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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.sgi
- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!uwm.edu!ux1.cso.uiuc.edu!news.cso.uiuc.edu!TheImprov!amys
- From: amys@TheImprov.ncsa.uiuc.edu (Amy Swanson)
- Subject: Re: SGI workstations in the schools?
- References: <WALVER.92Dec15073151@kielo.uta.fi>
- Message-ID: <BzD08y.GMI@news.cso.uiuc.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.cso.uiuc.edu (Net Noise owner)
- Organization: University of Illinois at Urbana
- Distribution: comp
- Date: Wed, 16 Dec 1992 15:55:43 GMT
- Lines: 47
-
- In <WALVER.92Dec15073151@kielo.uta.fi> walver@kielo.uta.fi (Ville V. Walveranta) writes:
-
- > Are the Silicon Graphics workstations (Personal IRIS,
- > INDIGO...) in use in any college as a primary teaching/lab tool
- > in the computer graphics/animation department?
-
- At the University of Illinois, there are several labs around campus which
- use Silicon Graphics workstations. The primary lab is the Renaissance
- Experimental Lab, which SGI donated to the UofI and the National Center for
- Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) about 4 or 5 years ago. (thank you, SGI!)
- The original donation was 20 4D/20G workstations, which, as of today, are now
- 20 4D/25TG workstations. This lab is used for university classes is areas
- such as computer science, art & design, math, geology, computational biology
- and medical imaging, and by the local community college for a computer graphics
- specialist program. When not used by the students, the campus researchers and
- and related students use it for their projects. We are currently trying to
- get the lab upgraded to Indigo systems.
-
- Also on campus are several smaller labs which are owned and used by a specific
- department - these labs typically have Indigo systems.
-
-
- > How about apps like Alias, TDI Explore, SoftImage, Creative
- > Licence...? Any schools?
-
- The classes in the REL use Wavefront (art & design), Biosym software
- (comp bio), and their own personally developed software. The problem with
- commericial software packages is that they cost lots o'money and universities
- typically don't have that type of money. The commercial software that we do
- have in the REL is usually donated and/or some type of special, relatively
- inexpensive license is concocted or the professor teaching the class acquires
- it somehow.
-
- Considering that the software in the lab is exposed to hundreds of students
- about to enter the job market, who then may be asked "what software do you
- like to use," it's seems a shame to me that more software vendors don't
- take an interest in this type of market. They may lose a little bit of
- money in the beginning, but the PR more than makes up for it. Oh, well...
-
-
- Amy
-
- --
- =========
- Amy K. Swanson
- SGI Systems Administrator, NCSA
- amys@ncsa.uiuc.edu
-