I just signed up after finding this message board watching your videos. lots of nostalgia feels!
my only comment is to slow down a bit.... us old people can have a hard time keeping up with you ha!
I still have an octane and an o2 in storage, i'm contemplating digging them out. I owned 4 indigo 2 machines but sold them in the 90's and miss them
I would like to see a video going over the death of sgi on the desktop. it's a sad story for sgi but an important one. I switched from SGI to a desktop NT machine because a pc with a geforce that cost me a couple grand would destroy a $60,000 sgi box. I remember setting up a render farm of overclocked celerons that cost us about 5k that outperformed anything sgi could put out, unless you were talking about unlimited funds.
the late 90's where an amazing time for computer graphics where it seemed like every day brought some new bombshell in hardware/software and things were moving so fast it's no wonder sgi couldn't keep up.
keep up the good work on the videos!
my only comment is to slow down a bit.... us old people can have a hard time keeping up with you ha!
I still have an octane and an o2 in storage, i'm contemplating digging them out. I owned 4 indigo 2 machines but sold them in the 90's and miss them
I would like to see a video going over the death of sgi on the desktop. it's a sad story for sgi but an important one. I switched from SGI to a desktop NT machine because a pc with a geforce that cost me a couple grand would destroy a $60,000 sgi box. I remember setting up a render farm of overclocked celerons that cost us about 5k that outperformed anything sgi could put out, unless you were talking about unlimited funds.
the late 90's where an amazing time for computer graphics where it seemed like every day brought some new bombshell in hardware/software and things were moving so fast it's no wonder sgi couldn't keep up.
keep up the good work on the videos!