Project Athena
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Project Athena was a joint project of MIT, Digital Equipment Corporation, and IBM. It was launched in 1983, and research and development ran through June 30, 1991, eight years after it began. The goals were to create a computing environment that would scale up to 10,000 workstations (like VAX) and accommodate heterogeneous hardware, yet be "coherent". This concept meant that a user could go to any workstation and access any files or applications without finding major differences in the user interface and service delivery, just like browsing the Internet today.
The project spawned many technologies that are widely used today, such as the X Window System and Kerberos. Amongst the other technologies developed for Project Athena were the Xaw widget set, Zephyr Notification Service (which was the first instant messaging service), and the Hesiod name and directory service.
The X Window System originated as a joint project of Project Athena and MIT's Laboratory for Computer Science, and was used by Athena.
When Project Athena ended in 1991, the computing environment was renamed to the Athena system, and is still used by many in the MIT community through the computer clusters scattered around the campus, despite the increasing popularity of laptops and ubiquity of wireless internet on campus.
Pixar Animation Studios, the computer graphics and animation company (then the Lucasfilm Computer Graphics Project, now owned by Walt Disney Pictures), used most of the first fifty Project Athena systems before they went into general use rendering The Adventures of André and Wally B..
Iowa State runs an implementation of Athena named 'Project Vincent', named after John Vincent Atanasoff, the inventor of the Atanasoff-Berry Computer.
North Carolina State University also runs a variation of Athena named 'Eos/Unity'
Carnegie Mellon University runs a similar system called Project Andrew which spawned AFS, Athena's current filesystem.
[edit] References
- Treese, G. Winfield, Berkeley UNIX on 1000 Workstations: Athena Changes to 4.3 BSD USENIX Association, February 1988.
- Arfman, J. M.; Roden, Peter. Project Athena: Supporting distributed computing at MIT IBM Systems Journal Volume 31, Number 3, 1992.
- Champine, George (1991). MIT Project Athena: A Model for Distributed Campus Computing, Digital Press, ISBN 1-55558-072-6.
- Avril, C. R.; Orcutt, Ron L. Athena: MIT's Once and Future Distributed Computing Project, Information Technology Quarterly (Fall 1990).