Everything about Control Data Corporation totally explained
Control Data Corporation (CDC), was one of the pioneering
supercomputer firms. For most of the
1960s, it built the fastest computers in the world by far, only losing that crown in the
1970s to what was effectively a spinoff. CDC was one of the eight major
computer companies through most of the
1960s; the others were
IBM,
Burroughs Corporation,
NCR,
General Electric,
Honeywell,
RCA, and
UNIVAC. CDC was well known and highly regarded throughout the industry at one time, but today is largely forgotten.
Background and origins: World War II–1957
During
World War II the
U.S. Navy had built up a team of engineers to build codebreaking machinery for both
Japanese and
German electro-mechanical ciphers. A number of these were produced by a team dedicated to the task working in the
Washington, D.C., area. With the post-war wind-down of military spending the Navy grew increasingly worried that this team would break up and scatter into various companies, and it started looking for ways to covertly keep the team together.
Eventually they found their solution; the owner of a
Chase Aircraft affiliate in
St. Paul, Minnesota, John Parker, was about to lose all his contracts with the end of the war. The Navy never told Parker exactly what the team did, since it would have taken too long to get top secret
clearance. Parker was obviously wary, but after several meetings with increasingly high-ranking Naval officers it became apparent that whatever it was, they were serious, and he eventually agreed to give this team a home in his
glider factory.
The result was
Engineering Research Associates (ERA), a contract engineering company that worked on a number of seemingly unrelated projects in the early 1950s. One of these was one of the first commercial
stored program computers, the 36-
bit ERA 1103. The machine was built for the Navy, which intended to use it in their "above board" code-breaking centers. In the early 1950s a minor political debate broke out in
Congress about the Navy essentially "owning" ERA, and the ensuing debates and legal wrangling left the company drained of both capital and spirit. In 1952 Parker sold ERA to
Remington Rand.
Although Rand kept the ERA team together and developing new products, it was most interested in ERA's electromagnetic
drum memory systems. Rand soon merged with
Sperry Corporation to become
Sperry Rand, and in the process of merging the companies, the ERA division was folded into Sperry's UNIVAC division. At first this didn't cause too many changes at ERA, since the company was used primarily to provide engineering talent to support a variety of projects. However, one major project was moved from UNIVAC to ERA, the
UNIVAC II project, which led to lengthy delays and upsets to nearly everyone involved.
Since the Sperry "big company" mentality encroached on the decision-making powers of the ERA founders, they left Sperry to form the Control Data Corp. in 1957, setting up shop in an old warehouse down the road from Sperry in
Minneapolis at 501 Park Avenue. Of the members forming CDC,
William Norris was the unanimous choice to become the
chief executive officer of the new company.
Seymour Cray was likewise chosen to be the chief designer, but he was still in the process of completing an early version of the 1103-based
Naval Tactical Data System (NTDS), and he didn't leave Sperry to join CDC until it was complete.
Early Designs and Cray's Big Plan
CDC started business by selling subsystems, mostly drum memory systems, to other companies. Cray joined the next year, and he immediately built a small
transistor-based 6-bit machine known as the "
CDC Little Character" to test his ideas on large-system design and transistor-based machines. "Little Character" was a success, and CDC soon released a 48-bit transistorized version of their 1103 re-design as the
CDC 1604 in
1959, with the first machine delivered to the U.S. Navy in
1960. The 1604 designation was chosen by adding the number, 501, in CDC's address, 501 Park Avenue, to the number of Cray's former project, the 1103. A 12-bit cut-down version was also released as the
CDC 160A in 1960, arguably the first
minicomputer. The 160A was particularly notable as it was built as a standard office desk item, which was a rather-unusual packaging for that era. New versions of the basic 1604 architecture were rebuilt into the
CDC 3000 series, which sold through the early and mid-1960s.
Cray immediately turned to the design of a machine that would be the fastest (or in the terminology of the day, largest) machine in the world, setting the goal at 50 times the speed of the 1604. This required radical changes in design, and as the project "dragged on" --it had gone on for about four years by then--, the management got increasingly upset and it demanded greater oversight. Cray in turn demanded (in 1962) to have his own remote lab, saying that otherwise, he'd quit. Norris agreed, and Cray and his team moved to Cray's home town,
Chippewa Falls, Wisconsin. Not even Bill Norris, the founder and president of CDC, could visit Cray's laboratory without an invitation. (See story of a salesman's uninvited visit to Chippewa Falls
here
.)
Peripherals business
Through the 1960s, Norris became increasingly worried that CDC had to develop a "critical mass" in order to compete with IBM. In order to do this, he started an aggressive program of buying up various companies to round out CDC's peripheral lineup. In general, they tried to offer a product to compete with any of IBM's, but running 10% faster and costing 10% less. This wasn't always easy to achieve.
One of its first peripherals was a tape transport, which led to some internal wrangling as the Peripherals Equipment Division attempted to find a reasonable way to charge other divisions of the company for supplying the devices. If the division simply "gave" them away at cost as part of a system purchase, they'd never have a real budget of their own. Instead, a plan was established in which it would share profits with the divisions selling its peripherals, a plan eventually used throughout the company.
The tape transport was followed by the
405 Card Reader and the
415 Card Puncher, followed by a series of
tape drives and
drum printers, all of which were designed in-house. The printer business was initially supported by
Holley Carburetor in the
Rochester, Michigan suburb outside of
Detroit. They later formalized this by creating a jointly-held company,
Holley Computer Products. Holley later sold its stake back to CDC, the remainder becoming the Rochester Division.
Norris was particularly interested in breaking out of the
punched card–based workflow, where IBM held a stranglehold. He eventually decided to buy
Rabinow Engineering, one of the pioneers of
optical character recognition (OCR) systems. The idea was to bypass the entire punched card stage by having the operators simply type onto normal paper pages with a "known" typewriter font, and then submit those pages to the computer. Since a typewritten page contains much more information than a punched card (which has essentially one line of text from a page), this would offer savings all around. Unfortunately, this seemingly-simple task turned out to be much harder than anyone expected, and while CDC became a major player in the early days of OCR systems, it has remained a niche product to this day. Rabinow's Rockville plant was closed in 1976, and CDC left the business.
With the continued delays on the OCR project, it became clear that punched cards were not going to go away any time soon, and CDC had to address this as quickly as possible. Although the 405 remained in production, it was an expensive machine to build. So another purchase was made,
Bridge Engineering, which offered a line of lower-cost as well as higher-speed card punchers. All card-handling products were moved to what became the Valley Forge Division after Bridge moved to a new factory, with the tape transports to follow. Later on, the Valley Forge and Rochester divisions were spun-off to form a new joint company with National Cash Register (later
NCR Corporation),
Computer Peripherals Inc (CPI), in order to share development and production costs across the two companies. ICL later joined the effort. Eventually the Rochester Division was sold to
Centronics in 1982.
Another side-effect of Norris's attempts to diversify was the creation of a number of
service bureaus that ran jobs on behalf of smaller companies that couldn't afford to buy computers. This was never very profitable, and in 1965, several managers suggested that the unprofitable centers be closed in a cost-cutting measure. Nevertheless, Norris was so convinced of the idea that he refused to accept this, and ordered an across-the-board "belt tightening" instead.
The CDC 6600: Defining Supercomputing
Meanwhile at the new Chippewa Falls lab, Seymour Cray, Jim Thornton, and Dean Roush put together a team of 34 engineers, which continued work on the new computer design. In 1964, this was released onto the market as the
CDC 6600, out-performing everything on the market by roughly ten times. The 6600 had a
CPU (Central Processing Unit) with multiple, asynchronous functional units, and it used 10 logical, external
I/O processors to off-load many common tasks. That way the CPU could devote all of its time and circuitry to processing actual data, while the other controllers dealt with the mundane tasks like punching cards and running disk drives. Using late-model
compilers, the machine attained a standard mathematical operations rate of 500
kilo-FLOPS, but handcrafted computer assemblies delivered about 1.0 mega-FLOPS. The slower version was released as the
CDC 6400, and a two-processor version of the 6400 was called the
CDC 6500. Cray turned to an even faster machine built along different lines, then known as the 6800.
It was after the delivery of the 6600 that IBM took notice of this new company. At the time,
Thomas J. Watson, Jr. asked (words to the effect of)
How is it that this tiny company of 34 people —including the janitor — can be beating us when we've thousands of people?, to which Cray reportedly quipped
You just answered your own question. In
1965, IBM started an effort to build its own machine that would be even faster than the 6600, the
ACS-1. Two hundred people were gathered together on the
U.S. West Coast to work on the project, away from corporate prodding, in an attempt to mirror Cray's off-site lab. The project produced interesting computer architecture and technology, but it wasn't compatible with IBM's very successful
System/360 line or computers. The computer-makers were directed to make it be IBM-360-compatible, but this compromised its performance, and the ACS was canceled in
1969, after producing no product. Many of the engineers left the company, leading to a brain-drain in IBM's high-performance departments.
In the meantime, IBM announced a new version of the famed System/360, the Model 92, which would be just as fast as CDC's 6600. This machine didn't exist, but its nonexistence didn't stop sales of the 6600 from drying up, while people waited for the release of the Model 92. Norris didn't take this tactic, dubbed as
fear, uncertainty and doubt (FUD), lying down, and in an
antitrust suit against IBM a year later, he won over 600 million
dollars. He also picked up IBM's subsidiary Service Bureau Corporation (SBC), which ran computer processing for other corporations on its own computers. SBC fit nicely into CDC's existing service bureau offerings.
During the designing of the 6600, CDC had set up
Project SPIN to supply the system with a high speed
hard disk memory system. At the time, it was unclear if disks would replace magnetic memory drums, nor was it clear at the time whether fixed or removable disks would become the more prevelant. Thus, SPIN explored all of these approaches, and eventually it delivered a very large 28" diameter fixed disk and also a smaller multi-platter 14" removable disk-pack system. Over time, the hard disk business pioneered in SPIN would turn into a major product line.
The CDC 7600 and 8600
In the same month it won its lawsuit against IBM, CDC also announced its new computer, the
CDC 7600 (originally the 6800). This machine's speed was almost four times that of the 6600, and it offered about four times the total through-put. Much of this speed increase was due to extensive use of
pipelining, a technique that allows different parts of the CPU to work on different aspects of the instruction process at the same time. With this technique, the time to run any particular instruction is no faster, but the program as a whole moves through the computer more quickly since the instructions are queued up in a productive way.
The 7600 didn't do well in the marketplace for this reason: it was introduced in the 1969 downturn in the U.S. national economy. Its complexity had led to poor reliability. The machine was slightly incompatible with the 6000-series, so it required a completely different operating system, which like most new OSs, was primitive. The 7600 project paid for itself, yet it damaged CDC's reputation.
Cray then turned to the design of the
CDC 8600. This design included four processors in a single, smaller case. The smaller size and shorter signal paths allowed the 8600 to run at much higher clock speeds, and in combination with higher speed memory, these features provided most of the performance gains. The 8600, however, belonged to the "old school" in terms of its physical construction, and it used individual components soldered to circuit boards. The design was so compact that cooling and servicing the CPU modules proved effectively impossible. Because of too many hot-running solder joints in it that the machines didn't work reliably, Cray recognized that a re-design was needed.
The STAR and the Cyber
In addition to the redesign of the 8600, CDC had another project called the
CDC STAR-100 underway, led by Cray's former collaborator on the 6600/7600, Jim Thornton. Unlike the 8600's "four computers in one box" solution to the speed problem, the STAR was a new design using a unit that we know today as the
vector processor. By highly pipelining math instructions with purpose-built instructions and hardware, math processing is dramatically improved in a machine that was otherwise slower than a 7600. Although the particular set of problems it would be best at solving was limited - in comparison to the general-purpose 7600, it was for solving exactly these problems that customers would buy CDC machines.
Since these two projects competed for limited funds during the late 1960s, Norris felt that the company couldn't support simultaneous development of the STAR and a complete redesign of the 8600. Therefore, Cray left CDC to form the
Cray Research company in 1972. Norris remained, however, a staunch supporter of Cray, and he even invested money into Cray's new company. In
1974, CDC released the STAR, designated as the Cyber 203. It turned out to have "real world" performance that was considerably worse than expected. STAR's chief designer, Jim Thornton, then left CDC to form the
Network Systems Corporation.
A variety of systems based on the basic 6600/7600 architecture were repackaged in different price/performance categories of the
CDC Cyber, which became CDC's main product line in the 1970s. An updated version of the STAR architecture, the Cyber 205, had considerably better performance than the original. By this time, however, Cray's own designs, like the
Cray-1, were using the same basic design techniques as the STAR, but were computing much faster.
Sales of the STAR were weak, but Control Data Corp. produced a successor system, the Cyber 200/205, that gave Cray Research some competition. CDC also embarked on a number of special projects for its clients, who produced an even smaller number of
black project computers. The
CDC Advanced Flexible Processor (AFP), also known as CYBER PLUS, was one such machine.
Another design direction was the "Cyber 80" project, which was aimed at release in 1980. This machine could run old 6600-style programs, and also had a completely new 64-bit architecture. The concept behind Cyber 80 was that current 6000-series users would migrate to these machines with relative ease. The design and debugging of these machines went on past 1980, and the machines were eventually released under other names.
ETA Systems, Hard Disks, Oblivion
CDC decided to fight for the high-performance niche, but Norris recognized that the company had become moribund in his opinion and unable to quickly design competitive machines. So in 1983, he set up a spinoff company,
ETA Systems, whose design goal being a machine processing data at 10 GFLOPs, about 40 times the speed of the Cray-1. The design never fully matured, and it was unable to reach its goals. Nevertheless, the product was one of the fastest computers on the market, and a handful of those computers were sold during the next few years. The effort ended after half-hearted attempts to sell
ETA Systems. In 1989, most of the employees of
ETA Systems were laid off, and the remaining ones were folded into CDC.
Meanwhile, several very large Japanese manufacturing firms were entering the market. The
supercomputer market was too small to be able to afford more than a handful of companies, so CDC started looking for other markets. One of these was the high-performance hard disk drive market, which was becoming more lucrative as
personal computers (PCs) began to include them in the mid-1980s. Through its
Magnetic Peripherals unit, originally a joint venture with
Honeywell and Honeywell Bull, CDC became a major player in the hard disk drive market. It was the world wide leader in 14inch disk drive technology in the
OEM marketplace in the 1970s and early 1980s especially with its SMD (Storage Module Drive) and CMD (Cartridge Module Drive). CDC was an early developer of the eight-inch drive technoplogy that was pioneered by Shugart Associates with products from its MPI Oklahoma City Operation. Its
CDC Wren series drives were particularly popular with "high end" users, although it was behind the capacity growth and performance curves of numerous startups such a Micropolis, Atasi, Maxtor, and Quantum. CDC also co-developed the now universal
Advanced Technology Attachment (ATA) interface with
Compaq and
Western Digital, which was aimed at lowering the cost of adding low-performance drives.
Inexplicably, CDC exited the hard disk drive business entirely in 1988, spinning off Magnetic Peripherals under the name
Imprimis. The next year,
Seagate Technology, which had been seriously lagging in the high-end drive market, purchased Imprimis. The remainder of CDC was called as
Control Data Systems, Inc. Syntegra (USA), a subsidiary of the
BT Group merged into BT's Global Services organization.
CDC's services business was spun off in 1992, and it became known as the
Ceridian Corporation. Ceridian continues as a successful outsourced IT company focusing on human resources.
In 1986, Sandy Weill convinced the Control Data management to spin off their Commercial Credit subsidiary. Over a period of years Weil used Commercial Credit to build an empire that became
Citigroup.
Film and science fiction references
- : The title sequences to this film include tape drives and other early CDC equipment.
- The Adolescence of P-1, by Thomas Ryan: Control Data computers were very enticing to young P-1.
- Tron: The computer room seen after Flynn and Lora sneak into Encom contains a CDC 7600 computer in the background. This scene was shot at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. (Note that a wide screen version of the movie is needed to see the 7600 and neighboring Cray-1.)
- Die Hard: The computer room shot up by one of the terrorists contained a number of working Cyber 180 computers and a mock-up of an ETA-10 supercomputer along with a number of other peripheral devices all provided by CDC Demonstration Services/Benchmark Lab. This equipment was requested on short notice after another computer manufacturer backed out at the last minute. Paul Derby, manager of the Benchmark Lab arranged to send two van loads of equipment to Hollywood for the shoot accompanied by Jerry Stearns of the Benchmark Lab who watched over this equipment. After the machines were returned to Minnesota, they were inspected and tested, and as each machine was sold, a notation was made in the corporate records that the machine had appeared in the Die Hard movie.
- The New Avengers: In episode #23 ("Complex") Purdey uses a CDC card reader.
- They Live, the John Carpenter movie from 1988. As Roddy Piper is trying on his new 'sunglasses' that allow him to see the world as it is, he looks at an ad for Control Data Corporation - and he sees the word OBEY.
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