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Antonizoon edited this page Feb 18, 2015 · 11 revisions

Back in the 1990s, Silicon Graphics made the ultimate supercomputer workstations. These powerful beasts could pump out amazing 3D CGI, and were immortalized by it's use in Hollywood (as shown in Jurassic Park's UNIX System...). And yes, SGI IRIX really did have that 3D filesystem UI.

However, while it rested on it's laurels, SGI was quickly getting outpaced by plain ol' PC graphics cards, which were significantly cheaper and held a vibrant game development community.

Nekochan

The most important community to SGI collectors and enthusiasts is Nekochan, which still maintains a repository of good ol' SGI freeware for download, as well as a comprehensive wiki.

SGI O2

The SGI O2 is the best place for a beginner to start, since it has VGA output and other nice modern goodies.

I found one at the scrapyard for just $2, and couldn't resist taking it home to try it out. It was in piss poor condition with paint all over it (and brittle plastic), but at least it booted up.

Hard Drive

The SGI O2 uses a 80-pin SCA SCSI hotswappable Drive, no more than 1" thick.

Nowadays, even the largest and fastest 300GB 15K SCSI Drives are dirt cheap at $10-20 apiece. Just go to the SCSI drive list and check for the model number on eBay.

If you're not keen on installing IRIX again, or don't know which SCA SCSI Drive to look for, you can buy pre-loaded IRIX 6.5 hard drives from this eBay seller.

Disc Drive

The default Toshiba CD-ROM Drive was infamous for spitting a small plastic cog out, and refusing to open. It's possible to fix it, though you're better off replacing it with the Toshiba SD-M1401 SCSI DVD-ROM drive.

There's a Disc Drive replacement guide at the bottom of this guide.

Installing IRIX 6.5

You'll probably want to reinstall IRIX 6.5 from scratch, especially since it's a must if you're installing a new hard drive. You can probably find the discs on eBay for around $40, or burn the discs from torrents.

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  • Libreboot/Coreboot
  • HPLIP Printers - A massive family of common and cheap printers, that you can probably find from the junkyard. Most of them use open source drivers, and all work out of the box with Linux and HPLIP. Great for printing Bitcoin paper wallets.

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