Silicon Graphics, Inc. Sells for a Paltry $25 Million
Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI), the company responsible for helping create Terminator 2, Star Wars, and Jurassic Park, agreed to sell itself to Fremont-based Rackable Systems for $25 million. At one point, Silicon Graphics had been worth $3.66 billion in 1997, but has fallen on hard times, seeking bankruptcy protection two times in the past three years.
"It's kind of sad," said Rob Enderle, an analyst with the Enderle Group in San Jose. "At one time, SGI was really though to be where much of the creativity was going to occur in Silicon Valley. They were the guys kind of on the forefront of virtual reality."
SGI's fall from prominence can be traced back to around 1999. The company had started laying off hundreds of employees, its newly hired CEO resigned shortly after taking the job, and many of its customers turned to less expensive computer systems made by SGI's competitors.
Assuming the bankruptcy judge approves the sale, it's unclear whether Rackable will retain the corporate name of SGI or what it plans to do with SGI's 1,169 employees.

Image Credit: SGI
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yogurt80
April 03, 2009 at 7:08am
I'm confused- was SGI like the computer grafics division of Industrial Light and Magic/ Lucasfilm?
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ApoX-911
April 03, 2009 at 11:09am
No. They were a manufacturer of high end visual effects workstations. Back in their heydey, they may have supplied workstations, whose soul purpose was to create 3d graphics and visual effects for different medias, to ILM. But they are not the creators of effects for ILM/Lucasfilm.
Pity to see them go, in their prime they had some quality hardware albeit expensive.
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Bender2000
April 03, 2009 at 6:53am
SGI built themselves up on a closed ecosystem of MIPS based workstations, IRIX OS and proprietary software. Then they got blasted by cheaper, fully equivelent WinTel boxes and programs, then Linux. You can skate for a while selling the same stuff in a shiny box, but with the world tipping towards open apps in the cloud, you can't give a good answer as to why you charge so much to do the same thing! With SaaS/Cloud computing the platform is irrelevent, so you're stuck racing to the bottom in price for hardware.
















