21" Sony CRT. When I move Octanes around these days, they're quite light by comparison. :D For a really heavy SGI thought, gotta get an Onyx, hehe... forums.nekochan.net/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=16720350

  • @juvandy
    @juvandy3 жыл бұрын

    This brought back memories for me. In the early 90s my dad got a job teaching drafting at the local vocational school, and he convinced them that CAD was the way to teach rather than drafting by hand. Overnight, they managed to swap out the teaching lab from drafting tables to drafting computers, and he somehow even conned them into buying an Indigo-1. I was still in elementary school, but I think I ended up spending more time on it than anyone else.

  • @IainShepherd1
    @IainShepherd13 жыл бұрын

    They had an Indigo 2 at my college in the early 00s. Wish I had known any of this about it. As far as I knew it was just a.n. other machine in the Unix lab!

  • @icase75

    @icase75

    3 жыл бұрын

    They had one (maybe two) at my college in 97-98, in the VR lab. I remember the grad students using it. However, it wasn't the most powerful computer in that room.

  • @Moonbeam143
    @Moonbeam1437 жыл бұрын

    Man, that is one sexy computer.

  • @Reverend_Salem

    @Reverend_Salem

    6 жыл бұрын

    Moonbeam the colour is the same as my phone case

  • @jackaleope
    @jackaleope7 жыл бұрын

    thanks for rocking my shirt again LGR!! it always makes me super pumped to see you wearing it 😆

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    Haha, you bet!

  • @jackaleope

    @jackaleope

    7 жыл бұрын

    Lazy Game Reviews a bunch of my followers on tumblr were really quick to immediately send me messages telling me about it. apparently we share some fans! lol. by the way, did you know that I am working with Eric Chahi on an official comic for the game? it's going to be set as a continuity and extension of the universe. I thought you might be interested to know!

  • @whatsinaname5448

    @whatsinaname5448

    6 жыл бұрын

    Mycaruba!

  • @samtron5000

    @samtron5000

    5 жыл бұрын

    Omg the shirt is gorgeous

  • @symbiat0
    @symbiat03 жыл бұрын

    Dreamworks used to use the giant 16- CPU Onyx servers in their rendering farm. I had friends that worked there in the 90s so I got a tour of their data center. A few years later I went to work for an ISP who used SGI servers for web hosting so I spent sometime working with IrIX.

  • @thomashoffend4299
    @thomashoffend42993 жыл бұрын

    My first workstation at 3M in 1992 was an Indigo. It had a whopping 32 MB of RAM, and we had to replace the 16 MB DIMS with 8 MB DIMS because at the time the 32 MB were not yet stable. The hard drive was 4 GB. My second workstation was one of the purple Indigo 2 models, but it was not loaded fully.

  • @papaquonis
    @papaquonis7 жыл бұрын

    I remember reading a lot about SGI in the 90's, and they definitely seemed like the best thing money could buy. Not my money, obviously. It seemed like it was soooo far ahead of anything else available to consumers, both technically but certainly also aesthetically. Comparing these to the typical beige or grey boxes of the time, these were just much more futuristic! Honestly, they don't even look that dated yet (until you open them, obviously).

  • @rogerwilco2

    @rogerwilco2

    7 жыл бұрын

    When I got to university in 1993 they had just installed new Indy's. I first was impressed by the 486DX-33 Win 3.11 machines, until I figured out what unix a month later and got an account on the Indy's. Then they totally blew me away. 100 MHz, 64 MB RAM, 1280x1024 21" monitor, Full 3D graphics, 16bit stereo sound, Indycam webcam. And the PhD's had even more powerful Indigo's.

  • @absurdengineering

    @absurdengineering

    5 жыл бұрын

    1GB of RAM isn't totally out of question even today. Clean Windows 10 will boot and allow rudimentary internet browsing on a system with 1GB of RAM... Heck, probably Win 10 ported to that machine, running on its graphics hardware and CPU, would be usable. Not the snappiest, but usable.

  • @SoundToxin

    @SoundToxin

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@absurdengineering Really weird to me that Windows 10 is your default. A proper and free operating system optimized by people all over the world (e.g. GNU/Linux, BSD) is going to work much better.

  • @kermitdafrog8

    @kermitdafrog8

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@absurdengineering wonder if WoA could be ported.

  • @kermitdafrog8

    @kermitdafrog8

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@SoundToxin I agree Windows shouldn't be the first go to OS.

  • @litebkt
    @litebkt7 жыл бұрын

    I bought an Indigo Impact back in the nineties. I loved it! I also owned a Sun Sparc 20. I wish I still had them.

  • @Dant2142

    @Dant2142

    5 жыл бұрын

    That must have been extremely expensive! What sort of work were you using both machines for?

  • @cybertrophic
    @cybertrophic3 жыл бұрын

    God I loved old SGIs. Worked developing engineering software on them. Great OS which was years ahead of its time. My old 150MHz Indigo could do video editing and real-time 3D rendering when most people were wowed by windows 3.1. The O2 was unreal at modelling and the Indy had video conferencing in 1995, when most people though a 33kbps modem connection to a bulletin board was cutting edge. The Octanes were beasts and we all lived in awe of the Origins and Onyxes. Great compilers for development, great software tools for creativity and built-in web development software from the early 1990s. Built like tanks, too.

  • @Eli_Santin

    @Eli_Santin

    2 жыл бұрын

    The only SGI that wasn't built like a tank was the O2. The skins on those things are so brittle! It's almost impossible to ship one fully intact these days.

  • @cybertrophic

    @cybertrophic

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Eli_Santin I donated mine to the National computer museum at Bletchley Park. It had been mugged around from office to home, moved house twice and buried in an attic and was still intact. Maybe i had a good one, or other people drop theirs down stairs? 🤷‍♂️

  • @LakesideGazer
    @LakesideGazer3 жыл бұрын

    In the early part of the 2000s, I used to work for the company that repaired the circuit boards from all those machines. I personally worked on the Origin 2000, onyx2 servers and the High end graphics pipeline units. Pretty high end stuff, even in the early 2000s. Ironically, those big units were all tied to an Indy system as their terminal interface. I may or may not have played the original ported Doom on the machines during my break times... ;)

  • @mapesdhs597

    @mapesdhs597

    2 жыл бұрын

    I don't suppose any schematics & suchlike have survived from that time? Nowadays repair has become a vital aspect of keeping SGIs going, as the supply of spares has basically dried up.

  • @Windows98R
    @Windows98R4 жыл бұрын

    “Academic discount” On a 86k pc....

  • @KokoroKatsura

    @KokoroKatsura

    3 жыл бұрын

    a n i m e n i m e

  • @seangentry2943

    @seangentry2943

    3 жыл бұрын

    I think that means the *school* got a discount if they bought these for an animation department

  • @thomasneal9291

    @thomasneal9291

    3 жыл бұрын

    unis around silicon valley sometimes got these donated to their graphics, science, and engineering departments, and once hooked typically wrote upgrades to these systems into their grant proposals. I'd say about 1 in 10 of those machines were actually used to their capacity at the time.

  • @benjaminrittgers8509

    @benjaminrittgers8509

    3 жыл бұрын

    We had SGI boxes in one of the computer labs. This was in 2002 though, so the specs were different.

  • @Shilag
    @Shilag7 жыл бұрын

    Jesus christ. I would be more terrified to be on the borrowing end of one of these than the lending end. I can't even imagine handling and tinkering with something liket his if it wasn't yours.

  • @LGR

    @LGR

    7 жыл бұрын

    Dude, for real. I just tried not to think about it, haha.

  • @plasmaoctopus1728

    @plasmaoctopus1728

    6 жыл бұрын

    I feel like if I was on the borrowing end, I would probably be wearing latex gloves due to paranoia of fingerprinting it or something along those lines.

  • @MP-zf7er

    @MP-zf7er

    5 жыл бұрын

    I'm pretty sure I've seen this exact computer at some point in my past. Can verify name references in this video. Cool extremely expensive, purple computer

  • @1337penguinman
    @1337penguinman2 жыл бұрын

    An SGI, NeXT cube, and a SPARC workstation. That's my holy trinity of stuff I'd love to own. I love older, more "oddball" systems as it were.

  • @blendernoob64
    @blendernoob64 Жыл бұрын

    As a 3D student, SGI has this mythical aura about it. 3D graphics innovation was almost all made on SGI hardware. I would love the SGI granite keyboard and a SGI trinitron monitor to really fit my workstation to add this vintage quality to it!

  • @freezetile8588
    @freezetile85887 жыл бұрын

    My 2015 laptop has 4X the amount of RAM of a 22 year old high-end computer. Dang it LGR, you made my computer look slow. >:(

  • @freezetile8588

    @freezetile8588

    6 жыл бұрын

    Make that 23.

  • @MasterChickenYT

    @MasterChickenYT

    5 жыл бұрын

    @@freezetile8588 Make it 24.

  • @topsecret1837

    @topsecret1837

    5 жыл бұрын

    MasterChickenYT No kidding.

  • @fivesquaredyt2521

    @fivesquaredyt2521

    5 жыл бұрын

    MasterChickenYT make it 64 get it!

  • @fredriksvard2603

    @fredriksvard2603

    5 жыл бұрын

    FreezeTile it makes it look fast

  • @Mnelissen1968
    @Mnelissen19684 жыл бұрын

    Man, I like your videos. It brings back such great memories from a time when I started to explore computers. Today you see people line up almost two blocks at an Apple Store to get the new iPhone. I remember in my time when the Vic 20 and Commodore 64 came out that we slept in a tent in front of the store for the weekend to be sure we could buy one Monday morning. Over here in The Netherlands there was only one store who sold them. I never forget every Thursday evening 19h. We have a radio station called Radio 2. They aired every Thursday evening 2h long nothing else then Commodore 64 software. Tools, games and so on. We had to use a cassette players to record everything. Then you could load the software in to your Commodore 64. The Good ole Days.

  • @andresbravo2003
    @andresbravo20032 жыл бұрын

    It’s way early because of that expensive 3D workstation from 1995. Damn that hits way hard to become an animator way back then.

  • @nbarbosadt
    @nbarbosadt2 жыл бұрын

    it was my workstation in 1994, working on 3D software for pipeline simulation on nuclear plant, at EDF, the french electric operator :)

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