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Convex was formed in [[1982]] by Bob Paluck and Steve Wallach in [[Richardson, Texas]]. Their product concept was not particularly original: they planned on producing a machine very similar in architecture to the [[Cray Research]] vector processor machines, but with a somewhat lower performance, and at a much lower price-performance point. In order to lower costs, the Convex designs were not as technologically aggressive as Cray's, and were based on more mainstream chip technology, attempting to make up for the loss in performance in other ways.
Their first machine was the '''C1''', released in 1985. The C1 was very similar to the [[Cray-1]] in general design, but used a slower memory and main CPU. They offset this by increasing the capabilities of the vector units, including 128 64-bit registers, double that of the Cray. It also used [[virtual memory]] as opposed to the real memory system of the Cray machines. It was based on [[CMOS]] chips, and generally rated at 20 MFLOPS peak for double precision (64 bits), and 40 MFLOPS peak for single precision (32 bits). They also invested heavily in advanced automatic vectorizing [[compiler]]s in order to gain performance
The '''C2''' was a crossbar-interconnected [[multiprocessor]] version of the C1, with up to 4 CPUs, released in 1988. It used newer [[ECL]] chips for a
Instead Convex introduced an entirely new design as the '''Exemplar'''. Unlike the C-series machine, the Exemplar was a parallel-computing machine based on off-the-shelf HP-PA [[RISC]] chips, connected together using [[SCI]]. First introduced in 1994, the Exemplar technology was generic enough that HP decided to buy Convex in order to sell the Exemplar machines directly.
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