Kendall Square Research

Kendall Square Research (KSR) was a supercomputer company headquartered in Kendall Square in Cambridge, Massachusetts, near MIT. It was founded by Henry Burkhardt III who had previously helped found Data General and Encore Computer and was one of the original team that designed the PDP-8. Its machines ran Unix, and were shared memory NUMA machines based on a custom processor. A few of the KSR1 models were sold, but as the KSR2 was being rolled out, the company collapsed amid accounting irregularities involving the overstatement of revenue. One customer of the KSR2, the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, a United States Department of Energy facility, purchased an enormous pile of spare parts, and kept their machines running for years after the demise of KSR. KSR, along with many of its competitors (see below) went bankrupt during the collapse of the supercomputer market in the mid-1990s. KSR's competitors included Thinking Machines and Meiko, in addition to various old-line (and still surviving) companies like IBM, Intel, and Sun Microsystems.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
karl ferdinand braun
khunjerab pass
kazimir malevich
toshiki kaifu
kakinomoto no hitomaro
karl ernst von baer
kentucky and virginia resolutions
keystone kops
knigsberg university
koenigsegg
kaliningrad oblast
kenneth i of scotland
khandi alexander
klaus fuchs
konstantin stanislavski
k cell
khartoum
ketoglutaric acid
keynesian economics
kinetic energy
kew gardens
king's royal rifle corps
khoisan languages
katina paxinou
klaus barbie
kashmir
kinglassie, fife
kalat
kordofanian languages
khuriya muriya islands
khwaja ahmad abbas
katherine maclean
kuru
kenneth kaunda
k 9
k2
komodo dragon
kiln
kiwi
kiwifruit
kiel canal
konrad emil bloch
ksc
klement gottwald