![]() ![]() Released in 1993, the Indy was a light-blue with a crooked pizza box type case and was SGI's attempt to get the masses to use their workstations for all types of graphics work, be it 3D or 2D. The Indy was SGI's replacement for the beloved Indigo and was placed as its low-end workstation. ~~ Silicon Graphics Advertising Slogan ~~ In which case you got all of 16MB RAM and 384MB of HDU! Is, it's not the low-end model) either way, it's close. postscript - this may not be a first generation Indy (or if it ![]() Only the ECOFF executable format and the Irix EFS filesystem,īut later ones are a bit more worldly-wise. Early Indy PROMs (like that of my machine) understand Red Hat 7.x see also MIPS Linux node for resources) that are out there Hence this is the first step to installing some of the Want to temporarily use a different kernel or kernel configuration (and have a TFTP without the need for anything on the hard disk - especially handy if you One of the cute features is the PROM, which does network boot and You'd want the 64-bit Irix 6.3 (or better) on them, not least because it's Job I took on: 19" monitor, half-gig SCSI HDU, Irix 5.2, Ind圜am (nowadays I got one of the early-Indy machines as a desktop box with the post-graduate The OS- went through numerous revisions due to bugs we found in it, ( Indigo) machines that were in the undergrad labs ![]() Possibly the first few Indys in the UK (this was also true of SGI's predecessor As a Leeds University graduate, I got to see what were ![]()
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