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Pyramid Technology was formed in 1981 by a number of ex- HP employees, who were interested in building first-rate minicomputers based on RISC designs. Their first series was released in 1983 as the 90x, which used their custom 32-bit scalar processor running at 3MHz. In late 1985 they released their first SMP system, the multi-processor 98x, running at 7MHz. Several machines in the series were released, from the 1-CPU '''9815''' to the 4-CPU '''9845''', over a period of years from 1985 to 1987. The fully-loaded 9845 ran at about 25 MIPS , a respectable figure for the era, but not competitive with high-end Supercomputer s. Like many of the early multiprocessor vendors, Pyramid turned to "commodity" RISC CPU's when they started to become practical. The processor of the day was the MIPS R3000 , and Pyramid released a series of R3000-based machines known as the MIServer starting in 1989. The first machines in the series shipped with anywhere from 4 to 12 R3000's, with top-end performance around 140MIPS. The MIServer was replaced in 1991/2 with the low-end 1-12 CPU '''MIServer S''' (aka '''S-series''') and high-end 24 CPU '''MIServer ES''', both running speed-bumped 33MHz R3000's. The release of the 150MHz 64-bit R4400 led to the 2-16 CPU Nile series in late 1993. With each CPU capable of 92MIPS, the Nile systems were true supercomputers. Their last product, the Reliant RM 1000 known internally as the '''Meshine''', was just coming to market when Siemens bought them. |