- Convergent Technologies (Unisys)
Convergent Technologies was a company formed by a small group of people who left
Intel Corporation and Xerox PARC in 1979.Convergent Technologies' first product was the IWS (Integrated Workstation) tower based on the
Intel 8086 , which ranConvergent Technologies Operating System - their first operating system. The next product was a cost-reduced desktop version called the AWS (Advanced Workstation). Both of these workstations ran in an RS-422 clustered environment under a proprietary operating system known asCTOS .In 1982, Convergent formed a new division to focus on a multi-processor computer known as the
MegaFrame . TheMegaFrame ran a [Unix|UNIX] System 3] -derived operating system calledCTIX on multipleMotorola 68010 processors. Three other I/O processor boards could also be place in the system, theFile Processor , theCluster Processor , and theTerminal Processor . All I/O processor boards were based on theIntel 80186 and ran a scaled down version ofCTOS .Convergent later used the
Motorola 68010 in theirMiniFrame , and laterMotorola 68020 and 68040 processors in their VME-basedMightyFrame systems, all also runningCTIX .Supplanting the IWS was the AWS (Advanced Workstation) which itself was replaced by the NGEN (New or Next Generation) workstation and used by
Prime Computer as a word processing workstation; The "Prime Producer 100". The NGEN was known to Burroughs users as the B25, to Prime as the "Prime Producer 200", and was included the Intel 80186 CPU chip.Later models kept pace with Intel CPU development through at least the Intel 80386 era. Convergent also developed the first
Motorola 68010 OEM UNIX product for AT&T, and integrated a number features (Stream-based I/O, Multinational Language Support) to the Intel AT&T UNIX base (SVR3.2).Convergent Technologies systems were also resold by Motorola under the Motorola/4-Phase brand. Motorola/4-Phase pioneered development of international character support for Unix platforms for their EMEA business using the CTOS/CTIX equipment.
The Workslate, a very early portable computer which used a spreadsheet as the primary interface and included a mini-cassette for both voice and data recording, was also marketed by Convergent Technologies.
Convergent reached an agreement to acquire
3Com in March 1986, but the merger was called off at the last moment.Unisys bought Convergent Technologies in 1988, after which Convergent Technologies became Unisys' Network Systems Division.
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