This article needs additional citations for verification. (September 2017) |
Manufacturer | Silicon Graphics, Inc. |
---|---|
Type | Graphics supercomputer |
Release date | January 1993 |
Introductory price | |
Discontinued | March 31, 1999 |
Operating system | IRIX 5.0–6.5.22 (for R10000 CPU models) |
CPU | MIPS R4400, MIPS R10000 |
Memory | 64 MB to 16 GB |
Storage | Up to 30 GB internal disk; expandable to 2 TB total storage |
Graphics | |
Platform | MIPS |
Predecessor | SGI Crimson |
Successor | SGI Onyx2 |
Related | SGI Challenge |
Website | web |
SGI Onyx is a series of visualization systems designed and manufactured by SGI, introduced in 1993 and offered in two models, deskside and rackmount, codenamed Eveready and Terminator respectively. The Onyx's basic system architecture is based on the SGI Challenge servers, but with graphics hardware.
The Onyx was employed in early 1995 for development kits used to produce software for the Nintendo 64 and, because the technology was so new, the Onyx was noted as the major factor for the impressively high price of US$100,000[1]–US$250,000[2] for such kits.
The Onyx was succeeded by the Onyx2 in 1996 and was discontinued on March 31, 1999.