|  |  
 
              DIGITAL EQUIPMENT INTRODUCES FAMILY OF
                   MASSIVELY PARALLEL COMPUTERS
MAYNARD, Mass. -- August 20, 1991 -- Digital Equipment Corporation 
today introduced a family of computers based on massively parallel 
processing (MPP), an emerging, high performance technology targeted 
at very complex problems of technical, scientific and commercial 
users.
     The new DECmpp 12000 system series features configurations 
ranging from 1,024 to 16,384 processors with performance up to 1.2 
billions of floating point operations per second (GigaFLOPS), and 
26,000 millions of instructions per second (MIPS). 
     The new systems, supplied under a previously announced 
agreement with MasPar Computer Corporation of Sunnyvale, California  
are priced from $240,500 to $1,502,500.  Worldwide shipments will 
begin in the fall.
     All DECmpp systems are configured with Digital DECstation 5000 
full color front-end workstations, as well as ULTRIX and DECnet 
software licenses. In addition to the family of computer 
processors, Digital also announced a comprehensive line of 
software, a family of high speed disk arrays, and full service and 
support programs.   Digital's standard one year product warranty 
will apply. 
     With this announcement, Digital becomes the first main line
systems vendor to formally introduce a family of massively parallel
systems, and it is the first time users of systems in this 
performance class can take advantage of Digital's high level of 
warranty, service and support. 
     Charles Wilson, director of Digital's Massively Parallel 
Systems Group, noted  "We feel this is a milestone in the evolution 
of massively parallel technology.  There are many businesses, 
government agencies and universities that want to move to massively 
parallel technology, but are looking to more application software 
and higher levels of enterprise service and support. 
     "Digital's entry in the market is important to these users for
two reasons.  First, we will stimulate application program 
development both directly through our independent software 
developers, and indirectly by adding the commitment of an 
established, major systems vendor to this relatively new market.
     "The second reason is Digital's leadership in delivering 
effective, highly reliable, enterprise-wide support to large 
organizations.  MPP systems are yet another important technology to 
be integrated into the total computing environment."
     Introduced today were:
     o	DECmpp 12000 systems -- eight field-upgradable  models 
        incorporating 1,024, 4,096, 8,192 and 16,384 processor 
        elements, and memory capacity from 16MB to 1GB. Priced from 
        $240,500 to $1,502,500;
     o	DECmpp Programming Language -- a C-like high level compiler 
        for programming DECmpp systems included with the DECmpp 
        System Software license, $100;
     o	DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment -- a comprehensive 
        suite of development tools for data-parallel programming.  
        Features an interactive DECwindows point-and-select 
        interface. Includes symbolic debugger, machine animator and 
        data visualizer. License, $4,000; 
     o	DECmpp Image Processing Library -- a facility for supplying 
        common visual and data objects to help speed program 
        development.  License, $4,000. 
     o	DECmpp FORTRAN -- built on FORTRAN 90, this compiler will 
        provide facilities to program in high level language and 
        generate code for data parallel execution.  Available in 
        December; 
     o	DECmpp Disk Array Systems -- high speed disk-array 
        subsystems, provide parallel access to large data files.  
        The disk array features 720 megabytes of formatted storage 
        per disk with a capacity up to 11.2 gigabytes of storage 
        and sustained I/O rate of nine megabytes per second.  
        Priced from $129,000 to $261,000; 
     o	Digital Service -- the complete worldwide service offering 
        from Digital, including enterprise integration, consulting, 
        customer training, and maintenance and repair services, is 
        available to DECmpp customers.
 
                    SOFTWARE AIDS MARKET GROWTH
     Massively parallel processor architectures are considered by
many industry experts to have the greatest potential for solving
highly complex problems in technical, scientific and commercial
computer applications such as scientific visualization, geographic 
database management, econometric  modeling, and financial analysis. 
     MPP computers are able to break down problems into smaller 
parts, then process these parts simultaneously, at very high speed.  
As a result, performance can be extremely fast for applications 
that lend themselves to this type of processing.
     Key to market acceptance, however, is software, ranging from 
application development and network integration tools to the 
applications themselves that can take advantage of this technique.
     Digital is working to advance MPP software development on
several fronts, according to Wilson.
     "First, we're focusing on basic software elements such as 
language compilers, libraries, networking designs and basic 
development tools.  In some cases, we're going to create 
parallelized versions of existing products; in other cases, we're 
developing entire new products.  For example, we are looking to 
extend Digital tools such as our Language Sensitive Editor, 
Friendly UNIX, and Test Manager to massively parallel 
architectures.
     "Secondly, we're committed to directly stimulating third-party
application development in strategic application areas."
     Targeted applications include: structural dynamics in 
automotive and aerospace industries; seismic processing and 
reservoir analysis in oil and gas exploration; and database 
retrieval, searching and sorting.
     Two application toolkits recently ported to these systems are
"Elexir", an information retrieval system from Third Eye Software,
Inc. of Menlo Park, California, and "Table-Maker", a statistical 
database package from CHISQ Ltd., Reading, England.
             DECmpp EXTENDS HIGH PERFORMANCE SOLUTIONS
    The new DECmpp 12000 Series Systems add an important MPP
component to Digital's high-performance computing products.  
Digital currently manufactures and markets VAX 9000 and VAX 6000 
systems, including mainframes and vector equipped versions for 
supercomputing.  Digital also offers a range of high-performance 
workstations.  These and other Digital products maintain industry 
leading interoperability with non-Digital systems via the company's 
open NAS architecture of standard software interfaces.     
     Digital Equipment Corporation, headquartered in Maynard,
Massachusetts, is the leading worldwide supplier of networked
computer systems, software and services.  Digital pioneered and
leads the industry in interactive, distributed and multi-vendor
computing.  Digital and its partners deliver the power to use the
best integrated solutions -- from desktop to data center -- in open
information environments.
                               ####
CORP/92/284
Note to Editors:   MasPar is a trademark of MasPar Computer 
                   Corporation.
     		   Table-Maker is a trademark of CHISQ Ltd.
     		   Elexir is a registered trademark of Third Eye 
                   Software, Inc.
     		   UNIX is a trademark of Unix System Laboratories, 
                   Inc.
     		   DECnet, DECstation, DECmpp, VAX and ULTRIX are 
                   trademarks of Digital Equipment Corporation.
                       CURRENT APPLICATIONS
     The newer massively parallel architectures make it possible to
process computationally intensive applications with ultra high
speed and relatively low cost.  For example, a 16,000-processor
machine is rated at 26,000 peak MIPS and 1,200 peak MFLOPS, and
costs just over $1 million.
     Some typical applications are:
     o  Structural analysis -- used frequently in automotive and
        aerospace industries, this relates to finite element 
        analysis of mechanical structures, both at rest and under
     	stress;
        
     o  Computational fluid dynamics -- the fastest growing area of 
        computational physics, this typically involves the study of 
        aerodynamics, including airflow over airfoils and air 
        resistance of automobiles;
     o  Seismic/reservoir modeling -- these are the two most used 
        oil-industry applications;
     o  Signal and image processing -- used extensively by NASA and 
        the military, this application requires very fast filtering
     	and analysis of electronic signals;
     o  Chemistry/biology -- these applications include studies of 
        chemical structures, reactions and properties, as well as 
        genetic molecular modeling;
     o  Commercial -- the major potential today for business/office 
        users involves database, financial-modeling and text-
     	retrieval applications.
 | 
|  | HIGHLIGHTS
o  Among our competitors, Digital is the first major company to formally 
   enter the market for massively parallel computer systems
o  Provides up to 16,384 processing elements capable of delivering 26,000 
   MIPS (32-bit add), 1.2 gigaflops 32-bit floating point
o  DECstation 5000 front-end systems use industry standard ULTRIX operating 
   systems
o  A robust software development environment through high-level language 
   data parallel programming
o  Digital integrates MPP into a customer's distributed computing 
   environment
o  Prices range from $264K -- $1.5M; delivery planned for September 1991
INTRODUCTION
Digital introduces a family of computers based on massively parallel 
processing (MPP), an emerging, high performance technology targeted at the 
very complex problems of technical, scientific and commercial users.
The new DECmpp 12000 system series features configurations ranging from 
1,024 to 16,384 processors with performance up to 1.2 billions of floating 
point operations per second (gigaflops), and 26,000 millions of instructions 
per second (MIPS). 
The new systems, supplied under a previously announced agreement with MasPar 
Computer Corporation of Sunnyvale, California, are priced from $264,000 to 
$1,502,500.  
ONE CONSISTENT COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT 
Digital now has a leadership position in high performance computing through 
our DECmpp 12000 massively parallel processing systems, VAX 9000 systems, 
networks and applications.  We have the ability to integrate all of these in 
one consistent computing environment for computationally intensive 
applications.  
Key to market acceptance, however, is software, ranging from application 
development and network integration tools to the applications themselves, 
that can take advantage of this technique.
Focus on Basic Software Elements
First, we're focusing on basic software elements such as language compilers, 
libraries, networking designs and basic development tools.  In some cases, 
we're going to create parallelized versions of existing products; in other 
cases, we're developing entire new products.  For example, we are looking to 
extend Digital tools such as our Language Sensitive Editor, Friendly UNIX, 
and Test Manager to massively parallel architectures.
Stimulate Third-Party Applications
Secondly, we're committed to directly stimulating third-party application 
development in strategic application areas.
Two application toolkits recently ported to these systems are "Elexir", an 
information retrieval system from Third Eye Software, Inc. of Menlo Park, 
California, and "Table-Maker", a statistical database package from CHISQ 
Ltd., Reading, England.
Strategic Development Technologies
Digital is focusing its resources on strategic development technologies and 
activities by:
o  Developing and enhancing application development tools -- Digital will 
   extend development tool components of its CASE (Computer Aided Software 
   Engineering) product family to work with massively parallel 
   architectures; Digital will also pursue advance development in other key 
   technologies such as language compilers, data libraries and networking 
   technologies
o  Stimulating third-party development activities -- Digital will pursue 
   partnerships and other initiatives to assist third-party application 
   developers with the creation of applications that take advantage of 
   massively parallel architectures
HOW MASSIVELY PARALLEL COMPUTERS WORK
Massively parallel processing is an outgrowth of the quest to speed computer 
processing.  The traditional computer architecture (known as the von Neumann 
architecture) operates in serial fashion.  With every cycle of a central 
computer clock, the central processor unit (CPU) processes a fixed-size 
instruction or word.  The larger the word length, from 16 to 32 bits, for 
instance, and the faster the processor, the greater the volume of 
information that can be processed in a set time.
However, the faster the CPU, the more memory and larger input/output 
bandwidth is required to maintain balanced, high-speed operations.  
Multiple-processor implementations, with four, six, or even a hundred or 
more processors, can bring significant increases in speed, but they must be 
coordinated by additional logic in order to maintain synchronization.  This 
interprocessor overhead can add considerably to internal resource 
utilization.
Massively parallel architectures employ thousands of relatively inexpensive 
processor/memory units, distributed throughout the system.  MPP 
architectures are thus very efficient at handling large data arrays (of 
1,000 by 1,000 elements, for instance), where the instruction flow can be 
parallelized to operate on all elements simultaneously.  
As a result, massively parallel computers are considered to have the 
potential, as more application software becomes available, for handling a 
broadening range of highly complex problem-solving applications.
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
The DECmpp 12000 systems series consists of eight models, depending on the 
number of Processor Element (PE) boards and memory per board.  The DECmpp 
12000 Series can be configured with 1024, 4096, 8192, or 16,384 processor 
elements at initial installation or through on-site upgrades.  By operating 
in a Single Instruction Multiple Data (SIMD) fashion, the thousands of 
processor elements can work on a single problem simultaneously.  An entry 
level DECmpp system provides 1,600 MIPS of processing power and is scalable 
up to 26,000 MIPS -- and all within the same system package.
DECmpp Software Products
Although the DECmpp 12000 Series uses many interconnected processing 
elements to achieve high performance, it features a single, integrated 
software environment.  This environment is based on the ULTRIX operating 
system giving access to hundreds of utilities and applications.  The user 
interface to the software environment is based on the DECwindows system and 
supports access from DECwindow terminals and DECstation workstations.
DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment
The DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment consists of a comprehensive set 
of development tools for data parallel programming.  This easy-to-use 
environment features an interactive DECwindows-based point-and-select 
interface.  Users will easily visualize, analyze and optimize the behavior 
of DECmpp processor elements, algorithms, and data.  The DECmpp tool set 
includes a symbolic debugger, a machine animator and data visualizer.
DECmpp Programming Language
DECmpp System software includes a C-like, high-level language compiler for 
programming the DECmpp 12000 Series systems.  The language is based on 
Kernighan and Ritchie C and is the primary programming language for the 
DECmpp system's data parallel unit.
DECmpp Image Processing Library
The DECmpp Image Processing Library is a highly optimized set of image 
processing routines for the DECmpp 12000 Series Systems.  The library 
supports the development of very high performance image processing solutions 
on a fully programmable platform with a symbolic, window-based, interactive, 
graphical, and network-distributed development environment.  Library 
routines are callable from standard languages such as C, FORTRAN, and DECmpp 
Programming Language.  The library includes routines for image arithmetic, 
low-level image processing operations, and image analysis, as well as a 
variety of utilities for image display, I/O, test image generation, and 
format conversion.
DECmpp Parallel Disk Array
The disk array provides the DECmpp 12000 Series systems with up to 11.2 
gigabytes of formatted capacity and 9 MB/Sec sustained disk I/O.  The disk 
array is ideal for a wide range of data-intensive applications, such as 
scientific visualization, remote sensing, image processing, and geographic 
database management.
The disk array can be upgraded from four disks at 3 MB/Sec to 24 disks at 9 
MB/Sec.  Digital's TKZ08 tape drive may used to back up the parallel disk 
array.
THE DIGITAL MPP STRATEGY
Digital has signed an OEM agreement with MasPar Computer Corporation to 
resell MasPar's massively parallel computer systems, software and options.  
The DECmpp 12000 systems combine excellent price/performance to provide a 
highly productive growth path for the future.  The product line is easily 
scalable, upgradable and includes software tools for developing parallel 
processing applications.
Digital's strategy is to:
o  Provide an integrated environment by drawing on our strengths in areas 
   such as:
   - Software development tools
   - High performance networking
   - System integration
   - Workstations and servers
   - Third-party software relationships
o  Establish partnerships with leading MPP hardware and software companies
o  Expand the market by raising awareness of the benefits of MPP
Why Did Digital Choose to Resell MasPar's Systems?
MasPar's products have high quality and an excellent price/performance.  The 
products are designed and built on state-of-the-art technology licensed from 
Digital.  This is the first partnership, but another, MIMD (Multiple 
Instruction Multiple Data) partnership is planned for later this year.
PERFORMANCE POSITIONING
		  	   			     LINPACK
		  	   		Peak	     1K x 1K *	    Price
		  MIPS	   Number of	MFLOPS	     64-bit	    Range
		  32-bit   Processors	64-bit	     MFLOPS   	    $K   
DECmpp 12000	  26,000    16K		 580	       440	   $  274 -
Model 16B		       		    		  	   $1,533  
Thinking	   2,500     2K	      14,000	     5,200	   $2,000 -
Machines CM-2		       		    		  	   $7,000  
Intel iPSC/860	   1,056     32	       1,300	       486	   $1,000 -
			    128	       5,000	     1,920	   $4,000  
VAX 9000 /410VP	      30      1		 125		79	   $1,000 -
          440VP	      30      4		 500	       n/a	   $6,000  
Cray Y-MP/132	     N/A      1		 333	       324	   $1,500 -
         /832		      8	       2,667	     2,144	  $24,000  
Convex C3210	     N/A      1		  50		17	   $1,000  
       C3240		      4		 200	       166	   $6,000  
       C3810		      1		 106		99
* From report generated by Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee, 6/12/91.
POSITIONING WITH RESPECT TO VAX 9000
The VAX 9000 vector processing system provides excellent performance in a 
wide range of applications readily available from Independent Software 
Vendors covering Science, Engineering, Chemical, Pharmaceutical and Oil and 
Gas Industries.  It also has excellent scalar and I/O performance, meaning 
that it is a very balanced and versatile system to answer the growth needs 
of the immense installed base of VAX system users in all segments.  It will 
very often be used as a compute or database server to satisfy the single 
stream performance needs of an organization consisting of workstations or 
time-sharing users on smaller VAX systems.
DECmpp 12000 Series system is a specialized execution engine capable of 
extremely high performance for a more limited set of applications.  Today, 
it is relatively more difficult to program, but can yield dramatic execution 
speed dividends on applications that involve computing on large arrays of 
data.  The DECmpp 12000 systems include a DECstation 5000/200, which 
functions as a general purpose host computer to control and to execute 
sequential code.  VAX 9000 users can access the data parallel unit through 
the DECstation workstation.
MARKETS AND TYPICAL APPLICATIONS
Markets for DECmpp systems include industries such as Government, Education, 
Oil and Gas, Chemical, Pharmaceutical, Automotive/Aerospace, Service and 
Financial, and Defense.
Typical applications include computational fluid dynamics, geophysical data 
processing, structural dynamics and acoustics, ocean and atmospheric 
modeling, computational chemistry and physics, simulation of neural nets, 
molecular modeling, database and text retrieval, searching and sorting, 
image processing and recognition, signal processing (1D, 2D, 3D), and 
seismic processing and reservoir analysis. 
The Massively Parallel Systems Group (MPSG) has an aggressive program to 
provide off-the-shelf application software packages for DECmpp systems. 
Please contact the MPSG staff for status and availability of application 
software packages.
PRICING/ORDERING/CONFIGURATION/AVAILABILITY
All DECmpp 12000 Series systems include a DECstation 5000/200CX workstation 
with an additional 16 MB RAM, VME adapter and SZ12B-FA sidecar, which 
includes an RZ56 hard disk and a RRD42 CDROM drive, licenses for ULTRIX 
workstation software and DECnet.   Also included is a one-year Basic Service 
warranty for all DECmpp 12000 Series systems.
The products listed below are also available from MasPar, but are priced 
higher to represent added value when purchased from Digital.  Digital's 
prices include our comprehensive one-year warranty (versus MasPar's 90-day 
return-to-factory warranty), our unlimited users per system software 
licensing, our long-term commitment to support these products anywhere in 
the world, and our investment in growing the value of these systems through 
increasing application and system software. 
 | 
|  |     Below is the latest edition of the newsletter put out by MPSG
    (Massively Parallel Software Group) in Maynard; this is the group
    working with MASPAR on the development of software for the MASPAR
    machines.
    
    To subscribe, send mail to Darlene Camuti at RDVAX::CAMUTI.
    
    							Regards,
    
    
    							Mark
    
    	..............................................................
    
From:	FASDER::RDVAX::NILSSON "Bob Nilsson, 223-1715, MPSG  23-Aug-1991 2218" 23-AUG-1991 22:57:25.21
To:	@[CAMUTI]MPP.DIS
CC:	NILSSON
Subj:	Massively Parallel Systems Newsletter #4 - August
                                                 D I G I T A L
                                           -     ____  ____  ____   ____
                                           -    / / / /___/ /____  /  __
                                           -   / / / /      ____/ /____/
                                              16,384 Points of Light
MPSG NEWSLETTER #4
                 Massively Parallel Systems Group - August Update
                        ***Digital Internal Use Only***
Attached is the fourth update from MPSG on Digital's MPP program and 
plans. Please let Darlene Camuti (RDVAX::CAMUTI) know if you would 
like to be deleted from this distribution list or if you know of 
someone who should be added. 
                               Contents
			       --------
	       1.  Current program status 
	       2.  Training 
	       3.  MasPar MPP installed sites
	       4.  DECmpp notesfile, public directory
	       A1. DRAFT DECmpp Sales Update article (with prices and 
		   MPSG contacts)
               A2. DECmpp Press Release
NOTE: Please remember to call us at MPSG before you call 
a MasPar sales rep. DECmpp is now a Digital product and our 
selling success is maximized when we, Digital, present DECmpp
to the customer. It is often appropriate to bring MasPar 
into our selling process, but only after we have presented 
our products and strategy to the customer. Please see the 
attached sales update article for a list of MPSG contacts to
call. As a Digital sales rep you will get full credit for 
DECmpp systems which Digital sells to your customer. 
1. Current Status
-----------------
This was a momentous week for DECmpp! The pricing was
approved on Monday and we thank PAC for their cooperation
during Hurricane Bob. We announced DECmpp on Tuesday and 
despite some other newsworthy activity in the Kremlin, the
press pick up has been terrific! The NY Times, Wall Street 
Journal, Boston Globe, Nightly Business Report among others
ran stories. Articles based on interviews with us are also
expected in: Computerworld, Computer Systems News,
Electronic News, EE Times, Federal Computer Week, Government
Computer News, Information Week, Digital News, Electronic
Business, Digital Review, Electronics, Datamation,
DEComputing, Supercomputing Review, Parallelogram,
Computing, Computer Weekly, Computergram. 
This week Albuquerque manufacturing people built their first
DECmpp systems. The first US DECmpp sale was installed at
Georgia Tech and was up and running in less than 2.5 hours. 
More DECmpp events:
August 23       Sales Flash #693 announces Digital MPP systems in price 
	        list
September 16    Sales Update cover story on DECmpp
September 9-13  DECUS, The Hague. DECmpp demos and presentations
October 22      Cornell University DECmpp day (tentative)
November 13-15  DECUS, Japan. DECmpp demos and presentations
November 10-14  SEG show, Houston. DECmpp demos
November 14-16  IEEE Supercomputing Show, Albuquerque. DECmpp demos
December 9-13   DECUS, Anaheim.  DECmpp demos and presentations
Planning is beginning for a Washington, DC area DECmpp 1-day 
seminar. Steve Harrington will have more details in our next 
newsletter. 
2. Training
-----------
We are still targeting September 25-27 for sales and support 
training in Massachusetts. Let Darlene Camuti know if you
and your manager feel that you should attend this training.
Sales and sales support individuals with DECmpp prospects
will be given priority for the limited seating. 
We are looking to provide a two-week in-depth DECmpp
programming course in early October. Capacity for this will
be limited, so let Darlene Camuti know if you would like to 
attend this October Systems Engineering training. 
Additional training is also being planned for Europe. Call 
Steve Zagame or Yvan Bantoure for more info (see contact 
list in the attached Sales Update article. 
Massachusetts MPSG Sales and Support Training Agenda
DAY 1 
 
         8:30	Introduction to MPSG and goals of training 
         9:00	MPP style of computing, Digital strategy and plans  
         10:30	break
         10:45	MasPar background 
         11:00	DECmpp Products 
         11:30	lunch
         12:30	MPP product training part 1 
          2:00	Break
          2:15	MPP product training part 2 
          3:45	MPP positioning and Day 1 wrap up 
          4:00	Demos 
          5:15	End of day  1
         
         6:30	Dinner with MasPar
         
         
DAY 2
	 8:30	MPP applications
         9:00	Selling MPP systems vs the competition 
         10:00	break
         10:30	Marketing events 
         10:45	Configuring, quoting, site prep, Digital MPP mfg 
         11:15	Customer support 
         12:00	Lunch
         1:00	Hardware futures 
         1:30	Software futures 
         2:00	break
         2:15	Description of text retrieval demo 
         2:45	Discussion and wrap up 
         
         
DAY 3         
         
         1 x 1 consulting on customer opportunities
               optional MPP programming instruction
               
3. MasPar Installed sites and applications
------------------------------------------
We have received many requests for information on installed 
MPP sites. Since DECmpp is a new Digital product, there are 
not yet many installed Digital sites. Below are some MasPar
sites to give you an idea of current applications for MPP.
However, please do not contact these customers directly. If
you are interested in more information, give us a call or
call the MasPar representative associated with the site. 
	 Customer		Application		   MasPar sales rep
	 --------		-----------		   ----------------
         Ford Aerospace		Neural networks		       Ed McCurtain
         
         UNC			Neural Nets, computational 	   Al Payne
         			chemistry, molecular modeling
         
         Ames Laboratory	SIMD research 		     Gerry Winckler
         			computational chemistry			   
         
         NASA Goddard		galactic nebulae gas 	       Will Workman
         			velocity modeling, computa-
         			tional modeling
         
         RPI			Image processing, SIMD 	       Rich Sheroff
         			research
         
         Harvard		Machine Vision, Robotics       Rich Sheroff
         
         Univ of Bergen		Dynamic modeling, DNA 	      Neil Rowlands
         			sequencing, meteorology
         
         CSIRO			terrain surface display,    Greg Madden/DEC
         			geophysics, mineral 
         			exploration, meteorology
         
         McGill			object recognition, robotics   Rich Sheroff
         
         Univ of Bath		numerical analysis	      Neil Rowlands
         
         Texas Tech		molecular dynamics, quantum    Paul McManus
         			physics
         
         Toyohashi Univ		Extended common LISP	     Katsuei Aoyagi
         			implementation
         
         Texas A&M		Reservoir simulation, 	       Paul McManus
         			molecular dynamics
         
         Belcore		Automatic indexing, document   Rich Sheroff
         			retrieval, cryptography
continues on next page
MasPar installed sites continued         
	 Customer		Application		   MasPar sales rep
	 --------		-----------		   ----------------
         University of Akron	Finite Element Analysis		 Greg Worth
         
	 Sumitomo Metals	neural networks		     Katsuei Aoyagi
         
         CMU			Machine vision, robotics	 Greg Worth
         
         Fregate/ENS		sorting and searching tasks,  Neil Rowlands
         			index table algorithms, 
         			pattern matching
         
         Johns Hopkins Univ	Semiconductor modeling,	       Will Workman
         			radar signal processing
         
4. MPSG Notesfile and public directory
--------------------------------------
The DECmpp notesfile is now open at RDVAX::DECMPP. 
We have also set up a public directory at
RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC. It contains the info sheet draft, the
MPSG newsletters, the DECmpp sales update article, the press
release, and a configuration guide. We will shortly copy the 
overall DECmpp marketing presentation and the DECmpp product
presentation into the directory. 
A1. DECmpp Sales Update Article with Prices and MPSG Contact List
-----------------------------------------------------------------
The DECmpp 12000 Massively Parallel Processing (MPP) Systems
CONTACT
Ram Appalaraju, DTN 223-4170, MLO
HIGHLIGHTS
o  Among our competitors, Digital is the first major company to formally 
   enter the market for massively parallel computer systems
o  Provides up to 16,384 processing elements capable of delivering 26,000 
   MIPS (32-bit add), 1.2 gigaflops 32-bit floating point
o  DECstation 5000 front-end systems use industry standard ULTRIX operating 
   systems
o  A robust software development environment through high-level language 
   data parallel programming
o  Digital integrates MPP into a customer's distributed computing 
   environment
o  Prices range from $264K -- $1.5M; delivery planned for September 1991
INTRODUCTION
Digital introduces a family of computers based on massively parallel 
processing (MPP), an emerging, high performance technology targeted at the 
very complex problems of technical, scientific and commercial users.
The new DECmpp 12000 system series features configurations ranging from 
1,024 to 16,384 processors with performance up to 1.2 billions of floating 
point operations per second (gigaflops), and 26,000 millions of instructions 
per second (MIPS). 
The new systems, supplied under a previously announced agreement with MasPar 
Computer Corporation of Sunnyvale, California, are priced from $264,000 to 
$1,502,500.  
ONE CONSISTENT COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT 
Digital now has a leadership position in high performance computing through 
our DECmpp 12000 massively parallel processing systems, VAX 9000 systems, 
networks and applications.  We have the ability to integrate all of these in 
one consistent computing environment for computationally intensive 
applications.  
Key to market acceptance, however, is software, ranging from application 
development and network integration tools to the applications themselves, 
that can take advantage of this technique.
Focus on Basic Software Elements
First, we're focusing on basic software elements such as language compilers, 
libraries, networking designs and basic development tools.  In some cases, 
we're going to create parallelized versions of existing products; in other 
cases, we're developing entire new products.  For example, we are looking to 
extend Digital tools such as our Language Sensitive Editor, Friendly UNIX, 
and Test Manager to massively parallel architectures.
Stimulate Third-Party Applications
Secondly, we're committed to directly stimulating third-party application 
development in strategic application areas.
Two application toolkits recently ported to these systems are "Elexir", an 
information retrieval system from Third Eye Software, Inc. of Menlo Park, 
California, and "Table-Maker", a statistical database package from CHISQ 
Ltd., Reading, England.
Strategic Development Technologies
Digital is focusing its resources on strategic development technologies and 
activities by:
o  Developing and enhancing application development tools -- Digital will 
   extend development tool components of its CASE (Computer Aided Software 
   Engineering) product family to work with massively parallel 
   architectures; Digital will also pursue advance development in other key 
   technologies such as language compilers, data libraries and networking 
   technologies
o  Stimulating third-party development activities -- Digital will pursue 
   partnerships and other initiatives to assist third-party application 
   developers with the creation of applications that take advantage of 
   massively parallel architectures
HOW MASSIVELY PARALLEL COMPUTERS WORK
Massively parallel processing is an outgrowth of the quest to speed computer 
processing.  The traditional computer architecture (known as the von Neumann 
architecture) operates in serial fashion.  With every cycle of a central 
computer clock, the central processor unit (CPU) processes a fixed-size 
instruction or word.  The larger the word length, from 16 to 32 bits, for 
instance, and the faster the processor, the greater the volume of 
information that can be processed in a set time.
However, the faster the CPU, the more memory and larger input/output 
bandwidth is required to maintain balanced, high-speed operations.  
Multiple-processor implementations, with four, six, or even a hundred or 
more processors, can bring significant increases in speed, but they must be 
coordinated by additional logic in order to maintain synchronization.  This 
interprocessor overhead can add considerably to internal resource 
utilization.
Massively parallel architectures employ thousands of relatively inexpensive 
processor/memory units, distributed throughout the system.  MPP 
architectures are thus very efficient at handling large data arrays (of 
1,000 by 1,000 elements, for instance), where the instruction flow can be 
parallelized to operate on all elements simultaneously.  
As a result, massively parallel computers are considered to have the 
potential, as more application software becomes available, for handling a 
broadening range of highly complex problem-solving applications.
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
The DECmpp 12000 systems series consists of eight models, depending on the 
number of Processor Element (PE) boards and memory per board.  The DECmpp 
12000 Series can be configured with 1024, 4096, 8192, or 16,384 processor 
elements at initial installation or through on-site upgrades.  By operating 
in a Single Instruction Multiple Data (SIMD) fashion, the thousands of 
processor elements can work on a single problem simultaneously.  An entry 
level DECmpp system provides 1,600 MIPS of processing power and is scalable 
up to 26,000 MIPS -- and all within the same system package.
DECmpp Software Products
Although the DECmpp 12000 Series uses many interconnected processing 
elements to achieve high performance, it features a single, integrated 
software environment.  This environment is based on the ULTRIX operating 
system giving access to hundreds of utilities and applications.  The user 
interface to the software environment is based on the DECwindows system and 
supports access from DECwindow terminals and DECstation workstations.
DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment
The DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment consists of a comprehensive set 
of development tools for data parallel programming.  This easy-to-use 
environment features an interactive DECwindows-based point-and-select 
interface.  Users will easily visualize, analyze and optimize the behavior 
of DECmpp processor elements, algorithms, and data.  The DECmpp tool set 
includes a symbolic debugger, a machine animator and data visualizer.
DECmpp Programming Language
DECmpp System software includes a C-like, high-level language compiler for 
programming the DECmpp 12000 Series systems.  The language is based on 
Kernighan and Ritchie C and is the primary programming language for the 
DECmpp system's data parallel unit.
DECmpp Image Processing Library
The DECmpp Image Processing Library is a highly optimized set of image 
processing routines for the DECmpp 12000 Series Systems.  The library 
supports the development of very high performance image processing solutions 
on a fully programmable platform with a symbolic, window-based, interactive, 
graphical, and network-distributed development environment.  Library 
routines are callable from standard languages such as C, FORTRAN, and DECmpp 
Programming Language.  The library includes routines for image arithmetic, 
low-level image processing operations, and image analysis, as well as a 
variety of utilities for image display, I/O, test image generation, and 
format conversion.
DECmpp Parallel Disk Array
The disk array provides the DECmpp 12000 Series systems with up to 11.2 
gigabytes of formatted capacity and 9 MB/Sec sustained disk I/O.  The disk 
array is ideal for a wide range of data-intensive applications, such as 
scientific visualization, remote sensing, image processing, and geographic 
database management.
The disk array can be upgraded from four disks at 3 MB/Sec to 24 disks at 9 
MB/Sec.  Digital's TKZ08 tape drive may used to back up the parallel disk 
array.
THE DIGITAL MPP STRATEGY
Digital has signed an OEM agreement with MasPar Computer Corporation to 
resell MasPar's massively parallel computer systems, software and options.  
The DECmpp 12000 systems combine excellent price/performance to provide a 
highly productive growth path for the future.  The product line is easily 
scalable, upgradable and includes software tools for developing parallel 
processing applications.
Digital's strategy is to:
o  Provide an integrated environment by drawing on our strengths in areas 
   such as:
   - Software development tools
   - High performance networking
   - System integration
   - Workstations and servers
   - Third-party software relationships
o  Establish partnerships with leading MPP hardware and software companies
o  Expand the market by raising awareness of the benefits of MPP
Why Did Digital Choose to Resell MasPar's Systems?
MasPar's products have high quality and an excellent price/performance.  The 
products are designed and built on state-of-the-art technology licensed from 
Digital.  This is the first partnership, but another, MIMD (Multiple 
Instruction Multiple Data) partnership is planned for later this year.
PERFORMANCE POSITIONING
		  	   			     LINPACK
		  	   		Peak	     1K x 1K *	    Price
		  MIPS	   Number of	MFLOPS	     64-bit	    Range
		  32-bit   Processors	64-bit	     MFLOPS   	    $K   
DECmpp 12000	  26,000    16K		 580	       440	   $  274 -
Model 16B		       		    		  	   $1,533  
Thinking	   2,500     2K	      14,000	     5,200	   $2,000 -
Machines CM-2		       		    		  	   $7,000  
Intel iPSC/860	   1,056     32	       1,300	       486	   $1,000 -
			    128	       5,000	     1,920	   $4,000  
VAX 9000 /410VP	      30      1		 125		79	   $1,000 -
          440VP	      30      4		 500	       n/a	   $6,000  
Cray Y-MP/132	     N/A      1		 333	       324	   $1,500 -
         /832		      8	       2,667	     2,144	  $24,000  
Convex C3210	     N/A      1		  50		17	   $1,000  
       C3240		      4		 200	       166	   $6,000  
       C3810		      1		 106		99
* From report generated by Jack Dongarra, University of Tennessee, 6/12/91.
POSITIONING WITH RESPECT TO VAX 9000
The VAX 9000 vector processing system provides excellent performance in a 
wide range of applications readily available from Independent Software 
Vendors covering Science, Engineering, Chemical, Pharmaceutical and Oil and 
Gas Industries.  It also has excellent scalar and I/O performance, meaning 
that it is a very balanced and versatile system to answer the growth needs 
of the immense installed base of VAX system users in all segments.  It will 
very often be used as a compute or database server to satisfy the single 
stream performance needs of an organization consisting of workstations or 
time-sharing users on smaller VAX systems.
DECmpp 12000 Series system is a specialized execution engine capable of 
extremely high performance for a more limited set of applications.  Today, 
it is relatively more difficult to program, but can yield dramatic execution 
speed dividends on applications that involve computing on large arrays of 
data.  The DECmpp 12000 systems include a DECstation 5000/200, which 
functions as a general purpose host computer to control and to execute 
sequential code.  VAX 9000 users can access the data parallel unit through 
the DECstation workstation.
MARKETS AND TYPICAL APPLICATIONS
Markets for DECmpp systems include industries such as Government, Education, 
Oil and Gas, Chemical, Pharmaceutical, Automotive/Aerospace, Service and 
Financial, and Defense.
Typical applications include computational fluid dynamics, geophysical data 
processing, structural dynamics and acoustics, ocean and atmospheric 
modeling, computational chemistry and physics, simulation of neural nets, 
molecular modeling, database and text retrieval, searching and sorting, 
image processing and recognition, signal processing (1D, 2D, 3D), and 
seismic processing and reservoir analysis. 
The Massively Parallel Systems Group (MPSG) has an aggressive program to 
provide off-the-shelf application software packages for DECmpp systems. 
Please contact the MPSG staff for status and availability of application 
software packages.
PRICING/ORDERING/CONFIGURATION/AVAILABILITY
All DECmpp 12000 Series systems include a DECstation 5000/200CX workstation 
with an additional 16 MB RAM, VME adapter and SZ12B-FA sidecar, which 
includes an RZ56 hard disk and a RRD42 CDROM drive, licenses for ULTRIX 
workstation software and DECnet.   Also included is a one-year Basic Service 
warranty for all DECmpp 12000 Series systems.
The products listed below are also available from MasPar, but are priced 
higher to represent added value when purchased from Digital.  Digital's 
prices include our comprehensive one-year warranty (versus MasPar's 90-day 
return-to-factory warranty), our unlimited users per system software 
licensing, our long-term commitment to support these products anywhere in 
the world, and our investment in growing the value of these systems through 
increasing application and system software. 
RESOURCES
o  Infosheets -- To order infosheets on DECmpp 12000 Series products, 
   contact Darlene Camuti at RDVAX::CAMUTI, DTN 223-3712.
o  Marketing/Sales support staff -- for sales support for DECmpp 
   applications, configurations and competition for end user and volume 
   sales contact, one of the following DECmpp marketing staff:
         
   Eastern U.S.		Steve Harrington, DTN 223-3435 RDVAX::HARRINGTON
   Western U.S.		Eric Tyberg, DTN 521-6860, USWRLS::TYBERG_ER
   Central U.S.		Ron Renaud, RDVAX::RENAUD
   Pan Europe		Steve Zagame, 858-1067
   United Kingdom	Simon Cole, 899-3028
   Germany, Austria, 
	Switzerland	Jochen Krebs, 786-1408
   France		Yvan Bantoure, 858-1397
   South Pacific, Asia	Greg Madden @SNO, DTN 730-5454, (61-2-561-5454)
   European product mgr	Bob Pattison, 899-5734
   Japan		Hiroshi Mizoguchi, 03-989-7340
o  Service contacts	Diana McClure, 264-0883, MVDS02::MCCLURE
			Mike Carlton, 264-5740, MVDS02::CARLTON
o  Additional Contacts -- Ram Appalaraju, Program Manager, 
   RDVAX::APPALARAJU, DTN 223-4170; Bob Nilsson, MPSG Sales & Marketing 
   Manager, RDVAX::NILSSON, DTN 223-1715; Charlie Wilson, MPSG Group 
   Manager, DTN 223-2867.
o  Order processing contact -- DECmpp products must be quoted on AQS prior 
   to order entry and the quotes sent to Lisa Peloquin at RDVAX::PELOQUIN. 
   For help with quoting and processing orders, contact Lisa Peloquin, DTN 
   223-1935, RDVAX::PELOQUIN.
         
o  All the DECmpp products have a lead time of 90 days for domestic orders 
   and 120 days for international orders.
DISCOUNTS
All DECmpp products are discountable under the DBA, category A (0 - 21%) for 
both end users and resellers.  Also, the products can be sold under GSA 
contracts.
SERVICE
All DECmpp 12000 Series systems, software and options are fully supported by 
Digital Services organizations as standard Digital products.  Due to the 
specialized nature of DECmpp 12000 Series systems, all customer and Volume 
sales opportunities should be qualified through the MPSG technical staff.  
Contact Lisa Peloquin @MLO DTN 223-1935 to qualify and configure customer 
orders.
DECmpp 12000 Series Systems, Available September 1991
Model No.  Description				U.S. List	Std.
MP101-AA   Model 1A, 1K PE's, 16MB RAM, 120V	  $ 240,500	$ 264,300
MP101-AB   Model 1A, 1K PE's, 16MB RAM, 240V	    240,500	  264,300
MP101-AC   Model 1A, 1K PE's, 16MB RAM, 240 SH	    240,500	  264,300
MP102-AA   Model 1B, 1K PE's, 64MB RAM, 120V	  $ 275,000	$ 299,400
MP102-AB   Model 1B, 1K PE's, 64MB RAM, 240V	    275,000	  299,400
MP102-AC   Model 1B, 1K PE's, 64MB RAM, 240 SH	    275,000	  299,400
MP103-AA   Model 4A, 4K PE's, 64MB RAM, 120V	  $ 378,500	$ 413,000
MP103-AB   Model 4A, 4K PE's, 64MB RAM,240V	    378,500	  413,000
MP103-AC   Model 4A, 4K PE's, 64MB RAM, 240 SH	    378,500	  413,000
MP104-AA   Model 4B, 4K PE's, 256MB RAM, 120V	  $ 516,500	$ 558,500
MP104-AB   Model 4B, 4K PE's, 256MB RAM, 240V	    516,500	  558,500
MP104-AC   Model 4B, 4K PE's, 256MB RAM, 240SH	    516,500	  558,500
MP105-AA   Model 8A, 8K PE's, 128MB RAM, 120V	  $ 540,000	$ 589,000
MP105-AB   Model 8A, 8K PE's, 128MB RAM, 240V	    540,000	  589,000
MP105-AC   Model 8A, 8K PE's, 128MB RAM, 240SH	    540,000	  589,000
MP106-AA   Model 8B, 8K PE's, 512MB RAM, 120V	  $ 804,000	$ 860,000
MP106-AB   Model 8B, 8K PE's, 512MB RAM, 240V	    804,000	  860,000
MP106-AC   Model 8B, 8K PE's, 512MB RAM, 240SH	    804,000	  860,000
MP107-AA   Model 16A, 16K PE's, 256MB RAM, 120V	  $ 892,000	$ 970,000
MP107-AB   Model 16A, 16K PE's, 256MB RAM, 240V	    892,000	  970,000
MP107-AC   Model 16A, 16K PE's, 256MB RAM, 240SH    892,000	  970,000
MP108-AA   Model 16B, 16K PE's, 1GB RAM, 120V	 $1,420,000    $1,533,000
MP108-AB   Model 16B, 16K PE's, 1GB RAM, 240V	  1,420,000	1,533,000
MP108-AC   Model 16B, 16K PE's, 1GB RAM, 240SH	  1,420,000	1,533,000
NOTE: 1	 The data parallel unit in all the models requires 240V 50/60 HZ 
         power source.  The voltages indicated in the above description are 
         for the workstation only.
      2	 MP10X-AC models include monitors for use in the Southern 
         Hemisphere.
DECmpp PE Array Options, Available September 1991
KP100-AA   1K PE board with 16 MB RAM		  $ 51,750	 $ 55,500
KP100-AB   1K PE board with 64 MB RAM		    86,250	   92,300
KP100-AC   1K PE board upgrade from 16MB to 64MB    86,250	   90,100
DECmpp Interface Channel Option, Available September 1991
KF100-AA   DECmpp I/O Controller Option W/8MB	  $ 21,600	 $ 23,660
DECmpp Parallel Disk Array Systems, Available September 1991
SMP01-AA   Parallel disk array system w/4 data	 $ 129,800	$ 145,000
	   disks, 2.9GB. requires KF100-AA
SMP01-AB   Parallel disk array system w/8 data	   176,000	  192,000
	   disks, 5.8GB. requires KF100-AA
SMP01-AC   Parallel disk array system w/16 data	   237,600	  253,000
	   disks, 11.5GB. requires KF100-AA
DECmpp Disk Array Upgrade Options, Available September 1991
SMP02-AA   SMP01-AA to SMP01-AB upgrade		  $ 51,700	 $ 55,200
SMP02-AB   SMP01-AA to SMP01-AC upgrade		   118,800	  127,200
SMP02-AD   SMP01-AB to SMP01-AC upgrade		    67,100	   72,100
DECmpp Hard Disk, Available September 1991.
RMPO1-AA   Hot Standby Disk and Controller	   $11,550	  $12,900
DECmpp Software Products, Available September 1991
    					      Standard (Capacity
    					      Lic. Per System)
QL-XT4A8-AA    DECmpp System Software License		   $ 120
QA-XT4AA-GZ    Documentation for DECmpp System Software	   (Available 9/25)
QL-XT7A8-AA    DECmpp Parallel Programming		   $4,710
	       Environment License
QA-XT7AA-GZ    Documentation for DECmpp Parallel	   (Available 9/25)
	       Programming Environment software
QL-XT5A8-AA    DECmpp Image Processing Library License	   $4,710
QA-XT5AA-GZ    Documentation for DECmpp Image		   (Available 9/25)
	       Processing Software Library
QA-XT4AA-H8    CDROM Media for DECmpp System Software	   $ 335
	       DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment, 
	       DECmpp Image Processing Library
QA-XT4AA-H5    TK50 Media for DECmpp System Software	   $ 225
	       DECmpp Parallel Programming 
	       Environment, DECmpp Image Processing
	       Library.
A2.  The DECmpp Press Release
-----------------------------
Joseph D. Codispoti		
(508) 493-6767	                
              DIGITAL EQUIPMENT INTRODUCES FAMILY OF
                   MASSIVELY PARALLEL COMPUTERS
MAYNARD, Mass. -- August 20, 1991 -- Digital Equipment Corporation 
today introduced a family of computers based on massively parallel 
processing (MPP), an emerging, high performance technology targeted 
at very complex problems of technical, scientific and commercial 
users.
     The new DECmpp 12000 system series features configurations 
ranging from 1,024 to 16,384 processors with performance up to 1.2 
billions of floating point operations per second (GigaFLOPS), and 
26,000 millions of instructions per second (MIPS). 
     The new systems, supplied under a previously announced 
agreement with MasPar Computer Corporation of Sunnyvale, California  
are priced from $240,500 to $1,502,500.  Worldwide shipments will 
begin in the fall.
     All DECmpp systems are configured with Digital DECstation 5000 
full color front-end workstations, as well as ULTRIX and DECnet 
software licenses. In addition to the family of computer 
processors, Digital also announced a comprehensive line of 
software, a family of high speed disk arrays, and full service and 
support programs.   Digital's standard one year product warranty 
will apply. 
     With this announcement, Digital becomes the first main line
systems vendor to formally introduce a family of massively parallel
systems, and it is the first time users of systems in this 
performance class can take advantage of Digital's high level of 
warranty, service and support. 
     Charles Wilson, director of Digital's Massively Parallel 
Systems Group, noted  "We feel this is a milestone in the evolution 
of massively parallel technology.  There are many businesses, 
government agencies and universities that want to move to massively 
parallel technology, but are looking to more application software 
and higher levels of enterprise service and support. 
     "Digital's entry in the market is important to these users for
two reasons.  First, we will stimulate application program 
development both directly through our independent software 
developers, and indirectly by adding the commitment of an 
established, major systems vendor to this relatively new market.
     "The second reason is Digital's leadership in delivering 
effective, highly reliable, enterprise-wide support to large 
organizations.  MPP systems are yet another important technology to 
be integrated into the total computing environment."
     Introduced today were:
     o	DECmpp 12000 systems -- eight field-upgradable  models 
        incorporating 1,024, 4,096, 8,192 and 16,384 processor 
        elements, and memory capacity from 16MB to 1GB. Priced from 
        $240,500 to $1,502,500;
     o	DECmpp Programming Language -- a C-like high level compiler 
        for programming DECmpp systems included with the DECmpp 
        System Software license, $100;
     o	DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment -- a comprehensive 
        suite of development tools for data-parallel programming.  
        Features an interactive DECwindows point-and-select 
        interface. Includes symbolic debugger, machine animator and 
        data visualizer. License, $4,000; 
     o	DECmpp Image Processing Library -- a facility for supplying 
        common visual and data objects to help speed program 
        development.  License, $4,000. 
     o	DECmpp FORTRAN -- built on FORTRAN 90, this compiler will 
        provide facilities to program in high level language and 
        generate code for data parallel execution.  Available in 
        December; 
     o	DECmpp Disk Array Systems -- high speed disk-array 
        subsystems, provide parallel access to large data files.  
        The disk array features 720 megabytes of formatted storage 
        per disk with a capacity up to 11.2 gigabytes of storage 
        and sustained I/O rate of nine megabytes per second.  
        Priced from $129,000 to $261,000; 
     o	Digital Service -- the complete worldwide service offering 
        from Digital, including enterprise integration, consulting, 
        customer training, and maintenance and repair services, is 
        available to DECmpp customers.
 
                    SOFTWARE AIDS MARKET GROWTH
     Massively parallel processor architectures are considered by
many industry experts to have the greatest potential for solving
highly complex problems in technical, scientific and commercial
computer applications such as scientific visualization, geographic 
database management, econometric  modeling, and financial analysis. 
     MPP computers are able to break down problems into smaller 
parts, then process these parts simultaneously, at very high speed.  
As a result, performance can be extremely fast for applications 
that lend themselves to this type of processing.
     Key to market acceptance, however, is software, ranging from 
application development and network integration tools to the 
applications themselves that can take advantage of this technique.
     Digital is working to advance MPP software development on
several fronts, according to Wilson.
     "First, we're focusing on basic software elements such as 
language compilers, libraries, networking designs and basic 
development tools.  In some cases, we're going to create 
parallelized versions of existing products; in other cases, we're 
developing entire new products.  For example, we are looking to 
extend Digital tools such as our Language Sensitive Editor, 
Friendly UNIX, and Test Manager to massively parallel 
architectures.
     "Secondly, we're committed to directly stimulating third-party
application development in strategic application areas."
     Targeted applications include: structural dynamics in 
automotive and aerospace industries; seismic processing and 
reservoir analysis in oil and gas exploration; and database 
retrieval, searching and sorting.
     Two application toolkits recently ported to these systems are
"Elexir", an information retrieval system from Third Eye Software,
Inc. of Menlo Park, California, and "Table-Maker", a statistical 
database package from CHISQ Ltd., Reading, England.
             DECmpp EXTENDS HIGH PERFORMANCE SOLUTIONS
    The new DECmpp 12000 Series Systems add an important MPP
component to Digital's high-performance computing products.  
Digital currently manufactures and markets VAX 9000 and VAX 6000 
systems, including mainframes and vector equipped versions for 
supercomputing.  Digital also offers a range of high-performance 
workstations.  These and other Digital products maintain industry 
leading interoperability with non-Digital systems via the company's 
open NAS architecture of standard software interfaces.     
     Digital Equipment Corporation, headquartered in Maynard,
Massachusetts, is the leading worldwide supplier of networked
computer systems, software and services.  Digital pioneered and
leads the industry in interactive, distributed and multi-vendor
computing.  Digital and its partners deliver the power to use the
best integrated solutions -- from desktop to data center -- in open
information environments.
                               ####
CORP/92/284
Note to Editors:   MasPar is a trademark of MasPar Computer 
                   Corporation.
     		   Table-Maker is a trademark of CHISQ Ltd.
     		   Elexir is a registered trademark of Third Eye 
                   Software, Inc.
     		   UNIX is a trademark of Unix System Laboratories, 
                   Inc.
     		   DECnet, DECstation, DECmpp, VAX and ULTRIX are 
                   trademarks of Digital Equipment Corporation.
                       CURRENT APPLICATIONS
     The newer massively parallel architectures make it possible to
process computationally intensive applications with ultra high
speed and relatively low cost.  For example, a 16,000-processor
machine is rated at 26,000 peak MIPS and 1,200 peak MFLOPS, and
costs just over $1 million.
     Some typical applications are:
     o  Structural analysis -- used frequently in automotive and
        aerospace industries, this relates to finite element 
        analysis of mechanical structures, both at rest and under
     	stress;
        
     o  Computational fluid dynamics -- the fastest growing area of 
        computational physics, this typically involves the study of 
        aerodynamics, including airflow over airfoils and air 
        resistance of automobiles;
     o  Seismic/reservoir modeling -- these are the two most used 
        oil-industry applications;
     o  Signal and image processing -- used extensively by NASA and 
        the military, this application requires very fast filtering
     	and analysis of electronic signals;
     o  Chemistry/biology -- these applications include studies of 
        chemical structures, reactions and properties, as well as 
        genetic molecular modeling;
     o  Commercial -- the major potential today for business/office 
        users involves database, financial-modeling and text-
     	retrieval applications.
 | 
|  | 
                                                 D I G I T A L
                                           -     ____  ____  ____   ____
                                           -    / / / /___/ /____  /  __
                                           -   / / / /      ____/ /____/
                                           Computers of the future...
							...available today
MPSG NEWSLETTER #6
                 Massively Parallel Systems Group - December Update
                        ***Digital Internal Use Only***
Attached is the sixth update from MPSG on Digital's MPP program and 
plans. Please let Darlene Camuti (RDVAX::CAMUTI) know if you would 
like to be deleted from this distribution list or if you know of 
someone who should be added. 
                               Contents
			       --------
	       1.  Program Summary
	       2.  Product Update
	       3.  Training Plans
	       4.  Applications
	       5.  MPP Positioning Review
	       6.  DECmpp Contacts
	       7.  Recent and Upcoming DECmpp Events
	       8.  Press Release: Georgia Tech DECmpp sale
	       9.  Press Release: New MPSG Staff Members
	      10.  Sales Update Draft on DECmpp FORTRAN
	      11.  How To Access DECmpp User Documentation
1. Program Summary
   ---------------
DECmpp is Digital's entry into the massively parallel
processing market. The DECmpp 12000 is based on a
single-instruction, multiple data (SIMD) architecture. The
products, prices and availability were announced on August
20, 1991. These products are currently on Digital's
corporate price list worldwide. 
MPP systems offer both the maximum computing performance 
available and the maximum performance at a given price 
level for applications involving large arrays of data. 
Examples of these applications include database searching
and sorting, computational chemistry, automobile design,
statistical analysis, text retrieval, signal and image
processing, financial analysis, and seismic processing. 
Digital's strategy is sell midrange MPP systems which
integrate into the customers' computing environment. This 
integration is accomplished by extending NAS and the
Cohesion toolset to embrace our MPP systems. Digital's major
commitment to this software environment is evidenced by
MPSG's nineteen software engineers developing and enhancing
our MPP compilers and toolsets. We have also assembled a
team of application consultants to port and optimize
applications for DECmpp. 
Our DECmpp platforms range from 1,024 to 16,384 processors 
per system and are priced from $250,000 to $1.5M. Peak
performance of the large system is 1.3 Gigaflops. 
Selling DECmpp
Target customers typically have 1-3 large, time consuming 
computer applications which require hours or days to execute 
on traditional systems. MPSG is prepared to accompany you on 
visits to these customers to present the benefits of MPP 
and show how our software integrates via Network
Application Support. If the customer's application is not
yet available off-the-shelf, we have experts who can
determine how easily the customer's application can be
ported to DECmpp. 
Note that while the DECmpp SIMD hardware was designed by 
MasPar Computer Corporation, please do not call MasPar 
sales reps to help with your sales. The Digital and MasPar
software environments are diverging and the MasPar reps will 
not be able to accurately represent the Digital products. 
The sales support staff at MPSG has ramped up to 25 people
worldwide, including PhDs with extensive MPP experience. We
guarantee quick response to telephone or electronic
requests. 
		DECmpp Sales Tools
		------------------
	o DECmpp info sheet (EC-F1545-15)
	  These info sheets are orderable through Northboro 
	  Publishing and Circulation Services.
	o Digital High Performance Computing brochure (EC-E1145-57)
	o DECmpp customer presentation 
	  (RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:customer_presentation.ps)
	o DECmpp configuration guide 
	  (RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:decmpp_configuration_guide.txt)
	o Notesfile - RDVAX::DECMPP
	o Hotline mail account - RDVAX::DECMPP
	o Product manuals (all docs are now complete!) - 
	  in the public directory: RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:decmpp_docs.dir
	o Demos - available on request, software available on 
	  RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:decmpp_demos.tar
2. Product Update
   --------------
DECmpp Fortran (Ql-XT6A8-AA) is scheduled for announcement
at the end of this month. The target price is $10,000. The
field test version of this software is currently being
shipped to customers. The FRS will be February 15, 1992. 
See attached Sales Update draft for more info on DECmpp 
FORTRAN. 
These documentation kits have been added to the price list
as of 12/2/91: 
QA-XT4AA-GZ	DECmpp SYSTEM SOFTWARE DOCUMENTATION	$465
QA-XT5AA-GZ	DECmpp IMAGE PROCESSING LIBRARY		$136
		DOCUMENTATION
QA-XT7AA-GZ	DECmpp PARALLEL PROGRAMMING ENVIRONMENT	$643 
		DOCUMENTATION
Product enhancements planned over the next 4-6 months:
o Announcement of VAST II for optimizing MPP software
o Repackaging DECmpp 12000 into new Digital standard
	enclosure system 
o Implementation of DECmpp software environment based on 
	FUSE and COHESION
Product enhancements planned over the next 6-15 months:
o Introduction of new High Performance/Data Parallel Fortran Compiler
o Introduction of MIMD system to complement SIMD offering
o Boost in performance of current SIMD system 4-10 times
3. Training 
   --------
The next class of DECmpp sales and support training is now 
scheduled for January 8-10 in Maynard, MA. Please send a 
note to Darlene Camuti to register for the class. Student
reviews of this training have been excellent and we have had 
to limit attendance at each class given to date, so sign up 
early. The training agenda for this class is below. 
		       DECmpp Product Training
         
		         January 8 - 10 1991
         
		Dan Cook Conference Room at PK3-2/26c
         
         
         DAY 1: Jan 8
         
         8:30	Introduction to MPSG and training goals 
         9:00	MPP style of computing, Digital strategy and plans  
         10:30	break
         10:45	MasPar background 
         11:00	DECmpp Products
         11:30	lunch
         12:30	Demo part 1 - sorting, Mandlebrot
         1:00	MPP product training part 1
         2:30	Break
         2:45	MPP product training part 2
         4:15	MPP positioning and Day 1 wrap up 
         4:30	Demo part 2 (MRI, MPPE)
         5:00	end of day 1
         
         
         
         DAY 2: Jan 9
         
         8:30	MPP application software
         9:00	Selling MPP systems vs the competition 
         10:00	break
         10:30	Marketing events 
         10:45	Configuring, quoting, site prep, Digital MPP mfg 
         11:15	Customer support 
         12:00	Lunch
         1:00	Hardware futures 
         1:30	Software futures
         2:00	break
         2:15	discussion and wrap up 
         
         
         
         DAY 3: Jan 10 
         
         1x1 Consulting on customer opportunities.
             Optional MPP programming instruction.
             Quiz.
DECmpp field seminars
---------------------
If you would like to hold a DECmpp seminar for your customers, 
we would be glad to help out. Here are three example seminar
topics: "DECmpp and Large Scale Statistical Analysis",
"DECmpp and Automotive Crash Test Simulation", and
"Digital's Massively Parallel Processing Strategy and
Products". 
We ask only that you assign someone from your sales office
to be responsible for the logistics and customer invitations
and that you help pull together a training session for your
local support team. We will supply a presentor and demo. If
you would like to pursue this please call or send mail to
the MPSG marketing rep assigned to your geography (see
section 6 of this newsletter). 
Two new training courses are being offered by Digital 
Educational Services. Additional dates will be scheduled as 
requested. 
SERVICES TRAINING
NAME:              DECmpp SOFTWARE TRAINING (VENDOR TRAINING)
COURSE CODE:	   EY-H997E-S0
DATES:		   DECEMBER 2-5, 1991
DURATION:	   4 DAYS
FORMAT:		   LECTURE/LAB
LIMIT:		   10
TUITION:	   $1,000.00
START TIME:	   9:00 A.M.
NAME:              DECmpp SYSTEMS MAINTENANCE and DECmpp DISK ARRAY 
                   MAINTENANCE TRAINING (VENDOR TRAINING)
COURSE CODE:	   EY-H998E-S0
DATES:		   DECEMBER 9-13, 1991
DURATION:	   5 DAYS
FORMAT:		   LECTURE/LAB
LIMIT:		   6
TUITION:	   $2,082.50
START TIME:	   8:30 A.M. (Please note earlier start time.)
DESCRIPTION INFORMATION - DECmpp SOFTWARE TRAINING
Prerequisites:  Some familiarity with SIMD computer architectures C 
Programming with intensive coverage of syntactic and semantic extensions to 
C, MPPE and System Administration.
Topics Covered:
    .	 Array Control (ACU) concepts
    .	 ACU-to-Procesor and Processor-to-ACU communications
    .	 Data paths between Front End workstation and ACU Processors
    .	 Processor on-ship and off-ship memory concepts
    .	 XNET (nearest neighbor) inter-processor communication
    .	 Global Router inter-processor communication
    .	 High-speed I/O data paths
    .	 Plural data paths
    .	 mp_fort, mpi_cc and stand along mpl programming models
    .	 Compile-time options; DPU/workstation compatibility issues
    .	 Plural aggregates, arrays, and pointers
    .	 Plural loop, conditional, switch, and procedure returns
    .	 Interaction between plural/singular loops, conditionals, etc.
    .	 Processor selection and inhibition
    .	 Pseudo-structures proc[], xnet[], and router[]
    .	 Library routines for parallel arithmetic functions
    .	 Library routines for special parallel constructs
    .	 Library routines for workstation/DPU communication and control
    .	 Brief overview of library routines for high-speed I/O
    .	 Window, cursor, and mouse button conventions in MPPE
    .	 Principal debugger features and menu options
    .	 Remote procedure calls, X Windows - Yellow Pages interactions
    .	 Hands-on exercises: walk through of MPPE tutorial
    .	 directory trees
    .	 device driver/config overview
    .	 dpumanager execution and log files
    .	 networking/yellowpages issues
    .	 software installation procedure
DESCRIPTION INFORMATION -  DECmpp SYSTEMS MAINTENANCE and DECmpp DISK ARRAY
                           MAINTENANCE TRAINING
Please Note:  This training combines a 4-day and a 3-day course into one
5-day intensive training.
Prerequisites:  Experience in hardware troubleshooting techniques and ULTRIX 
system administration.
Topics Covered:
    .	 System Architectural Overview
    .	 Theory of Operation
    .	 System installation and verification
    .	 Performing important ULTRIX system administration functions
    .	 Installation of optional products
    .	 System diagnostics
    .	 Field replaceable unit replacement procedures
    .	 Performing electronic adjustments
    .	 Documentation review
    .	 Theory of operation
    .	 System installation and verification
    .	 Performing important ULTRIX system administration functions
    .	 System diagnostics
    .	 Field replaceable unit replacement procedures
    .	 Performing electronic adjustments
    .	 Performing disk array upgrades to larger models
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LOCATION:  MasPar Computer Corporation, 749 North Mary Avenue, Sunnyvale, CA
ENROLLMENT INFORMATION:   Call CENTRAL 
REGISTRATION, DTN 264-7000 or (603) 884-7000.  Direction information will be 
included in the employee's confirmation letter.  
TO WRITE:  Today only, write to BUOREG @BUO or ESMAIL::BUOREG, after today, 
write to:  BUOREG @DDD or CGVAX2::BUOREG.
Include:  Your name, badge, CC, DTN, Mail Node, Mgr's Name and Mail Node, 
Course Name, EY Course Code, and Course Date.
4. Applications
   ------------
The following are off-the-shelf codes available for DECmpp:
SAS/TM ACCESS (CHISQ Ltd)
This software provides the large-scale statistical analysis 
capabilities of Table-maker integrated into the popular SAS 
statistical software package. It provides very high speed
statistical database functions such as data correlation,
averaging and histogramming. The package effectively
replaces mainframes from IBM, ICL, CDC which are currently
being used for statistical analysis. The developer, Ian
Taylor (reachable at dtn 849-3614) located in Reading,
England, is available to provide presales support and
customer consulting for this application. 
ELEXIR (Third Eye Software, Inc.)
Elexir is a toolkit for building information retrieval 
systems which achieve unprecedented performance for 
similarity searches of unstructured text in applications 
including legal and financial services, wire information 
services, message routing and customer support. Elexir on 
the DECmpp 12000 is capable of searching 8 million documents 
per second. 
Radioss (Mecalog) 
Radioss is a car crash simulation code which uses the finite 
element method. It achieves 1/3 the performance of a YMP
processor on the DECmpp 4K processor system. This code will 
be available for customers starting in January. 
Codes in process
----------------
The following is a sample of the most promising codes to be 
ported to DECmpp systems over the next 3-9 months. We'd be 
glad to work with customers who are interested in using 
DECmpp systems to run these codes. 
CHARMm (Molecular Simulations, Inc)
The CHARMm software package models the static and dynamic 
behavior of molecular systems. The code uses empirical 
energy functions to compute energies, find minimum-energy 
conformations, determine the energy cost of deformations and 
simulate vibrational motions. The code is applicable to 
small organic and drug molecules, peptides and proteins, 
nucleic acids and other biopolymers, and a variety 
of synthetic polymers and inorganic materials. 
FIDAP (Fluid Dynamics International, Inc)
FIDAP uses the finite-element method to simulate classes of 
incompressible fluid flows. The code provides a range of 
possible analyses, including isothermal and non-isothermal, 
Newtonian and non-Newtonian flows; turbulent flows; free, 
forced or mixed convection flows; periodic; separating or 
recirculating flows; swirling flows; creeping flows; flows 
in rotating frames of reference; flows with a free or moving 
surface; and surface tension, gradient-driven thermal flows. 
The following codes are under investigation (for short term
conversion, if feasibility is verified). 
o Amber
o Xplor
o AVL/FIRE
o Mathcad
o IMSL
o DYNA3D
o AVS
The following are longer term code conversion efforts. These
are high priorities, but, if feasible, will take more than a
year to port. We are currently negotiating business
arrangements with the code providers to port and support the
codes. This is for your information only; we need to
progress further with these before this information can be
shared with customers. 
o ABACUS by HKSI
o Gaussian 9X
 5. Product Positioning
    -------------------
With Alpha systems coming and negotiations to sell the Cray
YMP-EL progressing, it is important to understand how to
position DECmpp systems among RISC and vector products. 
DECmpp systems offer the highest performance for a given 
price level for applications that map well to MPP. Current
performance is up to 1.3 GF. The next DECmpp SIMD 
generation, to be available next year, increases this 4-10
times. Significantly, DECmpp software is a full member of
Digital's NAS and Cohesion product lines. Its operating
system is ULTRIX, it uses DECwindows, the CASE environment
will be moving to DEC FUSE and all networking is based on
standard Digital products. The DECmpp customers' growth path
is within the Digital product line which will grow to also
include MIMD MPP. 
Applications which map well to MPP include:
Text retrieval				financial modeling
large-scale statistical analysis	computational fluid dynamics
structural analysis			algorithm research
computational chemistry			seismic analysis
image and signal processing		reservoir analysis
RISC systems (including Alpha in the future) offer medium
high performance over the widest range of applications,
especially those which are less data-intensive. RISC offers 
higher performance than MPP for applications which are less
data intensive such as: software development, electronic
mail, office automation, personal productivity, MRP and
numerically-intensive applications that do not involve
arrays of data. Performance of high end Alpha systems (based
on EV-4 to be announced next calendar year) will be in the
range of approximately 70-150 MFLOPS per processor. 
VECTORS offer an attractive compromise between highest
speed (of MPP) and the widest range of applications (of 
RISC). Many scientific applications have already been
optimized for vector processors. Data-intensive applications
which do not fit well into the MPP application categories
listed above may fit vector processors such as the VAX
6000VP and VAX 9000VP. 
The YMP-EL will be a good fit for customers who require full 
Cray YMP compatibility and need to run a range of highly 
vectorized UNIX applications. Maximum performance of the
YMP-EL is 133 MFLOPS per CPU, up to four CPUs. Selling
YMP-ELs allows us to retain account control where the
customer is committed to purchasing a fully CRAY compatible
mid-range system. Note that while negotiations for Digital 
to resell YMP-EL systems are progressing rapidly, an
agreement has not yet been signed. 
6. DECmpp Contacts
   ---------------
         
   Eastern U.S.		Steve Harrington, 223-3435, RDVAX::HARRINGTON
   Western U.S.		Eric Tyberg, 521-6860, USWRLS::TYBERG_ER
   Central U.S.		Ron Renaud, 223-4161, RDVAX::RENAUD
   Pan Europe		Steve Zagame, 858-1067, CCIIS1::ZAGAME
   United Kingdom	Simon Cole, 899-3028
   Germany, Austria, 
	Switzerland	Jochen Krebs, 786-1408, MTS$::"unt::jochen KREBS"
   France		Yvan Bantoure, 858-1397,MTS$::"FGT::YVAN Bantoure"    
   Nordic countries	Magnus Persson, 876-8000, mts$::"soo::magnus persson" 
   South Pacific, Asia	Greg Madden @SNO, DTN 730-5454, (61-2-561-5454)
   European product mgr	Bob Pattison, 899-5734, CHEFS::PATTISONB
   Japan		Hiroshi Mizoguchi, 03-989-7340, TKOVOA::mizoguchi_h  
o  Service contacts	Diana McClure, 264-0883, MVDS02::MCCLURE
			Mike Carlton, 264-5740, MVDS02::CARLTON
o  Additional Contacts -- 
	Ram Appalaraju, Program Manager, RDVAX::APPALARAJU, 223-4170
	Bob Nilsson, MPSG Sales & Mktg Manager, RDVAX::NILSSON, 223-1715
	Charlie Wilson, MPSG Group Manager, RDVAX::WILSON, 223-2867
	
  DECmpp Application Consultants
	Bill Celmaster, 223-2173, RDVAX::CELMASTER
	Ajit Agrawal, 223-2383, RDVAX::AGRAWAL
	George Anagnostou, rdvax::anagnostou
	Bob Monroe, rdvax::monroe
o  Order processing contact -- DECmpp products are available 
   for quoting in the AQS system. For help with quoting and
   processing orders, contact Lisa Peloquin, DTN 223-1935,
   RDVAX::PELOQUIN. 
         
o  In-field support people who have received DECmpp training 
	Over sixty in-field sales support people have been trained 
	on DECmpp. Give the MPSG support person assigned to your
	geography a call for help in assembling a team for your
	sales opportunity. 
7.  DECmpp events
    -------------
November 16-18	Japan DECmpp training Tokyo 
November 10-14	DECmpp at SEG show, Houston 
November 14-16	DECmpp at IEEE Supercomputing '91, Albuquerque
November 26	DECmpp presentation MRO4 Amphitheater
December 3	Atlanta, Georgia DECmpp training
December 5	Novi, Michigan DECmpp training
January	8-10	DECmpp sales and support training
February 12-14	Supercomputing Europe, Paris
mid-April 	Supercomputing Japan
Apr 27-May 15	DECworld - including DECmpp sessions and demos
8. Press Release: Georgia Tech DECmpp Sale
    
    
    
    Joseph D. Codispoti		       
    508-493-6767
    
    
    Molly Croft
    Georgia Institute of Technology
    404-853-2682
    
    
    GEORGIA TECH GETS FIRST DIGITAL EQUIPMENT MASSIVELY PARALLEL
    
     SYSTEM TO FURTHER RESEARCH INTO THIS EMERGING ARCHITECTURE
    
    ATLANTA, GA -- November 19, 1991 --  The first installed 
    massively parallel computer from Digital Equipment 
    Corporation is being used by researchers at Georgia Institute 
    of Technology to better understand and advance the use of 
    this emerging computing architecture.
    	 The DECmpp 12000, installed at the recently formed 
    College of Computing, joins other advanced parallel computers 
    as part of research into system dynamics related to software 
    design, input/output subsystems, data management, storage, 
    and interprocessor communication as computers scale upwards 
    from a handful of processors to several thousand.
    	 Research in the College, thus far, has been focused on 
    small to medium scale parallel computers with fewer than 
    1,000 processors where a critical issue is internal 
    communication among processors.   
    	 According to Dr. Kishore Ramachandran, associate 
    professor in the College, "The DECmpp 12000 can scale up to 
    16,000 processors allowing us to focus attention on 
    input/output and other architectural issues related to such 
    large scale parallelism.           
    	 "The DECmpp 12000 is our first SIMD style machine.  The 
    programming environment of the DECmpp 12000 makes it 
    extremely easy to introduce  parallel computing to our 
    students."  He added that the DECmpp 12000 was also an 
    affordable parallel machine, that was easily installed in 
    August and ready for September classes.
    	 Dr. Ramachandran, a 1990 NSF Presidential Young 
    Investigator, said the College has been engaged in 
    considerable research into distributed computing 
    architectures and is now aggressively looking at massively 
    parallel structures.  In addition to specific research in 
    this area, the DECmpp system is also being used for imaging, 
    computer vision and numerical algorithms.       
    	 Dr. Peter Freeman, Dean of the College of Computing 
    said, "The acquisition of the DECmpp 12000 is part our 
    ongoing effort to establish a high performance computing 
    experimentation laboratory in the College for the entire 
    campus. It was funded through this College and the School of 
    Electrical Engineering as well as a grant from Digital.  The 
    mission of the laboratory is to develop high performance 
    computing software and hardware by collaborating with 
    researchers from a number of application fields."  
    	 The DECmpp 12000 at Georgia Tech features 1024 4-bit 
    processors which can be expanded to more than 16,000.  Fully 
    expanded, the system can perform up to 1.2 billions of 
    floating point operations per second (GigaFLOPS) and 26,000 
    millions of instructions per second (MIPS).  Price for the 
    DECmpp 12000, which was introduced in August, range from 
    about $240,000 to $1.5 million. 
    	Digital Equipment Corporation, headquartered in Maynard, 
    Massachusetts, is the leading worldwide supplier of networked 
    computer systems and services.  Digital offers a full range 
    of computing solutions and systems integration for the entire 
    enterprise -- from the desktop to the data center.
                                ####
10. Press Release: New MPSG staff members
Joseph D. Codispoti		       
508-493-6767			       11/10/91 Sun 0:34:29 	 
DTN-223-6767			       11-Nov-1991 Mon 12:33
         DIGITAL EQUIPMENT ASSEMBLES TOP TECHNICAL TEAM
          TO IMPLEMENT ITS MASSIVELY PARALLEL STRATEGY
MAYNARD, MA -- November 19, 1991 --  Digital Equipment 
Corporation has recently named top technical professionals to 
lead the implementation of its strategy for leadership for 
massively parallel computing systems.  Digital announced its 
entry into this emerging market in April, and introduced its 
DECmpp 12000 systems series in August with the expressed strategy 
of accelerating the development and use of software to help 
stimulate the market.
    New senior staff include: Ching-Ching Ganley, Engineering 
Manager; Marco Annaratone, Technical Director; William Celmaster, 
Applications Consultant; Ajit Agrawal, Applications Consultant.  
    'We have assembled a group of extraordinary individuals who 
will each contribute significantly to our software strategy which 
is the key to the broad acceptance of massively parallel 
technology", said Charles Wilson, Manager of Digital's Massively 
Parallel Systems Group. "They join other top professionals 
already in place and they will work collaboratively with the 
extensive and talented resources within Digital's worldwide 
research and engineering organization."
    Ching-Ching Ganley has been with Digital for nearly 20 
years having increasing responsibilities in software engineering 
and engineering management with TOPS 10, display systems 
software and networking software including OSI and distributed 
systems.  In her most recent assignment she was responsible for 
strategic technology and planning functions for the Publishing 
and Distribution Technology Group.  Prior to joining Digital, she 
had been with Honeywell Information Systems in software 
engineering, development and consulting. Ching-Ching has a BS in 
mathematics from Pu Jen University {CITY, COUNTRY} an MS degree 
in mathematics from Clarkson College and MBA from Northeastern 
University.
    Marco Annaratone joins Digital from the Integrated Systems 
Laboratory, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich, 
Switzerland, where he has been an assistant professor of computer 
science.  Dr. Annaratone is a highly regarded computer scientist 
having conducted research in areas of VLSI architectures, 
massively parallel architectures, and, earlier, in the areas of 
speech compression and fault tolerance.  Widely published in 
technical journals and textbooks, he had previously been a 
researcher at Carnegie Mellon University and Politecnico di 
Milano where he earned the Dott. Ing. degree.
    William (Bill) Celmaster comes to Digital from BBN/Advanced 
Computers, Inc. where he was Chief Scientist and North American 
Analyst Manager.  Prior to BBN, Celmaster had been a consultant  
with Symbolics, Inc. and an assistant professor of physics at 
Northeastern University and University of Illinois.  His areas of 
expertise include parallel and vector programming, mathematical 
and scientific algorithms and fluency in 'C' and FORTRAN.  He 
holds a BS in mathematics and physics, and earned the MS and PhD 
degrees in physics at Harvard University.
    Ajit Agrawal had been with Thinking Machines Corporation for 
several years before joining Digital.  While there, he designed 
and implemented a parallel fault simulator for testing VLSI 
circuits for the Connection Machine and also designed many of the 
key parallel primitives for this machine.  He earned his 
undergraduate engineering degree at the Indian Institute of 
Technology, and the MS, Masters of Philosophy and PhD in Computer 
Science at Brown University. 
     Digital Equipment Corporation, headquartered in Maynard, 
Massachusetts, is the leading worldwide supplier of networked 
computer systems and services.  Digital offers a full range of 
computing solutions and systems integration for the entire 
enterprise -- from the desktop to the data center.
                              ####
11. Sales Update Draft - DECmpp FORTRAN article
         DIGITAL ANNOUNCES DECmpp FORTRAN COMPILER FOR DECmpp 12000 SYSTEMS
         
             							Ram Appalaraju
             							DTN 223 - 4170
             							MLO1-3/B11
         
         =====================================================================
         |   								     |
         |   o  FORTRAN Compiler for DECmpp 12000 Massively Parallel	     |
         |      Processing Systems					     |
         |   								     |
         |   o  FORTRAN 90 Array Extensions				     |
         |   								     |
         |   o  Complies with FORTRAN, ANSI X3.9-1978,			     |
         |   								     |
         |   o  Optimizes code for size of DECmpp 12000 system to deliver    |
         |      maximum performance				 	     |
         |   
         |   o  Available in February 1992				     |
         |   								     |
         =====================================================================
         
         Digital announces DECmpp FORTRAN for developing massively parallel 
         processing applications using DECmpp 12000 systems.  DECmpp FORTRAN 
         is an implementation of full language FORTRAN-77 with FORTRAN 90 
         array extensions.  The compiler complies with American National 
         standard for FORTRAN, ANSI X3.9-1978.  The product is available for 
         ordering now and will be shipped in February 1992.
         
         PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
         
         DECmpp FORTRAN is a layered software on RISC ULTRIX operating system 
         and makes DECmpp 12000 Series systems entirely transparent. The 
         DECmpp FORTRAN optimizing compiler automatically separates scalar and 
         parallel code, accesses different functional units as needed, and 
         integrates all communications, and I/O operations. Scalar code is 
         executed on the DECstation 5000 workstation and parallel code streams 
         are executed on the DECmpp 12000 Data Parallel Unit. The application 
         program executes with maximum efficiency because the compiler 
         optimizes data placement and minimizes data movement.   Additionally, 
         the built-in virtualization allows very large data structures to be 
         defined and allocated over a smaller physical processor array.  
         
         DECmpp FORTRAN FEATURES
         
         DECmpp FORTRAN includes the following features to ease the 
         development of data parallel programs:
              
         
         o  Functions for array operations.  
            - Arrays as first class objects
            - Assumed shape arrays
            - Array sectioning with subscript triplet notation and 
              vector-valued subscripts.
            - Array constructors
            - Array assignments
            - WHERE statement and construct
            - FORALL statement
            - Array expressions
            - Automatic arrays
         o  Intrinsic functions to enhance array operations in the
            following categories:
            - Inquiry functions.
            - Elemental functions 
            - Transformational functions
         
         o  WHERE statement
         
         o  FORALL statement
         
         o  Attribute specification in the type declaration. Supported 
            attributes are PARAMETER, DATA, INTENT, ARRAY, OPTIONAL, and SAVE.
         
         o  Control structures which include a CASE construct, a DO WHILE 
            construct, and extensions to the FORTRAN 77 DO construct.
         
         BENEFITS
         
         o  Delivers high-performance by optimizing user programs for 
            Processor Element array size transparent to users.
         
         o  Fully supported by DECmpp Parallel Programming Environment.
         
         o  Supports DECmpp Programming Language calls for programming X-net, 
            and Global Router.
         
         o  Supports DECmpp Image Processing Library using DECmpp Programming 
            Language.
         
         PRICING AND ORDERING
         
         DECmpp FORTRAN is a separately orderable layered product for the 
         DECmpp 12000 systems.  The SPD number for this product is 36.38.00.  
         USLP pricing is as follows:
         
         DEVELOPMENT SYSTEM  		DESCRIPTION
         
         QL-XT6A8-AA	     $10,000	Software License
         QA-XT6AA-GZ	     $432	Documentation
         QA-XT4AA-H8	     $335	CDROM Media
         QA-XT4AA-H5	     $225	TK50 Media
         
         DECmpp FORTRAN is distributed along with other DECmpp software 
         products in the same media.
         
         AVAILABILITY
         
         February 1, 1992
         
         REFERENCE
         
         SALES UPDATE issue September 16, 1991.  Vol. 23 No. 4
         DECmpp 12000 Opens Massively Parallel Computing
         
11.  How To Access DECmpp User Documentation
     ---------------------------------------
From:	RDVAX::RODON "Rob Rodon, MLO1-3/B68; 223-2715  11-Dec-1991 1223" 11-DEC-1991 12:29:20.45
To:	@DECMPP_ALL.DIS
CC:	SUE_D,RODON
Subj:	DECmpp FT1.0 Documentation Available
        Hello everybody...
        I am pleased to announce that the DECmpp FT1.0 doc set is complete
        and available in both hardcopy (on RDVAX::) and online (on both
	MPSG:: and RDVAX::) formats.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
        The hardcopy PostScript files are located on:
        RDVAX::SYS$PUBROOT:[PUBLIC.MPSG.DECMPP_DOCS]
	There is a file named AA_DOC_DESCRIPTIONS.TXT which lists each
	manual title and the associated PostScript file.
	For those of you who are not familiar with VMS, this is how you
	can print out a manual:
	1) Enter SET DEF MPSG$PUBLIC at the prompt.
	2) Enter SET DEF [.DECMPP_DOCS] at the prompt.
	3) Enter DIR to get a directory listing.
	4) Enter TYPE/PAGE AA_DOC_DESCRIPTIONS.TXT to read the file.
	5) Select the manuals that you want to print.
	6) Enter this command for each manual:
        PRI/NOTI/QUE=[printername]/PARA=(DATA_TYPE=POST,SIDES=2) filename.PS
	I do not recommend printing these manuals on LN03 printers.  They
	take a long, long time to finish.
	Thanks,
	Rob
 | 
|  |                                                  D I G I T A L
                                           -     ____  ____  ____   ____
                                           -    / / / /___/ /____  /  __
                                           -   / / / /      ____/ /____/
                                           Innovative Systems ...
					       ... for Innovative Customers
						
MPSG NEWSLETTER #7
                 Massively Parallel Systems Group - February Update
                        ***Digital Internal Use Only***
Attached is the seventh update from MPSG on Digital's MPP program and 
plans. Please let Darlene Camuti (RDVAX::CAMUTI) know if you would 
like to be deleted from this distribution list or if you know of 
someone who should be added. 
                               Contents
			       --------
	       1.  Quick status and update on DECmpp
	       2.  Product positioning
	       3.  Creative DECmpp selling
	       4.  DECmpp training 
	       5.  DECmpp applications
	       6.  Upcoming DECmpp events
	       7.  Benchmarking
	       8.  DECmpp demos
	       9.  Data Parallel Research Initiative
	      10.  MPP consultants
	      A1.  High Performance Fortran Alliance meeting notes
	      A2.  DECmpp contacts
	
1. Program Summary
   ---------------
DECmpp is Digital's entry into the massively parallel
processing market. The DECmpp 12000 is based on a
single-instruction, multiple data (SIMD) architecture. The
products, prices and availability were announced on August
20, 1991. These products are currently on Digital's
corporate price list, carry the Digital logo and are serviced 
by Digital worldwide. 
MPP systems offer both the maximum computing performance 
available and the maximum performance at a given price 
level for applications involving large arrays of data. 
Examples of these applications include database searching
and sorting, computational chemistry, automobile design,
statistical analysis, text retrieval, signal and image
processing, financial analysis, and seismic processing. 
Digital's strategy is sell midrange MPP systems which
integrate into the customers' computing environment. This 
integration is accomplished by extending NAS and the
Cohesion toolset to embrace our MPP systems. As part of 
Digital's commitment to MPP we have assembled a team of MPP 
experts to extend Digital's CASE toolset to apply it to MPP 
software development and to port applications to DECmpp 
systems. 
Our DECmpp platforms range from 1,024 to 16,384 processors 
per system and are priced from $250,000 to $1.5M. Peak
performance of the large system is 1.3 Gigaflops. 
==========================================================================
         
         DECmpp Fortran is out!
         
         January 20, 1992 sales update contains the article announcing the 
         DECmpp Fortran V1.0.  This is Digital's first product based on 
	 the Fortran 90 standard. The SPD for this software will be in the 
	 SPD database by Feb 1, 1992.  Draft copy of all the DECmpp software 
	 product SPDs are in the RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:[.SPD] directory.
	 Digital is also leading the effort on a High Performance Fortran 
	 building upon Fortran 90. Read more about this in Bert Halstead's 
	 trip report later in this newsletter. 
==========================================================================
New MPSG Marketing staff
Mike Anuta joins MPSG as Technical Marketing Consultant
responsible for DECmpp business applications and
opportunities in Washington DC government accounts.  Mike 
brings 11 years experience in image processing at NASA, the 
Defense Intelligence Agency and Digital Equipment. 
Mike Fishbein joins MPSG as Product Manager reporting to Ram
Appalaraju.  Mike has been with Digital since 1986, in
Software Services as Project Leader, and most recently as
Project Manager at New Ventures Group.   Mike is responsible
for DECmpp 12000 products (Hardware and Software). 
==========================================================================
Coming attractions:
We are currently evaluating the possibility of offering a
smaller scale version of the DECmpp system, which would be
less expandable and priced starting from $125,000. If you
have definite prospects for this class of system please call
your MPSG regional sales marketing manager listed in
appendix A2. 
 2. Product Positioning
    -------------------
Now that Digital sells Cray's YMP-EL and is preparing 
for the introduction of Alpha systems, it is important to
understand how to position DECmpp systems among RISC and
vector products. 
DECmpp systems offer the highest performance for a given 
price level for applications that map well to MPP. Current
performance is up to 1.3 GF. Significantly, DECmpp software
is a full member of Digital's NAS and Cohesion product
lines. Its operating system is ULTRIX, it uses DECwindows,
the CASE environment will be moving to DEC FUSE and all
networking is based on standard Digital products. The DECmpp
customers' growth path is within the Digital product line
which will grow to also include MIMD MPP. 
Applications which map well to MPP include:
Text retrieval				financial modeling
large-scale statistical analysis	computational fluid dynamics
structural analysis			algorithm research
computational chemistry			seismic analysis
image and signal processing		reservoir analysis
RISC systems (including Alpha in the future) offer medium
high performance over the widest range of applications,
especially those which are less data-intensive. RISC offers 
higher performance than MPP for applications which are less
data intensive such as: software development, electronic
mail, office automation, personal productivity, MRP and
numerically-intensive applications that do not involve
arrays of data. Performance of high end Alpha systems (based
on EV-4 to be announced next calendar year) will be in the
range of approximately 70-150 MFLOPS per processor. 
VECTORS offer an attractive compromise between highest
speed (of MPP) and the widest range of applications (of 
RISC). Many scientific applications have already been
optimized for vector processors. Data-intensive applications
which do not fit well into the MPP application categories
listed above may fit vector processors such as the VAX
6000VP and VAX 9000VP. 
The YMP-EL will be a good fit for customers who require full 
Cray YMP compatibility and need to run a range of highly 
vectorized UNIX applications. Maximum performance of the
YMP-EL is 133 MFLOPS per CPU, up to four CPUs. 
3. Creative DECmpp Selling
   -----------------------
We have received feedback from sales reps who have found that
DECmpp provides a refreshing entry into accounts requiring
performance previously beyond Digital's capabilities. Since
DECmpp runs ULTRIX and is fully compatible with NAS it helps
them sell the full range of Digital solutions. 
We've also found that customers often want to try out these 
innovative solutions at their sites prior to their purchase. 
MPSG is now offering a "try and buy" program for a limited 
time. If you feel you have a qualified DECmpp prospect who 
needs to verify the DECmpp solution prior to placing a purchase 
order, please call your MPSG regional sales marketing manager 
(Appendix A2) to see if our "try and buy" program is
appropriate for your customer. 
Qualifying Your Customer For "Try and Buy"
Target DECmpp customers typically have 1-3 large, time
consuming computer applications which require hours or days
to execute on traditional systems. Qualified customers have
a funded project ($250,000 to $1.5M) and either intend to
use or test a DECmpp application code or they intend to
develop their own MPP software. These customers must be
willing to state their acceptance criteria to be met
in order to place their order. 
DECmpp Sales Tools
------------------
         
         DECmpp PRESENTATIONS
         
         MPSG public directory (RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:[.PRESENTATIONS]) now has 
         several presentations newly created for DECmpp sales and marketing 
         training. The presentations are all in postscript and ASCII formats.  
         
        CUSTOMER_PRESENTATION.PS;2
	CUSTOMER_PRESENTATION.DOC;2
	DATA_PAR_PROG_AND_DEVEL.PS;1
        DATA_PAR_PROG_AND_DEVEL.DOC;1
	DECMPP_DATA-PARALLEL_COMPUTING_OVERVIEW.PS;1
        DECMPP_DATA-PARALLEL_COMPUTING_OVERVIEW.DOC;1
	DECMPP_PRODUCTS.PS;2
        DECMPP_PRODUCTS.DOC;1
	DECMPP12000_SYSTEM_ARCHITECTURE.PS;1
        DECMPP12000_SYSTEM_ARCHITECTURE.DOC;1
	INTERNAL_PRESENTATION.PS;1         
        INTERNAL_PRESENTATION.DOC;1
Additional Sales Tools
----------------------
	o DECmpp info sheet (EC-F1545-15)
	  These info sheets are orderable through Northboro 
	  Publishing and Circulation Services.
	o Digital High Performance Computing brochure (EC-E1145-57)
	o DECmpp configuration guide 
	  (RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:decmpp_configuration_guide.txt)
	o Notesfile - RDVAX::DECMPP
	o Hotline mail account - RDVAX::DECMPP
	o Product manuals - 
	  in the public directory: RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:decmpp_docs.dir
	o Demos - available on request, software available on 
	  RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:decmpp_demos.tar
4. Training 
   --------
         ANNOUNCEMENT OF DECmpp 12000 Customer Training
         
         First DECmpp 12000 customer training is scheduled for March 3 - 6, 
         1992 (at Washington D.C.) Digital Educational Services Training 
         Center at Landover, MD.  The part number for the course is 
         EY-K018E-L0.  Please include the training in the DECmpp 12000 
         quotations.  Subsequent customer training courses will be offered in 
         different geographies.   The training will also be given at customer 
         sites.  For registration information for March 3-6 training please 
         contact Digital Educational Services directly.  For information on 
         training customers in different geographies (US, Europe, and GIA), 
         please contact Ram Appalaraju @MLO (RDVAX::APPALARAJU).
         
         DECmpp Product Training:
         
         MPSG is offering three different courses for supporting DECmpp 12000 
         products:
         
             COURSE		COURSE NUMBER	INTENDED AUDIENCE
         
         1. DECmpp 12000 	EY-H997E-S0	Field Service/Customer Service
            Software Training
         
         2. DECmpp 12000 System EY-H998E-S0	Field Service/Customer Service
            Maintenance Training
         
         3. DECmpp System 	EY-K018E-L0	DECmpp Customers, Prospects,
            Software Training			Digital Sales Support, PSSL.
             					March 3-6, 1992. Washington DC
         
         4. DECmpp 12000 Sales			Digital Sales, Sales Support,
            and Marketing			PSSL, High-end Drivers, 
             					Marketing..
         
         
         For information on courses 1, 2 and 3 please consult VTX or 
	 contact educational services directly. DECmpp 12000 Sales 
	 and Marketing course is being offered local to sales geographies.  
	 If there are eight (8) or more students interested in this 
	 training contact your regional MPSG sales marketing manager 
	 (listed at end of this newsletter) for scheduling convenient dates.
         
         
         NAME:             DECmpp SOFTWARE TRAINING (VENDOR TRAINING)
         COURSE CODE:	   EY-H997E-S0
         DATES:		   Call
         DURATION:	   4 DAYS
         FORMAT:	   LECTURE/LAB
         LIMIT:		   10
         TUITION:	   $1,000.00
         START TIME:	   9:00 A.M.
         
         
         NAME:             DECmpp SYSTEMS MAINTENANCE and DECmpp DISK ARRAY 
                           MAINTENANCE TRAINING (VENDOR TRAINING)
         COURSE CODE:	   EY-H998E-S0
         DATES:		   Call
         DURATION:	   5 DAYS
         FORMAT:	   LECTURE/LAB
         LIMIT:		   6
         TUITION:	   $2,082.50
         START TIME:	   8:30 A.M. (Please note earlier start time.)
         
         DECmpp 12000 Sales and Marketing Training
         
         COURSE DESCRIPTION
         
         DAY 1
         
         FOCUS: Sales and Sales Support.
         
         - Introduction to MPSG and goals of training 
         - MPP style of computing, Digital strategy and plans  
         - DECmpp 12000 products 
         - DECmpp 12000 positioning
         - DECmpp 12000 Configuration and Quoting
         - Selling Vs. Competition
         - MPP Applications
         - DECmpp Product Futures
         
         DAY 2
         
         FOCUS: Sales Support, PSSL, High-end Drivers, Consultants
         Prerequisite: Attend Day 1
         
         - DECmpp 12000 Architecture
         - DECmpp 12000 Hardware Description
         - DECmpp 12000 Software 
         - Details of Parallel Applications
         - DECmpp Programming Examples
         
         DAY 3
         
         - Customer Seminars
         - 1 x 1 Consulting
5. Applications
   ------------
The following are off-the-shelf codes available for DECmpp:
SAS/TM ACCESS (CHISQ Ltd)
This software provides the large-scale statistical analysis 
capabilities of Table-maker integrated into the popular SAS 
statistical software package. It provides very high speed
statistical database functions such as data correlation,
averaging and histogramming. The package effectively
replaces mainframes from IBM, ICL, CDC which are currently
being used for statistical analysis. The developer, Ian
Taylor (reachable at dtn 849-3614) located in Reading,
England, is available to provide presales support and
customer consulting for this application. 
ELEXIR (Third Eye Software, Inc.)
Elexir is a toolkit for building information retrieval 
systems which achieve unprecedented performance for 
similarity searches of unstructured text in applications 
including legal and financial services, wire information 
services, message routing and customer support. Elexir on 
the DECmpp 12000 is capable of searching 8 million documents 
per second. 
Radioss (Mecalog) 
Radioss is a car crash simulation code which uses the finite 
element method. It achieves 1/3 the performance of a YMP-2E
processor on the DECmpp 4K processor system. This code will 
be shown running on the DECmpp system at the Paris 
supercomputing show in February. 
Codes in process
----------------
The following is a sample of the most promising codes to be 
ported to DECmpp systems over the next 3-9 months. We'd be 
glad to work with customers who are interested in using 
DECmpp systems to run these codes immediately. 
CHARMm (Molecular Simulations, Inc)
The CHARMm software package models the static and dynamic 
behavior of molecular systems. The code uses empirical 
energy functions to compute energies, find minimum-energy 
conformations, determine the energy cost of deformations and 
simulate vibrational motions. The code is applicable to 
small organic and drug molecules, peptides and proteins, 
nucleic acids and other biopolymers, and a variety 
of synthetic polymers and inorganic materials. 
FIDAP (Fluid Dynamics International, Inc)
FIDAP uses the finite-element method to simulate classes of 
incompressible fluid flows. The code provides a range of 
possible analyses, including isothermal and non-isothermal, 
Newtonian and non-Newtonian flows; turbulent flows; free, 
forced or mixed convection flows; periodic; separating or 
recirculating flows; swirling flows; creeping flows; flows 
in rotating frames of reference; flows with a free or moving 
surface; and surface tension, gradient-driven thermal flows. 
The following codes are under investigation (for short term
conversion, as feasibility is verified). 
o Amber
o Gaussian 92
o Xplor
o AVL/FIRE
o Mathcad
o IMSL
o DYNA3D
o AVS
6. Upcoming DECmpp events
====================================================================
         
         DECworld UPDATE
         
         MPSG will be participating at DECworld 92 at the High Performance 
         Technical Computing Center, and the Innovation Center.  DECmpp 12000 
         system will be displayed at both these places.  There will be four 
         demo stations on the exhibit floor demonstrating brand new 
         applications and ISV products.  Also, MPSG staff will be delivering 
         session presentation every day.  MPSG technical and Marketing staff 
         will be available throughout the event to help consult and close 
         business.  We expect to show our forthcoming 
	 generations in at a private sandbox suite and will be 
	 prepared to host customer visits and deliver PIDs in the 
	 suite. Stay tuned for further information.
DECmpp Event Schedule
---------------------
February 4	GIA VAX Champions Training
February 12-14	Supercomputing Europe, Paris
March 11-18	Hannover Fair CeBIT '92 (will display DYNA3D)
April 6-8	Data Parallel Research Initiative Symposium, Boston
April 22-24 	Supercomputing Japan
Apr 27-May 15	DECworld - including DECmpp sessions and demos
May 4-8		DECUS - Atlanta (DECmpp talks and demonstrations)
7. Benchmarking
   ------------
The MPSG group has allocated resources for providing performance benchmarks
for potential customer applications. We are committed to dealing with the
benchmark requests in a time-critical fashion. All benchmark requests
must go through one of the MPSG Regional Sales Marketing Managers (see contact
list at end of this newsletter). The benchmark efforts will
be coordinated by Ajit Agrawal (DTN 223-2383, RDVAX::AGRAWAL). 
The benchmark code can be sent either on a TK50/tar format media, 
or by electronic mail. The request should be accompanied by:
   1) The name, phone number, and email address of: 
      a) Digital Sales contact
      b) Digital Sales Support contact
      c) A technical contact from the customer
   2) Expected date of closing business
   3) Date by which the benchmark is needed 
   4) Expected configuration of the DECmpp machine for which the benchmark is 
      requested
   5) Performance expectation of the customer/salesperson.
We will provide a preliminary evaluation of the benchmark application
within 2 days of receiving the benchmark. The code provided must run
on the DECstation 5000, during the benchmarking process we will
optimize for DECmpp The evaluation will consist of the following
information: 
    a) An estimate of the performance for the benchmark.
    b) The number of man-weeks required for demonstrating the above performance.
    c) The turnaround time by which the MPSG will be able to complete the
       benchmark.
At the end of this preliminary evaluation phase, plans for further action will
be made in consultation with your sales team.
8. DECmpp demonstrations
   ---------------------
This update on DECmpp demonstrations is provided by George Anagnostou. 
          Summary of Current Demo Status:
1) RESIDENCE: All demos reside on the DECstation 5000 named "mpsg"
under the directory "/usr/mpsg2/georgea/mpdemos/ds".
The executables can be invoked on a DECmpp 12000 named "mpdemo" which 
is aware of all "mpsg" file systems.  A subdirectory called "scripts"
gives a short description of each demo and how to run it. 
2)  REQUIREMENTS FOR USAGE:  To ensure smooth execution of
the software, the environment variable DISPLAY should be set
to your local workstation name: 
          setenv DISPLAY local_workstation_name:0.0 
Furthermore, the session manager should update its security 
list to include the system "mpdemo" so that it 
can open X-display terminals on the local host.  The local
display could be any X-device, but some of the demos
look better in color, so a color terminal is more desirable.
Demos:
                  I)  VOLUME RENDERING:  A very nice demo has been
          provided by University of North Carolina on ray
          tracing and volume rendering on a collection of images
          obtained by Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Imaging.  It is a 3-D
          representation of a human head and the data
          exists in two pixel (or voxel, rather) sizes:  128 and 192;
          for anything less than 4k machine, the smaller data set is
          recommended.  Once the initial window is
          opened, the image can be manipulated with the left and right
          mouse buttons.  Available functions are, rotation, translation,
          light source orientation, and opacity levels.  The executable 
          resides under "unc2.0/vol" and is invoked by typing "vol 128.im" 
          or "vol 192.im".
                  II)  COLOR SORTING:  Another impressive demo has been
          contributed by U of North Carolina as well,
          where a particular color pattern is searched based on an
          initial random distribution. The intermediate color states are
          displayed on the  graphics window as they
          are updated by the back end.  There are three different
          executables based on three different sorting algorithms.  A nice
          visual effect is  obtained by running all
          three executables to see the particular color patterns picked
          by each algorithm.  This demo resides under "unc2.0/vis" and is
          invoked by typing fla, xnet, and srm for
          the three algorithms, respectively.
                  III) RADAR TRACKING:  A not-so-exciting application of
          object detection and tracking from a
          collection of raw radar data across a pre-defined area of
          interest. The parallel algorithm searches
          through the data, filters out the noise,
          determines the real objects, and tracks them.   There 
          are three different executables in this directory with different
          domains searched through in each case.  The executables reside in
          "tracking" and run by just calling the name of each executable.
                  IV) SLALOM:  A non-graphical demonstration of the time
          it takes for the solution of linear equation based on the radiosity 
	  solution benchmark developed by John Gustafson.  This application 
          should be avoided unless there is a specific request.
                  V) MPIPL:  This is a demonstration of image filtering
          using the Maspar Image processing
          library.  The application processes various satellite images of
          cities  around the world and applies FFT, and
          other filters to them.  For more impressive
          results the demo should be run from a color terminal and the
          mouse should be clicked on the graphics
          window for correct color representation.  The executable
          resides in "mpipl" and is invoked by saying "mpipl -p city"
          where city can be any of the following: marseille, paris,
          riyadh, dakar, land, saturn etc.
                  VI) LINPACK:  Not a flashy demo, and should only be run
          if there is a specific request for it.
          As the name implies, this executable solves linear systems of
          equations and displays the time it took the DPU to complete the
          job.  The demo resides under "linpack" and is run by typing lups.
                  VII) MANDELBROT.  This is a nice implementation of the
          search for a Mandelbrot set on a 400x400
          pixel square cutaway of the plane of complex numbers.  The
          application starts from some default position of the cutaway and
          assigns a complex number to every pixel
          which in turn gets assigned to every processor on the DPU.
          Once the graphics window is painted, the user can change the
          position of the square  or zoom into the plane by clicking
          the left and middle mouse buttons, respectively.
          The right mouse button is used to reset the whole plane.  The
          time between repaints on the display window is the time it
          took the DPU to compute which of the 160000
          complex numbers are in the set and which are not.  The demo
          resides in "mandelbrot" and is invoked by typing "mb".
                  IX) TIN-CAN ON TURN TABLE:  The title speaks for itself.
          This application makes use of Marc Picart
          image processing library which is still under development
          in collaboration with Thompson CSF of France.   The graphics
          window does not  make use of color.  It displays a can 
          positioned on a turn-table which is
          rotating.  The location of the executable is under "crl".
                  X)  ARCO MIGRATION CODE:  This is a rather dull
          application of seismic migration.  The
          display window shows the propagation of an acoustic wave through
          a volume.  The discretization is a grid of 256x256x256 allocated
          at the back end.  This demo should be
          displayed only to customers related to the Oil & Gas industry.
          The code will be available starting Feb. 7th under the
          directory "arco".
                                  Work in Progress
                                  ----------------
          The following is a list of demos that are planned for the DECmpp
          system in the future.  Some are more long-term opportunities
          than others; the individual status for each one is given below:
                  I) SAS - TABLEMAKER:  This is a nice application of
          database searching  executed in
          parallel. Table-maker is a superset of SAS (Statistical Analysis
          Software) which runs on the DPU and can therefore, be considered
          as a  turbocharger to SAS.
          The demo unfortunately, requires the installation of SAS
          which in turn needs a license key to execute.  The demo copy of
          the software expires in a month at which point we will
          decide to extend the license.  
                  II) RADIOSS:  A crash simulation package by Mecalog in
          France.  The port to the DECmpp system is
          almost complete and will demonstrable by the end of January.
          The demo data set will most likely be the crashing of a steel
          bar.
                  III) ELEXIR:  A text retrieval software application
          provided by Third Eye Software.  Robin Young is
          the contact person for the port.
                  IV)  AVS:  A superb visualization package where some of
          its compute-intesive modules are ported on
          the DECmpp 12000.   Discussions are currently undergoing
          for New Mexico State University to do the port which will most
          likely to complete by the end of summer.
                  V) CAT-SCAN RECONSTRUCTION:  An application from
          Washington University in St. Louis.  Discussions are undergoing 
          for them to get a DECmpp system.  Their area of expertise is in 
          image processing for medical applications.
                  VI)  FIDAP: A fluid dynamics package by FDI in Evanston,
          Illinois.  Their main linear equation solver
          will be running on the DPU with all the graphics post-
          processing performed at the front-end.  This is scheduled to take
          place around the month of April.
                  VII)  DYNA3D:  A port performed by Joseph Pareti in
          Germany and scheduled to complete by end of February.  The demo 
          problem will most likely be a complete car crash simulation.
9. Data Parallel Research Initiative
   ---------------------------------
The Data Parallel Research Initiative is a Digital External Research 
Program to promote and fund research and software development in the 
field of massively parallel computing. As part of DPRI Digital funded 
research institutions worldwide and provided Digital front end systems 
to SIMD systems from MasPar and Thinking Machines. Digital will be 
sponsoring a symposium this April in Boston at which DPRI researchers
will present their results. 
Overviews of the research work of each institution is available 
on-line in RDVAX::MPSG$PUBLIC:DPRI.MEM
Institution			Area of Research
-----------			----------------
Florida State University	Theoretical High Energy Physics, 
				Experimental High Energy Physics, 
				Ocean Modeling, Economics, 
				Theoretical Condensed Matter Physics 
				and Materials Science, the Human Genome 
				Initiative, Chemistry, 
				Workstation Environment
Texas A&M University 		Simulation of petroleum reservoirs,
		                Modeling of vehicular traffic flow, 
				Neural networks
Harvard Univ.			Parallel Implementation of Dynamical 
				Systems for Intelligent Machines
McGill University		Parallel-Iterative Algorithms for 
				Image Reconstruction Analysis, and 
				Interpretation
                                 
Toyohashi University of Tech.	Data-Parallel Extensions to a Common 
				Lisp System
                  
Ecole Normale Superieure de Lyon
				Implementation of a general purpose 
				dictionary machine on a data parallel 
				computer
CSIRO				Parallel Algorithms for Interactive Analysis 
				and Visualization of Spatial Data
University of Bath		Algorithms and Data Structure for Symbolic 
				and Numeric Computation
The University of Akron		Software Automation for Advanced Parallel 
				Computers
Bellcore			Selected Parallel Sparse Matrix Algorithms
Universitaet Stuttgart 		Programming Environments for Massively 
				Parallel Programming and Neural Networks
Purdue University		Automatic Generation of Massive Parallelism
The Johns Hopkins University	Data Parallel Algorithms for the
				Numerical Modeling of Semiconductor Devices
                        	Boundary Contour System (BCS)/Feature 
				Contour System (FCS) Model for Smart
				Robotic Sensors
                        	A Parallel Algorithm for Sensor Array 
				Signal Processing
University of Vienna		Development of programming environments
				for parallel systems
The Tokyo University, 		Massive Parallel Database Processing/Massive 
Institute for Industrial 	Parallel Image Processing
Science
Carnegie Mellon University	Application of data parallelism to computer 
				vision
                   
University of Oregon		Genetic and Demographic Simulations of 
				Endangered Species
LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY 	SIMULATION AND VISUALIZATION OF COMPLEX
AND A & M COLLEGE               PHYSICAL SYSTEMS
University of Melbourne		Development of Data-Parallel Applications
Utrecht University		A Problem  Solving Environment  for  Ocean  
				Circulation Simulation on Massively 
				Parallel Computers.
University of Washington	Data-Parallel Systems, Applications, and 
				Algorithms
Princeton University		Parallel algorithm development for (a) Monte 
				Carlo simulation of disordered materials and 
				related optimization problems and 
				(b) Mathematical modeling of semiconductor 
				device structures.
Florida Atlantic University	Monte Carlo simulation of phase transformation 
				in two-dimensional and layered systems
IRISA, Campus de Beaulieu	Portability parallel software development tools
INSA, LMFN 			Modeling of Turbulent Combustion in Supersonic 
				Flows- Application to Hypersonic Propulsion
9. DECmpp consultants
   ------------------
MPSG has begun to line up outside consultants who are available to help
Digital and our customers port and optimize their applications on DECmpp
systems. Below is a list of some of these consultants. Please contact your 
regional MPSG Sales Marketing Manager (see back of this issue) for more 
information on this topic. 
 submitted by Bill Celmaster  - January 30, 1992
Geoffrey Fox (Syracuse)
Matthew Whitten (U.T. Austin)
John Campbell (private)
Joel Saltz (ICASE)
Rob Schreiber (RIACS)
Rich Brower (BU)
Gary Montry (private)
Alan Edelman (Berkeley)
Dongarra/ORNL (U Tenn)
Oliver McBryan (U Colo)
Kuch and Associates (KAI)
Henno Allik (BBN)
Grover Cleveland (private)
Joel Mannion  (private)
Scientific Visualization Associates
Scientific Computing Associates
Visionary Systems 
A1. High Performance Fortran Alliance Meeting Notes
    -----------------------------------------------
Digital is helping to set the standard for high performance or data
parallel Fortran. This effort is building on Fortran 90, with
particular attention paid to a set of directives for optimizing codes
to MPP architectures. Ken Kennedy of Rice University, one of the
foremost authorities in compiler research, accepted our invitation to
chair this effort. 
Digital's view of the standard was presented informally at
Supercomputing '91, and the attached trip report shows that Digital's
leadership effort is being very well received. 
As with all material in this newsletter, this report is 
strictly for Digital's internal use only. Please feel free 
to contact your MPSG regional sales marketing manager to set
up discussions about high performance Fortran with your
customers. 
	29-JAN-1992 10:14:17.69                                    
From:   CRL::HALSTEAD "Bert Halstead"
To:     mpsg::ganley, rdvax::nilsson
CC:     tle::harris, tle::whitlock
Subj:   trip report -- High Performance Fortran Forum, 1/27 - 1/28/92
      
High Performance Fortran Alliance Meeting Report
------------------------------------------------
This is a quick report of my impressions of the inaugural High
Performance Fortran Forum meeting, held in Houston near Rice
University on 1/27-1/28.  About 100 people attended the meeting,
including representatives from every well-known massively parallel
hardware vendor (for example, Intel, Cray Research, Thinking Machines,
MasPar, IBM, Motorola, nCube, Alliant, Kubota Pacific, Kendall Square
Research, and Convex were all represented; but AMT, Wavetracer, Tera,
and Sun were not), many universities, many government labs, and a
surprisingly large number of Europeans (I'd say there were about five)
who had traveled all the way to Houston for the meeting.  The subject
of this meeting was clearly of great interest to a wide community.
The agenda for the first day featured 30- to 60-minute presentations by
a whole range of parties: Digital, Cray, the Rice University Fortran D
project, Hans Zima of the University of Vienna, Jorge Sanz of the IBM
Almaden research lab, Convex, and Thinking Machines. 
With such a huge number of attendees, and such a plethora of
presentations, there was a great risk of the meeting being completely
unfocused and unproductive.  However, given these initial disadvantages,
the meeting went as well as anybody could have hoped, both for the
prospects of converging on a de facto High Performance Fortran standard,
and for Digital's role in defining that standard.  This was due in no
small part to the strong leadership exercised by Ken Kennedy (the
convenor of the meeting) and to the very positive reception accorded to
the presentation given by our own Dave Loveman. 
While the number of presentations given might suggest that the HPF Forum
would be faced with more proposals than it could succeed in dealing
with, the truth was not so grim.  Only three speakers -- Dave Loveman,
TMC's Guy Steele, and Chuck Koelbel of Rice University -- addressed
themselves directly to the topic of what language definition the HPF
Forum should actually adopt.  Digital's proposal was received exactly
the way we intended -- as a minimal base that we could all quickly agree
on, and then go on to debate more controversial matters.  The only
serious controversy was over our embracing full Fortran 90 (there was a
lot of sentiment favoring including only a subset of Fortran 90, or even
just FORTRAN 77).  Aside from minor nits, I didn't hear any substantial
or serious disagreement with accepting our proposals as at least a
subset to build on.  And Dave's presentation (which was scheduled right
at the beginning of the meeting) was received extremely well, as setting
just the right tone for the rest of the meeting. 
The Thinking Machines presentation, by Guy Steele, was also very good,
and contained a number of good ideas (though generally not as polished
and finished as ours) delivered in the spirit of, "Digital's proposal
will be great if we can just fix these few things." The tone of both his
written and oral comments was very constructive.  Chuck Koelbel also
took a very constructive point of view, presenting the "wish list" of
the Fortran D project but also pointing out areas for compromise. 
Tom MacDonald of Cray presented their programming model, not
as a proposal for the HPF Forum to adopt, but just to let us know what
Cray is up to.  Hans Zima gave a good presentation about Vienna Fortran
but it didn't really appear that he expected the HPF Forum to adopt
Vienna Fortran -- he just wanted us to know about the ideas that he
has been exploring.  Jorge Sanz of IBM Almaden gave a presentation of
some of his own research ideas -- not very fully developed yet,
certainly not an "IBM proposal for HPF".  Joel Williamson of
Convex gave a presentation which consisted of pointing out the things 
he didn't like about each of the other proposals, without offering any
proposal of his own. The second day of the meeting began with Ken
Kennedy taking the floor to discuss how the HPF Forum process should
proceed from this point onward. He stated his sincere desire to have a
small working group, consisting of members who were willing to commit
to attending nine or so meetings over the next 12 months.  He said he
wanted to limit attendance to only one representative per company or
organization.  (It appears that the working group will consist of
about 30 people -- large, but manageable if Ken sticks to his activist
style.)  He mentioned the Digital proposal several times as a great
starting point, and complimented Dave Loveman both publicly and
privately for setting out so clearly the issues we should focus on. 
(Dave's slide full of boxes showing all the different Fortran subsets
came in for particular praise.) 
In the break that followed, Ken indicated that he wanted Dave to lead
off the next HPF Forum meeting by again reminding everybody of what the
issues are.  Ken also wants Dave, Guy Steele, and maybe some other
people to get together before the next HPF Forum meeting and work out
the details of (ideally) a joint proposal to put before the Forum.  As a
measure of Ken's commitment to this process, he wants to schedule at
least one such meeting at a time when he can fly up to Boston to
participate in it himself. 
There are still many things that could go wrong with the process, but it
is very encouraging that the three main purveyors of serious proposals
-- Digital, TMC, and Rice -- are all so close to agreement and appear
willing and able to work together.  It is also very encouraging to see
Ken Kennedy's leadership talents and interest in making this project
successful.  Moreover, to have a figure as respected and impartial as
Ken Kennedy choose to single out Digital's contribution to the Forum for
as much praise as he did, before the distinguished and influential
audience that attended this week's meeting, has to help a lot in
convincing people that we are serious about Fortran for massively
parallel processing and we do know what we're doing.  Finally, Ken
clearly sees Digital's role as central in the evolution of the HPF
specification, and this also meets our objectives. 
							-Bert
A2. DECmpp Contacts
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