In 1984,
Justin Rattner became manager of the Intel Scientific Computers group in
Beaverton, Oregon. He hired a team that included mathematician
Cleve Moler. Intel announced the iPSC/1 in 1985, with 32 to 128 nodes connected with
Ethernet into a hypercube. The system was managed by a
personal computer of the
PC/AT era running
Xenix, the "cube manager". Each node had a
80286 CPU with
80287 math coprocessor, 512K of
RAM, and eight Ethernet ports (seven for the hypercube interconnect, and one to talk to the cube manager). A message passing interface called NX that was developed by Paul Pierce evolved throughout the life of the iPSC line. Because only the cube manager had connections to the outside world, developing and debugging applications was difficult. The basic models were the iPSC/d5 (five-dimension hypercube with 32 nodes), iPSC/d6 (six dimensions with 64 nodes), and iPSC/d7 (seven dimensions with 128 nodes). Each cabinet had 32 nodes, and prices ranged up to about half a million dollars for the four-cabinet iPSC/d7 model. iPSC/1 was called the first parallel computer built from
commercial off-the-shelf parts. This allowed it to reach the market about the same time as its competitor from
nCUBE, even though the nCUBE project had started earlier. Each iPSC cabinet was (overall) 127 cm x 41 cm x 43 cm. Total computer performance was estimated at 2 M
FLOPS. Memory width was 16-bit. Serial #1 iPSC/1 with 32 nodes was delivered to Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 1985. ==iPSC/2==