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Wikipedia

Workstation

A workstation is a special computer designed for technical or scientific applications.[2] Intended primarily to be used by a single user,[2] they are commonly connected to a local area network and run multi-user operating systems. The term workstation has been used loosely to refer to everything from a mainframe computer terminal to a PC connected to a network, but the most common form refers to the class of hardware offered by several current and defunct companies such as Sun Microsystems,[3] Silicon Graphics, Apollo Computer,[4] DEC, HP, NeXT, and IBM which powered the 3D computer graphics revolution of the late 1990s.[5]

Tim Berners-Lee created the World Wide Web at CERN in Switzerland on the NeXTcube workstation.[1]

Workstations formerly offered higher performance than mainstream personal computers, especially in CPU, graphics, memory, and multitasking. Workstations are optimized for the visualization and manipulation of different types of complex data such as 3D mechanical design, engineering simulations like computational fluid dynamics, animation, video editing, image editing, medical imaging, image rendering, computational science, and mathematical plots. Typically, the form factor is that of a desktop computer, which consists of a high-resolution display, a keyboard, and a mouse at a minimum, but also offers multiple displays, graphics tablets, and 3D mice for manipulating objects and navigating scenes. Workstations were the first segment of the computer market[6] to present advanced accessories, and collaboration tools like videoconferencing.[5]

The increasing capabilities of mainstream PCs since the late 1990s have reduced distinction between the PCs and workstations.[7] Typical 1980s workstations have expensive proprietary hardware and operating systems to categorically distinguish from standardized PCs. From the 1990s and 2000s, IBM's RS/6000 and IntelliStation have RISC-based POWER CPUs running AIX, and its IBM PC Series and Aptiva corporate and consumer PCs have Intel x86 CPUs. However, by the early 2000s, this difference largely disappeared, since workstations use highly commoditized hardware dominated by large PC vendors, such as Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and Fujitsu, selling x86-64 systems running Windows or Linux.

History edit

 
Early Xerox workstation
 
HP 9000 model 425 workstation running HP-UX 9 and Visual User Environment (VUE)
 
HP 9000 model 735 running HP-UX and the Common Desktop Environment (CDE)

Origins and development edit

Perhaps the first computer that might qualify as a workstation is the IBM 1620, a small scientific computer designed to be used interactively by a single person sitting at the console.[8] It was introduced in 1959.[9] One peculiar feature of the machine is that it lacks any arithmetic circuitry.[10] To perform addition, it requires a memory-resident table of decimal addition rules.[11] This reduced the cost of logic circuitry, enabling IBM to make it inexpensive. The machine is codenamed CADET and was initially rented for $1000 per month.

In 1965, the IBM 1130 scientific computer became the successor to 1620. Both of these systems run Fortran and other languages.[12] They are built into roughly desk-sized cabinets, with console typewriters. They have optional add-on disk drives, printers, and both paper-tape and punched-card I/O.

Early workstations are generally dedicated minicomputers, a multiuser system reserved for one user. For example, the PDP-8 from Digital Equipment Corporation, is regarded as the first commercial minicomputer.[13]

The Lisp machines developed at MIT in the early 1970s pioneered some workstation principles, as high-performance, networked, single-user systems intended for heavily interactive use. Lisp Machines were commercialized beginning 1980 by companies like Symbolics, Lisp Machines, Texas Instruments (the TI Explorer) and Xerox (the Interlisp-D workstations). The first computer designed for a single user, with high-resolution graphics (and so a workstation in the modern sense of the term), is the Alto developed at Xerox PARC in 1973.[14] Other early workstations include the Terak 8510/a (1977),[15] Three Rivers PERQ (1979), and the later Xerox Star (1981).

1980s rise in popularity edit

In the early 1980s, with the advent of 32-bit microprocessors such as the Motorola 68000, several new competitors appeared, including Apollo Computer and Sun Microsystems,[16] with workstations based on 68000 and Unix.[17][18] Meanwhile, DARPA's VLSI Project created several spinoff graphics products, such as the Silicon Graphics 3130. Target markets were differentiated, with Sun and Apollo considered to be network workstations and SGI as graphics workstations. RISC CPUs increased in the mid-1980s, typical of workstation vendors.[19]

Workstations often feature SCSI or Fibre Channel disk storage systems, high-end 3D accelerators, single or multiple 64-bit processors,[20] large amounts of RAM, and well-designed cooling. Additionally, the companies that make the products tend to have comprehensive repair/replacement plans. As the distinction between workstation and PC fades, however, workstation manufacturers have increasingly employed "off-the-shelf" PC components and graphics solutions rather than proprietary hardware or software. Some "low-cost" workstations are still expensive by PC standards but offer binary compatibility with higher-end workstations and servers made by the same vendor. This allows software development to take place on low-cost (relative to the server) desktop machines.

Thin clients edit

Workstations diversified to the lowest possible price point as opposed to performance, called the thin client or network computer. Dependent upon a network and server, this reduces the machine to having no hard drive, and only the CPU, keyboard, mouse, and screen. Some diskless nodes still run a traditional operating system and perform computations locally, with storage on a remote server.[21] These are intended to reduce the initial system purchase cost, and the total cost of ownership, by reducing the amount of administration required per user.[22]

This approach was first attempted as a replacement for PCs in office productivity applications, with the 3Station by 3Com. In the 1990s, X terminals filled a similar role for technical computing. Sun's thin clients include the Sun Ray product line.[23] However, traditional workstations and PCs continued to drop in price and complexity as remote management tools for IT staff became available, undercutting this market.

3M computer edit

 
A NeXTstation graphics workstation from 1990
 
Sony NEWS workstation: 2× 68030 at 25 MHz, 1280×1024 pixel and 256-color display
 
SGI Indy graphics workstation
 
SGI O2 graphics workstation
 
HP C8000 workstation running HP-UX 11i with CDE
 
Six workstations: four HP Z620, one HP Z820, one HP Z420

A high-end workstation of the early 1980s with the three Ms, or a "3M computer" (coined by Raj Reddy and his colleagues at CMU), has one megabyte of RAM, a megapixel display (roughly 1000×1000 pixels), and one "MegaFLOPS" compute performance (at least one million floating-point operations per second).[24] RFC 782 defines the workstation environment more generally as "hardware and software dedicated to serve a single user", and that it provisions additional shared resources. This is at least one order of magnitude beyond the capacity of the personal computer of the time. The original 1981 IBM Personal Computer has 16 KB memory, a text-only display, and floating-point performance around kFLOPS (30 kFLOPS with the optional 8087 math coprocessor. Other features beyond the typical personal computer include networking, graphics acceleration, and high-speed internal and peripheral data buses.

Another goal was to bring the price below one "megapenny", that is, less than $10,000 (equivalent to $28,000 in 2023), which was achieved in the late 1980s. Throughout the early to mid-1990s, many workstations cost from $15,000 to $100,000 (equivalent to $200,000 in 2023) or more.

Decline edit

The more widespread adoption of these technologies into mainstream PCs was a direct factor in the decline of the workstation as a separate market segment:[25]

  • Extremely reliable components: together with multiple CPUs with greater cache and error-correcting memory, this may remain the distinguishing feature of a workstation today. Although most technologies implemented in modern workstations are also available at a lower cost for the consumer market, finding good components and making sure they work compatibly with each other is a great challenge in workstation building. Because workstations are designed for high-end tasks such as weather forecasting, video rendering, and game design, it is taken for granted that these systems must be running under full load, non-stop for several hours or even days without issue. Any off-the-shelf components can be used to build a workstation, but the reliability of such components under such rigorous conditions is uncertain. For this reason, almost no workstations are built by the customer themselves but rather purchased from a vendor such as Hewlett-Packard / HP Inc., Fujitsu, IBM, Lenovo, Sun Microsystems, SGI, Apple, or Dell.
  • High-performance 3D graphics hardware for computer-aided design (CAD) and computer-generated imagery (CGI) animation is increasingly popular in the PC market around the mid-to-late 1990s mostly driven by computer gaming, yielding the first official GPU in Nvidia's NV10 and the breakthrough GeForce 256.
  • High-performance CPUs: the first RISC of the early 1980s offer roughly one order of magnitude in performance improvement over CISC processors of comparable cost. Intel's x86 CISC family always had the edge in market share and the economies of scale that this implied. By the mid-1990s, some CISC processors like the Motorola 68040 and Intel's 80486 and Pentium have performance parity with RISC in some areas, such as integer performance (at the cost of greater chip complexity) and hardware floating-point calculations, relegating RISC to even more high-end markets.[26]
  • Hardware support for floating-point operations: optional on the original IBM PC; remained on a separate chip for Intel systems until the 80486DX processor. Even then, x86 floating-point performance lags other processors due to limitations in its architecture. Today even low-price PCs now have performance in the gigaFLOPS range.
  • High-performance/high-capacity data storage: early workstations tend to use proprietary disk interfaces until the SCSI standard of the mid-1980s. Although SCSI interfaces soon became available for IBM PCs, they were comparatively expensive and tend to be limited by the speed of the PC's ISA peripheral bus. SCSI is an advanced controller interface good for multitasking and daisy chaining. This makes it suited for use in servers, and its benefits to desktop PCs which mostly run single-user operating systems are less clear, but it is standard on the 1980s-1990s Macintosh. Serial ATA is more modern, with throughput comparable to SCSI but at a lower cost.
  • High-speed networking (10 Mbit/s or better): 10 Mbit/s network interfaces were commonly available for PCs by the early 1990s, although by that time workstations were pursuing even higher networking speeds, moving to 100 Mbit/s, 1 Gbit/s, and 10 Gbit/s. However, economies of scale and the demand for high-speed networking in even non-technical areas have dramatically decreased the time it takes for newer networking technologies to reach commodity price points.
  • Large displays (17- to 21-inch) with high resolutions and high refresh rate, which were rare among PCs in the late 1980s and early 1990s but became common among PCs by the late 1990s.
  • Large memory configurations: PCs (such as IBM clones) are originally limited to 640  KB of RAM until the 1982 introduction of the 80286 processor; early workstations have megabytes of memory. IBM clones require special programming techniques to address more than 640 KB until the 80386, as opposed to other 32-bit processors such as SPARC which provide straightforward access to nearly their entire 4  GB memory address range. 64-bit workstations and servers supporting an address range far beyond 4  GB have been available since the early 1990s, a technology just beginning to appear in the PC desktop and server market in the mid-2000s.
  • Operating system: early workstations ran the Unix operating system (OS), a Unix-like variant, or an unrelated equivalent OS such as VMS. The PC CPUs of the time have limitations in memory capacity and memory access protection, making them unsuitable to run OSes of this sophistication, but this, too, began to change in the late 1980s as PCs with the 32-bit 80386 with integrated paged MMUs became widely affordable and enabling, OS/2, Windows NT 3.1, and Unix-like systems based on BSD and Linux on commodity PC hardware.
  • Tight integration between the OS and the hardware: Workstation vendors both design the hardware and maintain the Unix operating system variant that runs on it. This allows for much more rigorous testing than is possible with an operating system such as Windows. Windows requires that third-party hardware vendors write compliant hardware drivers that are stable and reliable. Also, minor variations in hardware quality such as timing or build quality can affect the reliability of the overall machine. Workstation vendors are able to ensure both the quality of the hardware, and the stability of the operating system drivers by validating these things in-house, and this leads to a generally much more reliable and stable machine.

Market position edit

 
Dell Precision 620MT with dual Pentium III processors
 
Sun Ultra 20 with AMD Opteron processor and Solaris 10

Since the late 1990s, the workstation and consumer markets have further merged. Many low-end workstation components are now the same as the consumer market, and the price differential narrowed. For example, most Macintosh Quadra computers were originally intended for scientific or design work, all with the Motorola 68040 CPU, backward compatible with 68000 Macintoshes. The consumer Macintosh IIcx and Macintosh IIci models can be upgraded to the Quadra 700. "In an era when many professionals preferred Silicon Graphics workstations, the Quadra 700 was an intriguing option at a fraction of the cost" as resource-intensive software such as Infini-D brought "studio-quality 3D rendering and animations to the home desktop". The Quadra 700 can run A/UX 3.0, making it a Unix workstation.[27] Another example is the Nvidia GeForce 256 consumer graphics card, which spawned the Quadro workstation card, which has the same GPU but different driver support and certifications for CAD applications and a much higher price.

Workstations have typically driven advancements in CPU technology. All computers benefit from multi-processor and multicore designs (essentially, multiple processors on a die). The multicore design was pioneered by IBM's POWER4; it and Intel Xeon have multiple CPUs, more on-die cache, and ECC memory.

Some workstations are designed or certified for use with only one specific application such as AutoCAD, Avid Xpress Studio HD, or 3D Studio Max. The certification process increases workstation prices.

Current market edit

 
GPU workstation with a GeForce RTX 3060 GPU
 
Hewlett-Packard Z6, an x86-64-based workstation with two RTX 5000 GPUs
 
Inside an HP Z820 workstation

GPU workstations edit

Modern workstations are typically desktop computers with AMD or NVIDIA GPUs to do high-performance computing on software programs such as video editing, 3D modeling, computer-aided design, and rendering.[28][29]

 
3D sketch of a half cube workstation
 
Case enclosure holds a GPU, PCI-E SSD, DRAM DIMM sticks, and air cooling heat sink on the CPU.

Decline of RISC workstations edit

By January 2009, all RISC-based workstation product lines had been discontinued:

  • Hewlett-Packard withdrew its last HP 9000 PA-RISC-based desktop products from the market in January 2008.[30]
  • IBM retired the IntelliStation POWER on January 2, 2009.[31]
  • SGI ended general availability of its MIPS-based SGI Fuel and SGI Tezro workstations in December 2006.[32]
  • Sun Microsystems announced end-of-life for its last Sun Ultra SPARC workstations in October 2008.[33]

In early 2018, RISC workstations were reintroduced in a series of IBM POWER9-based systems by Raptor Computing Systems.[34][35] The Mac transition to Apple silicon greatly increased power efficiency and size efficiency over x86-64 with its ARM-based RISC architecture.[36]

x86-64 edit

Most of the current workstation market uses x86-64 microprocessors. Operating systems include Windows, FreeBSD, Linux distributions, macOS, and Solaris.[37] Some vendors also market commodity mono-socket systems as workstations.

These are three types of workstations:

  1. Workstation blade systems (IBM HC10 or Hewlett-Packard xw460c. Sun Visualization System is akin to these solutions)[38]
  2. Ultra high-end workstation (SGI Virtu VS3xx)
  3. Deskside systems containing server-class CPUs and chipsets on large server-class motherboards with high-end RAM (HP Z-series workstations and Fujitsu CELSIUS workstations)

Definition edit

A high-end desktop market segment includes workstations, with PC operating systems and components. Component product lines may be segmented, with premium components that are functionally similar to the consumer models but with higher robustness or performance[39].[40]

A workstation-class PC may have some of the following features:

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ https://artsandculture.google.com/asset/original-next-computer-used-by-sir-tim-berners-lee-to-design-the-world-wide-web-next/6QHcxbuGnQ4rng?hl=en
  2. ^ a b "workstation | Definition & Facts", Britannica, retrieved 2021-12-05
  3. ^ Bechtolsheim, Andreas; Baskett, Forest (1980). "High-performance raster graphics for microcomputer systems". Proceedings of the 7th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques - SIGGRAPH '80. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press. pp. 43–47. doi:10.1145/800250.807466. ISBN 0897910214. S2CID 12045240.
  4. ^ "US and India sign neutrino pact". Physics World. 31 (5): 13. May 2018. doi:10.1088/2058-7058/31/5/23. ISSN 0953-8585.
  5. ^ a b Johnson, Karen; Fairless, Tami; Giangrande, Scott (2020-08-01). Ka-Band ARM Zenith Radar Corrections (KAZRCOR, KAZRCFRCOR) Value-Added Products (Report). doi:10.2172/1647336. OSTI 1647336. S2CID 242933956.
  6. ^ "Global Personal Computers Market Report (2021 to 2030) - COVID-19 Impact and Recovery - ResearchAndMarkets.com". Business Wire. 2021-06-23. Retrieved 2022-09-07.
  7. ^ . OIDair WEB. Archived from the original on 2021-12-05. Retrieved 2021-12-05.
  8. ^ "IBM workstations" (PDF). IBM.
  9. ^ "IBM Archives: 1620 Data Processing System". www.ibm.com. 2003-01-23. Retrieved 2022-03-06.
  10. ^ Sweeney, D. W. (1965). "An analysis of floating-point addition". IBM Systems Journal. 4 (1): 31–42. doi:10.1147/sj.41.0031. ISSN 0018-8670.
  11. ^ . 2017-12-22. Archived from the original on 2017-12-22. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  12. ^ . 2019-07-05. Archived from the original on 2019-07-05. Retrieved 2022-03-06.
  13. ^ Hey, Anthony J. G. (2015). The computing universe : a journey through a revolution. Gyuri Pápay. New York, New York. ISBN 978-1-316-12976-0. OCLC 899007268.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  14. ^ Newquist, HP (1994). The Brain Makers. Internet Archive. Indianapolis, Ind. : Sams Pub. ISBN 978-0-672-30412-5.
  15. ^ "» Pascal and the P-Machine The Digital Antiquarian". Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  16. ^ "The Death Of The Workstation? - INFOtainment News". 2013-02-11. Retrieved 2022-03-19.
  17. ^ "The SUN workstation architecture" (PDF). Stanford University. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  18. ^ "Apollo Domain DN100 workstation - CHM Revolution". www.computer history.org. Retrieved 2022-03-10.
  19. ^ Funding a revolution : government support for computing research. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press. 1999. ISBN 0-585-14273-4. OCLC 44965252.
  20. ^ New Straits Times. New Straits Times.
  21. ^ Conrad, Eric; Misenar, Seth; Feldman, Joshua (2012). Domain 2. Elsevier. pp. 63–141. doi:10.1016/b978-1-59749-961-3.00003-0. ISBN 9781597499613. Retrieved 2022-03-18. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  22. ^ "Diskless Nodes HOW-TO document for Linux: What is this all about?". www.ossh.com. Retrieved 2022-03-18.
  23. ^ "CNN - Here comes the Sun Ray - November 2, 1999". www.CNN.com. Retrieved 2022-03-18.
  24. ^ Andries van Dam; David H. Laidlaw; Rosemary Michelle Simpson (2002-08-04). "Experiments in Immersive Virtual Reality for Scientific Visualization". Computers & Graphics. 26 (4): 535–555. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.4.9249. doi:10.1016/S0097-8493(02)00113-9
  25. ^ The Daily Gazette. The Daily Gazette.
  26. ^ Webster, Bruce (December 1991). "Macintosh Quadras - Power But No Pizzazz". MacWorld. Vol. 8, no. 12. pp. 140–147.
  27. ^ Wilkinson, Chris (11 December 2020). "Working from home at 25MHz: You could do worse than a Quadra 700 (even in 2020)". Ars Technica.
  28. ^ "Workstations for Architects: Design Device for the Digital Age". Devices and Delight. 2023-07-28. Retrieved 2024-03-26.
  29. ^ https://www.pcguide.com/gpu/guide/best-workstation-gpus/
  30. ^ "Discontinuance Notice: c8000 Workstation". HP. July 2007.[permanent dead link]
  31. ^ "Hardware Withdrawal Announcement: IntelliStation POWER 185 and 285" (PDF). IBM.
  32. ^ "End of General Availability for MIPS® IRIX® Products". Silicon Graphics. December 2006.
  33. ^ . Solar systems. Archived from the original on 2012-01-02. Retrieved 2012-04-11.
  34. ^ "Raptor Launching Talos II Lite POWER9 Computer System At A Lower Cost". Phoronix.
  35. ^ Raptor Announces "Blackbird" Micro-ATX, Low-Cost POWER9 Motherboard, Phoronix
  36. ^ "Introducing M1 Pro and M1 Max: the most powerful chips Apple has ever built". Apple Newsroom (Australia). Retrieved 2023-11-16.
  37. ^ edengelkingiia+ (2000-09-15). "Which workstation OS would you like to support?". TechRepublic. Retrieved 2022-04-03.
  38. ^ Kovar, Joseph F. (2007-05-01). "IBM Using Blades To Attack Desktop PC Market". CRN. Retrieved 2022-04-08.
  39. ^ "Workstations for Architects: Design Device for the Digital Age". Devices and Delight. 2023-07-28. Retrieved 2024-03-26.
  40. ^ . Main PC. Archived from the original on 2022-03-08. Retrieved 2022-03-08.
  41. ^ a b c d e f Bushong, Stewart C.; Clarke, Geoffrey (2013-08-07). Magnetic Resonance Imaging: Physical and Biological Principles. Elsevier Health Sciences. ISBN 978-0-323-27765-5.
  42. ^ https://www.pcmag.com/picks/the-best-m2-solid-state-drives
  43. ^ https://www.pcmag.com/picks/the-best-pci-express-nvme-solid-state-drives-ssds

External links edit

  •   Media related to Workstations at Wikimedia Commons

workstation, this, article, about, type, computer, other, uses, work, station, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find. This article is about the type of computer For other uses see Work station This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Workstation news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message A workstation is a special computer designed for technical or scientific applications 2 Intended primarily to be used by a single user 2 they are commonly connected to a local area network and run multi user operating systems The term workstation has been used loosely to refer to everything from a mainframe computer terminal to a PC connected to a network but the most common form refers to the class of hardware offered by several current and defunct companies such as Sun Microsystems 3 Silicon Graphics Apollo Computer 4 DEC HP NeXT and IBM which powered the 3D computer graphics revolution of the late 1990s 5 Tim Berners Lee created the World Wide Web at CERN in Switzerland on the NeXTcube workstation 1 Workstations formerly offered higher performance than mainstream personal computers especially in CPU graphics memory and multitasking Workstations are optimized for the visualization and manipulation of different types of complex data such as 3D mechanical design engineering simulations like computational fluid dynamics animation video editing image editing medical imaging image rendering computational science and mathematical plots Typically the form factor is that of a desktop computer which consists of a high resolution display a keyboard and a mouse at a minimum but also offers multiple displays graphics tablets and 3D mice for manipulating objects and navigating scenes Workstations were the first segment of the computer market 6 to present advanced accessories and collaboration tools like videoconferencing 5 The increasing capabilities of mainstream PCs since the late 1990s have reduced distinction between the PCs and workstations 7 Typical 1980s workstations have expensive proprietary hardware and operating systems to categorically distinguish from standardized PCs From the 1990s and 2000s IBM s RS 6000 and IntelliStation have RISC based POWER CPUs running AIX and its IBM PC Series and Aptiva corporate and consumer PCs have Intel x86 CPUs However by the early 2000s this difference largely disappeared since workstations use highly commoditized hardware dominated by large PC vendors such as Dell Hewlett Packard and Fujitsu selling x86 64 systems running Windows or Linux Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins and development 1 2 1980s rise in popularity 1 3 Thin clients 1 4 3M computer 1 5 Decline 1 6 Market position 2 Current market 2 1 GPU workstations 2 2 Decline of RISC workstations 2 3 x86 64 2 4 Definition 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp Early Xerox workstation nbsp HP 9000 model 425 workstation running HP UX 9 and Visual User Environment VUE nbsp HP 9000 model 735 running HP UX and the Common Desktop Environment CDE Origins and development edit Perhaps the first computer that might qualify as a workstation is the IBM 1620 a small scientific computer designed to be used interactively by a single person sitting at the console 8 It was introduced in 1959 9 One peculiar feature of the machine is that it lacks any arithmetic circuitry 10 To perform addition it requires a memory resident table of decimal addition rules 11 This reduced the cost of logic circuitry enabling IBM to make it inexpensive The machine is codenamed CADET and was initially rented for 1000 per month In 1965 the IBM 1130 scientific computer became the successor to 1620 Both of these systems run Fortran and other languages 12 They are built into roughly desk sized cabinets with console typewriters They have optional add on disk drives printers and both paper tape and punched card I O Early workstations are generally dedicated minicomputers a multiuser system reserved for one user For example the PDP 8 from Digital Equipment Corporation is regarded as the first commercial minicomputer 13 The Lisp machines developed at MIT in the early 1970s pioneered some workstation principles as high performance networked single user systems intended for heavily interactive use Lisp Machines were commercialized beginning 1980 by companies like Symbolics Lisp Machines Texas Instruments the TI Explorer and Xerox the Interlisp D workstations The first computer designed for a single user with high resolution graphics and so a workstation in the modern sense of the term is the Alto developed at Xerox PARC in 1973 14 Other early workstations include the Terak 8510 a 1977 15 Three Rivers PERQ 1979 and the later Xerox Star 1981 1980s rise in popularity edit In the early 1980s with the advent of 32 bit microprocessors such as the Motorola 68000 several new competitors appeared including Apollo Computer and Sun Microsystems 16 with workstations based on 68000 and Unix 17 18 Meanwhile DARPA s VLSI Project created several spinoff graphics products such as the Silicon Graphics 3130 Target markets were differentiated with Sun and Apollo considered to be network workstations and SGI as graphics workstations RISC CPUs increased in the mid 1980s typical of workstation vendors 19 Workstations often feature SCSI or Fibre Channel disk storage systems high end 3D accelerators single or multiple 64 bit processors 20 large amounts of RAM and well designed cooling Additionally the companies that make the products tend to have comprehensive repair replacement plans As the distinction between workstation and PC fades however workstation manufacturers have increasingly employed off the shelf PC components and graphics solutions rather than proprietary hardware or software Some low cost workstations are still expensive by PC standards but offer binary compatibility with higher end workstations and servers made by the same vendor This allows software development to take place on low cost relative to the server desktop machines Thin clients edit Workstations diversified to the lowest possible price point as opposed to performance called the thin client or network computer Dependent upon a network and server this reduces the machine to having no hard drive and only the CPU keyboard mouse and screen Some diskless nodes still run a traditional operating system and perform computations locally with storage on a remote server 21 These are intended to reduce the initial system purchase cost and the total cost of ownership by reducing the amount of administration required per user 22 This approach was first attempted as a replacement for PCs in office productivity applications with the 3Station by 3Com In the 1990s X terminals filled a similar role for technical computing Sun s thin clients include the Sun Ray product line 23 However traditional workstations and PCs continued to drop in price and complexity as remote management tools for IT staff became available undercutting this market 3M computer edit Main article 3M computer nbsp A NeXTstation graphics workstation from 1990 nbsp Sony NEWS workstation 2 68030 at 25 MHz 1280 1024 pixel and 256 color display nbsp SGI Indy graphics workstation nbsp SGI O2 graphics workstation nbsp HP C8000 workstation running HP UX 11i with CDE nbsp Six workstations four HP Z620 one HP Z820 one HP Z420A high end workstation of the early 1980s with the three Ms or a 3M computer coined by Raj Reddy and his colleagues at CMU has one megabyte of RAM a megapixel display roughly 1000 1000 pixels and one MegaFLOPS compute performance at least one million floating point operations per second 24 RFC 782 defines the workstation environment more generally as hardware and software dedicated to serve a single user and that it provisions additional shared resources This is at least one order of magnitude beyond the capacity of the personal computer of the time The original 1981 IBM Personal Computer has 16 KB memory a text only display and floating point performance around 1 kFLOPS 30 kFLOPS with the optional 8087 math coprocessor Other features beyond the typical personal computer include networking graphics acceleration and high speed internal and peripheral data buses Another goal was to bring the price below one megapenny that is less than 10 000 equivalent to 28 000 in 2023 which was achieved in the late 1980s Throughout the early to mid 1990s many workstations cost from 15 000 to 100 000 equivalent to 200 000 in 2023 or more Decline edit The more widespread adoption of these technologies into mainstream PCs was a direct factor in the decline of the workstation as a separate market segment 25 Extremely reliable components together with multiple CPUs with greater cache and error correcting memory this may remain the distinguishing feature of a workstation today Although most technologies implemented in modern workstations are also available at a lower cost for the consumer market finding good components and making sure they work compatibly with each other is a great challenge in workstation building Because workstations are designed for high end tasks such as weather forecasting video rendering and game design it is taken for granted that these systems must be running under full load non stop for several hours or even days without issue Any off the shelf components can be used to build a workstation but the reliability of such components under such rigorous conditions is uncertain For this reason almost no workstations are built by the customer themselves but rather purchased from a vendor such as Hewlett Packard HP Inc Fujitsu IBM Lenovo Sun Microsystems SGI Apple or Dell High performance 3D graphics hardware for computer aided design CAD and computer generated imagery CGI animation is increasingly popular in the PC market around the mid to late 1990s mostly driven by computer gaming yielding the first official GPU in Nvidia s NV10 and the breakthrough GeForce 256 High performance CPUs the first RISC of the early 1980s offer roughly one order of magnitude in performance improvement over CISC processors of comparable cost Intel s x86 CISC family always had the edge in market share and the economies of scale that this implied By the mid 1990s some CISC processors like the Motorola 68040 and Intel s 80486 and Pentium have performance parity with RISC in some areas such as integer performance at the cost of greater chip complexity and hardware floating point calculations relegating RISC to even more high end markets 26 Hardware support for floating point operations optional on the original IBM PC remained on a separate chip for Intel systems until the 80486DX processor Even then x86 floating point performance lags other processors due to limitations in its architecture Today even low price PCs now have performance in the gigaFLOPS range High performance high capacity data storage early workstations tend to use proprietary disk interfaces until the SCSI standard of the mid 1980s Although SCSI interfaces soon became available for IBM PCs they were comparatively expensive and tend to be limited by the speed of the PC s ISA peripheral bus SCSI is an advanced controller interface good for multitasking and daisy chaining This makes it suited for use in servers and its benefits to desktop PCs which mostly run single user operating systems are less clear but it is standard on the 1980s 1990s Macintosh Serial ATA is more modern with throughput comparable to SCSI but at a lower cost High speed networking 10 Mbit s or better 10 Mbit s network interfaces were commonly available for PCs by the early 1990s although by that time workstations were pursuing even higher networking speeds moving to 100 Mbit s 1 Gbit s and 10 Gbit s However economies of scale and the demand for high speed networking in even non technical areas have dramatically decreased the time it takes for newer networking technologies to reach commodity price points Large displays 17 to 21 inch with high resolutions and high refresh rate which were rare among PCs in the late 1980s and early 1990s but became common among PCs by the late 1990s Large memory configurations PCs such as IBM clones are originally limited to 640 KB of RAM until the 1982 introduction of the 80286 processor early workstations have megabytes of memory IBM clones require special programming techniques to address more than 640 KB until the 80386 as opposed to other 32 bit processors such as SPARC which provide straightforward access to nearly their entire 4 GB memory address range 64 bit workstations and servers supporting an address range far beyond 4 GB have been available since the early 1990s a technology just beginning to appear in the PC desktop and server market in the mid 2000s Operating system early workstations ran the Unix operating system OS a Unix like variant or an unrelated equivalent OS such as VMS The PC CPUs of the time have limitations in memory capacity and memory access protection making them unsuitable to run OSes of this sophistication but this too began to change in the late 1980s as PCs with the 32 bit 80386 with integrated paged MMUs became widely affordable and enabling OS 2 Windows NT 3 1 and Unix like systems based on BSD and Linux on commodity PC hardware Tight integration between the OS and the hardware Workstation vendors both design the hardware and maintain the Unix operating system variant that runs on it This allows for much more rigorous testing than is possible with an operating system such as Windows Windows requires that third party hardware vendors write compliant hardware drivers that are stable and reliable Also minor variations in hardware quality such as timing or build quality can affect the reliability of the overall machine Workstation vendors are able to ensure both the quality of the hardware and the stability of the operating system drivers by validating these things in house and this leads to a generally much more reliable and stable machine Market position edit nbsp Dell Precision 620MT with dual Pentium III processors nbsp Sun Ultra 20 with AMD Opteron processor and Solaris 10Since the late 1990s the workstation and consumer markets have further merged Many low end workstation components are now the same as the consumer market and the price differential narrowed For example most Macintosh Quadra computers were originally intended for scientific or design work all with the Motorola 68040 CPU backward compatible with 68000 Macintoshes The consumer Macintosh IIcx and Macintosh IIci models can be upgraded to the Quadra 700 In an era when many professionals preferred Silicon Graphics workstations the Quadra 700 was an intriguing option at a fraction of the cost as resource intensive software such as Infini D brought studio quality 3D rendering and animations to the home desktop The Quadra 700 can run A UX 3 0 making it a Unix workstation 27 Another example is the Nvidia GeForce 256 consumer graphics card which spawned the Quadro workstation card which has the same GPU but different driver support and certifications for CAD applications and a much higher price Workstations have typically driven advancements in CPU technology All computers benefit from multi processor and multicore designs essentially multiple processors on a die The multicore design was pioneered by IBM s POWER4 it and Intel Xeon have multiple CPUs more on die cache and ECC memory Some workstations are designed or certified for use with only one specific application such as AutoCAD Avid Xpress Studio HD or 3D Studio Max The certification process increases workstation prices Current market edit nbsp GPU workstation with a GeForce RTX 3060 GPU nbsp Hewlett Packard Z6 an x86 64 based workstation with two RTX 5000 GPUs nbsp Inside an HP Z820 workstationGPU workstations edit Modern workstations are typically desktop computers with AMD or NVIDIA GPUs to do high performance computing on software programs such as video editing 3D modeling computer aided design and rendering 28 29 nbsp 3D sketch of a half cube workstation nbsp Case enclosure holds a GPU PCI E SSD DRAM DIMM sticks and air cooling heat sink on the CPU Decline of RISC workstations edit By January 2009 all RISC based workstation product lines had been discontinued Hewlett Packard withdrew its last HP 9000 PA RISC based desktop products from the market in January 2008 30 IBM retired the IntelliStation POWER on January 2 2009 31 SGI ended general availability of its MIPS based SGI Fuel and SGI Tezro workstations in December 2006 32 Sun Microsystems announced end of life for its last Sun Ultra SPARC workstations in October 2008 33 In early 2018 RISC workstations were reintroduced in a series of IBM POWER9 based systems by Raptor Computing Systems 34 35 The Mac transition to Apple silicon greatly increased power efficiency and size efficiency over x86 64 with its ARM based RISC architecture 36 x86 64 edit Most of the current workstation market uses x86 64 microprocessors Operating systems include Windows FreeBSD Linux distributions macOS and Solaris 37 Some vendors also market commodity mono socket systems as workstations These are three types of workstations Workstation blade systems IBM HC10 or Hewlett Packard xw460c Sun Visualization System is akin to these solutions 38 Ultra high end workstation SGI Virtu VS3xx Deskside systems containing server class CPUs and chipsets on large server class motherboards with high end RAM HP Z series workstations and Fujitsu CELSIUS workstations Definition edit A high end desktop market segment includes workstations with PC operating systems and components Component product lines may be segmented with premium components that are functionally similar to the consumer models but with higher robustness or performance 39 40 A workstation class PC may have some of the following features Larger number of memory sockets which use DIMM slots or registered buffered modules 41 Multiple displays 41 Reliable high performance graphics card 41 Multiple processor sockets powerful CPUs 41 Run reliable operating system with advanced features 41 Support for ECC memory 41 M 2 42 or PCI E NVMe 43 SSDSee also editMobile workstation Gaming computer List of computer system manufacturers Music workstation Personal supercomputer Remote Graphics SoftwareReferences edit https artsandculture google com asset original next computer used by sir tim berners lee to design the world wide web next 6QHcxbuGnQ4rng hl en a b workstation Definition amp Facts Britannica retrieved 2021 12 05 Bechtolsheim Andreas Baskett Forest 1980 High performance raster graphics for microcomputer systems Proceedings of the 7th annual conference on Computer graphics and interactive techniques SIGGRAPH 80 New York New York USA ACM Press pp 43 47 doi 10 1145 800250 807466 ISBN 0897910214 S2CID 12045240 US and India sign neutrino pact Physics World 31 5 13 May 2018 doi 10 1088 2058 7058 31 5 23 ISSN 0953 8585 a b Johnson Karen Fairless Tami Giangrande Scott 2020 08 01 Ka Band ARM Zenith Radar Corrections KAZRCOR KAZRCFRCOR Value Added Products Report doi 10 2172 1647336 OSTI 1647336 S2CID 242933956 Global Personal Computers Market Report 2021 to 2030 COVID 19 Impact and Recovery ResearchAndMarkets com Business Wire 2021 06 23 Retrieved 2022 09 07 Workstation Computer OIDair WEB Archived from the original on 2021 12 05 Retrieved 2021 12 05 IBM workstations PDF IBM IBM Archives 1620 Data Processing System www ibm com 2003 01 23 Retrieved 2022 03 06 Sweeney D W 1965 An analysis of floating point addition IBM Systems Journal 4 1 31 42 doi 10 1147 sj 41 0031 ISSN 0018 8670 IBM 1620 2017 12 22 Archived from the original on 2017 12 22 Retrieved 2022 03 08 IBM 1130 Press Release 2019 07 05 Archived from the original on 2019 07 05 Retrieved 2022 03 06 Hey Anthony J G 2015 The computing universe a journey through a revolution Gyuri Papay New York New York ISBN 978 1 316 12976 0 OCLC 899007268 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Newquist HP 1994 The Brain Makers Internet Archive Indianapolis Ind Sams Pub ISBN 978 0 672 30412 5 Pascal and the P Machine The Digital Antiquarian Retrieved 2022 03 08 The Death Of The Workstation INFOtainment News 2013 02 11 Retrieved 2022 03 19 The SUN workstation architecture PDF Stanford University Retrieved 15 March 2022 Apollo Domain DN100 workstation CHM Revolution www computer history org Retrieved 2022 03 10 Funding a revolution government support for computing research Washington D C National Academy Press 1999 ISBN 0 585 14273 4 OCLC 44965252 New Straits Times New Straits Times Conrad Eric Misenar Seth Feldman Joshua 2012 Domain 2 Elsevier pp 63 141 doi 10 1016 b978 1 59749 961 3 00003 0 ISBN 9781597499613 Retrieved 2022 03 18 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Diskless Nodes HOW TO document for Linux What is this all about www ossh com Retrieved 2022 03 18 CNN Here comes the Sun Ray November 2 1999 www CNN com Retrieved 2022 03 18 Andries van Dam David H Laidlaw Rosemary Michelle Simpson 2002 08 04 Experiments in Immersive Virtual Reality for Scientific Visualization Computers amp Graphics 26 4 535 555 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 4 9249 doi 10 1016 S0097 8493 02 00113 9 The Daily Gazette The Daily Gazette Webster Bruce December 1991 Macintosh Quadras Power But No Pizzazz MacWorld Vol 8 no 12 pp 140 147 Wilkinson Chris 11 December 2020 Working from home at 25MHz You could do worse than a Quadra 700 even in 2020 Ars Technica Workstations for Architects Design Device for the Digital Age Devices and Delight 2023 07 28 Retrieved 2024 03 26 https www pcguide com gpu guide best workstation gpus Discontinuance Notice c8000 Workstation HP July 2007 permanent dead link Hardware Withdrawal Announcement IntelliStation POWER 185 and 285 PDF IBM End of General Availability for MIPS IRIX Products Silicon Graphics December 2006 A remarketed EOL Sun Ultra 45 workstation Solar systems Archived from the original on 2012 01 02 Retrieved 2012 04 11 Raptor Launching Talos II Lite POWER9 Computer System At A Lower Cost Phoronix Raptor Announces Blackbird Micro ATX Low Cost POWER9 Motherboard Phoronix Introducing M1 Pro and M1 Max the most powerful chips Apple has ever built Apple Newsroom Australia Retrieved 2023 11 16 edengelkingiia 2000 09 15 Which workstation OS would you like to support TechRepublic Retrieved 2022 04 03 Kovar Joseph F 2007 05 01 IBM Using Blades To Attack Desktop PC Market CRN Retrieved 2022 04 08 Workstations for Architects Design Device for the Digital Age Devices and Delight 2023 07 28 Retrieved 2024 03 26 Services Main PC Archived from the original on 2022 03 08 Retrieved 2022 03 08 a b c d e f Bushong Stewart C Clarke Geoffrey 2013 08 07 Magnetic Resonance Imaging Physical and Biological Principles Elsevier Health Sciences ISBN 978 0 323 27765 5 https www pcmag com picks the best m2 solid state drives https www pcmag com picks the best pci express nvme solid state drives ssdsExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Workstations at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Workstation amp oldid 1218765049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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