Pikes Peak Life Member Affinity Group Virtual Meeting - April
VHSIC and the ETA-10: The First CMOS and Only Cryogenically Cooled Supercomputer
Supercomputer Progress Until Today
David Bondurant, Retired PE
Pikes Peak Life Member Affinity Group Chair
Region 5 LMAG Coordinator
Control Data Corporation (CDC) was the World’s Leading Supercomputer company for 40-years. Starting as classified group of Navy code breakers during WWII building tube-type computers, CDC was building the fastest computers by the 1970s in the Twin Cities.
By the early 1980s, CDC needed a dramatic leap forward to stay ahead of Cray Research, and several Japanese supercomputer companies. They creates ETA Systems to build a computer 10 times more powerful than any of the day, the ETA-10.
During the 1970s, fielded military computer technology was failing to keep pace with rapidly evolving commercial technology. In 1980, the DoD launched an aggressive technology development called Very High Speed Integrated Circuits (VHSIC) to rapidly develop 1.2 micron and 0.5 micron semiconductor and advanced computer-aided design tools. Across town from ETA Systems, Honeywell Solid State Electronics was developing leading edge CMOS and packaging technologies under a VHSIC contract.
The presentation will describe how Honeywell and ETA Systems worked together to create the ETA-10, The First CMOS and Only Cryogenically Cooled Supercomputer.
then describe how CMOS Supercomputers have evolved until today.
Date and Time
Location
Hosts
Registration
- Date: 19 Apr 2021
- Time: 06:00 PM to 07:30 PM
- All times are (GMT-07:00) US/Mountain
- Add Event to Calendar
- Starts 12 April 2021 04:23 PM
- Ends 17 April 2021 04:10 PM
- All times are (GMT-07:00) US/Mountain
- No Admission Charge
Speakers
David BONDURANT of Vertical Memory
VHSIC and the ETA-10: The First CMOS and Only Cryogenically Cooled Supercomputer Supercomputer Progress Until Today
Control Data Corporation (CDC) was the World’s Leading Supercomputer company for 40-years. Starting as classified group of Navy code breakers during WWII building tube-type computers, CDC was building the fastest computers by the 1970s in the Twin Cities.
By the early 1980s, CDC needed a dramatic leap forward to stay ahead of Cray Research, and several Japanese supercomputer companies. They creates ETA Systems to build a computer 10 times more powerful than any of the day, the ETA-10.
During the 1970s, fielded military computer technology was failing to keep pace with rapidly evolving commercial technology. In 1980, the DoD launched an aggressive technology development called Very High Speed Integrated Circuits (VHSIC) to rapidly develop 1.2 micron and 0.5 micron semiconductor and advanced computer-aided design tools. Across town from ETA Systems, Honeywell Solid State Electronics was developing leading edge CMOS and packaging technologies under a VHSIC contract.
The presentation will describe how Honeywell and ETA Systems worked together to create the ETA-10, The First CMOS and Only Cryogenically Cooled Supercomputer.
I then describe how CMOS Supercomputers have evolved until today.
Biography:
David Bondurant has been involved with the computer and semiconductor industry for 49-years. He was a computer architect at Control Data, Sperry-Univac, and Honeywell. He was involved with the government-sponsored advanced semiconductor program called VHSIC (Very High Speed Integrated Circuits) at Univac & Honeywell where he developed microprocessor and ASIC semiconductor products in bipolar CML, CMOS, and radiation hard CMOS. He was involved with emerging non-volatile RAM marketing at industry leading companies, Ramtron (FRAM), Simtek (non-volatile SRAM), and Freescale Semiconductor/Everspin Technologies (MRAM).
Email:
Address:Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States