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Latest revision as of 20:19, 14 September 2020
nCUBE,
a series of massive parallel computers based on a hypercube topology performing MIMD, first released 1985 by the company of the same name. The first model, the nCUBE 10 was able to build an order-ten hypercube, supporting up to 1024 CPUs with 32-bit ALU and 64-bit FPU and 128 KiB of RAM per node, also supporting dynamic reconfigurable partitioning the machine into "sub-cubes", that is connected processor teams working on particular sub-problems, such as searching sub-trees in the massive parallel chess program Waycool [2].
The single-chip nCUBE-2 processor launched in June 1989 used wormhole routing with up to 4096 nodes, the 64-bit ALU nCUBE-3 was released in 1995, and the fourth generation MediaCUBE 4 in 1999. In January 2005, nCUBE was acquired by C-COR, and subsequently acquired by ARRIS in December 2007 [3].
Chess Programs
See also
Selected Publications
- John P. Hayes, Trevor N. Mudge, Quentin F. Stout, et al. (1986). Architecture of a Hypercube Supercomputer. ICPP'86
- Ed Felten, Steve Otto (1988). Chess on a Hypercube. The Third Conference on Hypercube Concurrent Computers and Applications, Vol. II-Applications
- Ed Felten, Steve Otto (1988). A Highly Parallel Chess Program. Conference on Fifth Generation Computer Systems
- Ed Felten, Steve Otto (1989). Coherent parallel C. Proceedings of the third conference on Hypercube concurrent computers and applications
External Links
- nCUBE by Wikipedia
- nCUBE Corporation (Wayback machine)
- nCube and the Rise of the HyperCubes | The CPU Shack Museum
References
- ↑ Die of nCUBE-10 processor, Image by Pauli Rautakorpi, November 25, 2013, CC BY 3.0, Wikimedia Commons
- ↑ Ed Felten, Steve Otto (1988). Chess on a Hypercube. The Third Conference on Hypercube Concurrent Computers and Applications, Vol. II-Applications
- ↑ nCUBE by Wikipedia