The latter should be authoritative, Eric Fair was an Apple sysadmin in the '80s or thereabouts (and son of the Fair in Fair Issac, the inventors of credit scoring).
And there were quite a few more links I didn't check out.
That's a trip! I didn't consider the need for a supercomputer because I knew so little about the topic. Yet, the text file reminds me of the descriptions on solving fluid dynamics problems where they had to do intensive simulations to measure behavior of fluid in some situation. That's always advertised by supercomputer vendors. Seems molding has similar requirements.
Extra funny if that exchange between Scully and Cray happened. One of computing's more interesting synchronicities. :)
Btw, I recently found out that Cray had another company making a play in reconfigurable market. He died in a car accident but they followed through with interesting technology:
ftp://ftp.cray.com/announcements/product/OLD/Moldflow_Partnership.930408.txt
http://www.clock.org/~fair/computers/sgi-cray.html
The latter should be authoritative, Eric Fair was an Apple sysadmin in the '80s or thereabouts (and son of the Fair in Fair Issac, the inventors of credit scoring).
And there were quite a few more links I didn't check out.