Supertek Computers

American computer company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Supertek Computers Inc. was a computer company founded in Santa Clara, California in 1985 by Mike Fung, an ex-Hewlett-Packard project manager, with the aim of designing and selling low-cost minisupercomputers compatible with those from Cray Research.[1]

Company typePublic
IndustryComputer
Founded1985; 41 years ago (1985)
FounderMike Fung
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Supertek Computers Inc.
Company typePublic
IndustryComputer
Founded1985; 41 years ago (1985)
FounderMike Fung
Defunct1990; 36 years ago (1990)
FateAcquired by Cray
ProductsSupertek S-1
Close

Its first product was the Supertek S-1, a compact, air-cooled, CMOS clone of the Cray X-MP vector processor supercomputer running the CTSS (Cray Time Sharing System) operating system, and later a version of Unix. This was launched in 1989; although Supertek had raised US$21.4 million in venture capital, only $5 million of this was needed to develop the S-1.[1] Only ten units were sold before Supertek was acquired by Cray Research in 1990.[2] The S-1 was subsequently sold for a brief time by Cray as the Cray XMS.[3]

At the time of the acquisition the Supertek S-2, a clone of the Cray Y-MP, was under development. This was eventually launched as the Cray Y-MP EL in 1992.[4][5]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI