1994-08-09 - No more NSA supra-computer?

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From: Ben.Goren@asu.edu
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Message Hash: de2a6e9956f917d620baa2996b5fbf6fe332da0ec223dbc60bcd762931863498
Message ID: <aa6d7b6b080210237d91@[129.219.97.131]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1994-08-09 18:37:43 UTC
Raw Date: Tue, 9 Aug 94 11:37:43 PDT

Raw message

From: Ben.Goren@asu.edu
Date: Tue, 9 Aug 94 11:37:43 PDT
To: cypherpunks@toad.com
Subject: No more NSA supra-computer?
Message-ID: <aa6d7b6b080210237d91@[129.219.97.131]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Yesterday I was talking with a friend, and the subject of supercomputers
came up. Naturally, I mentioned the NSA 7000 Y-MP equivalent and Gunter
Ahrendt's list of supercomputers worldwide (finger
gunter@yarrow.wt.uwa.edu.au). My friend sent me a note this morning saying
that he couldn't find that machine on Gunter's list; sure enough, it's been
removed.

Anybody know what happened to this machine? Did they lose funding? Decide
it's not worth it? Is there some sort of subterfuge involved?

It would be nice to think the Congress killed it, or decided to give the
computer to a university, instead.

b&

--
Ben.Goren@asu.edu, Arizona State University School of Music
 net.proselytizing (write for info): We won! Clipper is dead!
 BUT! Just say no to key escrow. And stamp out spamming, too.
 Finger ben@tux.music.asu.edu for PGP 2.3a (soon 2.6) public key.







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