An SGI newb's questions
Hi everyone, I'm Daniël, also known as Tech&Music on several classic computer forums. I'm 21, turning 22 this year, and I'm as you might guess into old computers. My "first love" was a Commodore 64 at age 9, and I've collected a few more of those, as well as several older home computers, PCs and 68k and PowerPC Macs since.
SGIs have always been interesting to me, and many years ago, I almost got one. At the thrift shop I frequently visit, somewhere in 2012-2013, there was an O2 of some kind in the computer area. I was really curious about it, and pretty interested in getting it. That thrift is in a fairly industrial area near the Northern harbour, and I do know they tend to get a lot of business e-waste, as evidenced by the occasional rack gear and thin clients they have for sale.
My memory is a bit hazy, but I do remember it having an A/V card installed as it had composite video jacks on the side, and it was like €20. However, it was fairly beat up and cracked. For some reason, my dad decided to try and talk me out of it, and for some more bizarre reason, it worked and I left it there, where it was scooped up by someone else. My dad never really bothered with my computer hobby, and I was (and am) pretty hard-headed when it comes to that. I guess he figured it was probably broken as it was beat up, but still, at what I think it was priced at, it would have been worth grabbing regardless.
It's something that I never really have been able to let go, and still pains me everytime I see people post about their SGI computers. Now that I have more income, I'd still like to get back at myself for that and buy an SGI machine of my own. Well, that, and I have an in-need-of-PSU-repair Quadra 700, so as a Jurassic Park fan, that pretty much requires some sort of SGI to go with it. Crimsons and similar sized other machines are out of the question, and because of that thrift shop incident, my mind is still on an O2.
I'm currently doing some orientation on what I "need", spec-wise, out of an SGI. My interest would be in doing (SD) video editing from and to analog (and maybe digital) tape, and other creative photo/audio software, next to just having fun with 3D demos and such. I've never 3D modelled, but if I ever get into it, I don't think I will need a lot of graphics horsepower. So I don't need or really want the highest end machine possible, but I don't want a machine too slow/weak to work with such programs. So far, I've looked around a bit, and I think I might go with SGI Depot to buy my O2 from. Prices seem relatively fair, specs can be chosen, and it is from a place run by someone with good knowledge on these machines.
The specification that I was thinking about, is reference 29 on his O2 page. It consists of an O2 with an R10000SC CPU @ 195MHz, 1MB L2 Cache, 512MB of RAM spread over 4 banks, a 36GB 15K SCSI HDD, the A/V card, and an O2Cam, which is something I would like to go with it. Is this for my use case a good spec'd machine? Is there anything I should change? And does 2 vs. 4 banks of memory matter for performance, or is 2 banks only better for allowing for future upgrades?
Like I mentioned, I am not rushing to buy a machine (although if I do go for SGI Depot, I'd like to buy before mid-December due to the whole Brexit thing), so I would really appreciate to hear from more experienced users whether I'm on the right track.
An Indy with accompanying Indycam is also really appealing to me, as I want to build a shelve to house multiple pizzabox style machines (already have a 68k Mac Quadra 610, and PowerPC PowerMac 6100 to go into that) of various computer architectures. However, I think it would be wise to make this a secondary machine, and aim for somewhat lower (but not anemic) specs on it. But that would be for later.
Any advice is greatly appreciated, and I do apologize for the somewhat drawn-out post!
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