Silicon Graphics Gets the Rack
"It was the best of times, it was the worst of times" said Dickens, and he could well have been talking about Silicon Valley in 2009 — while some firms are setting up venture capital funds, others are looking for a buoy just to stay afloat. Such is the case for Silicon Graphics, as the once power-player revealed last week it will be sold to Rackable Systems for just half the cost of some of its systems.
Silicon Graphics (SGI) initially filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection early on Wednesday, listing some $526.5 million in debt against $390.5 million in assets, just hours before Rackable announced it would be purchasing the computing legend for just $25 million. SEC filings reveal that SGI intends to use the proceeds of the sale to pay off secured creditors, as the bankruptcy filing constituted a default on those obligations. This is the second Chapter 11 proceeding for SGI — the company filed for protection in May 2006, only to emerge in October of the same year. Poor financial conditions also led to the company's stock being delisted from the New York Stock Exchange in 2005, and from the NASDAQ in December 2008 after its valuation fell below the mandatory $35 million mark.
SGI has a long history in the computing world, and a long history with Open Source. It is among the top ten contributors to the Linux kernel, and was responsible for developing and donating OpenGL, the XFS file system, the SLES-powered Colombia supercomputer, among others. It was at the forefront of high-end machines and graphics — including 3D graphics — for much of the 1990s, and its offerings were part of the standard setup used to create films like Terminator 2 and Jurassic Park. Moreover, the company's systems appear onscreen in a number of films — in Jurassic Park, the system that spawns the quote "This is a Unix system. I know this." is by SGI, while the company's machines also make appearances in Swordfish, Twister, Disclosure, and Lost in Space, among others.
Rackable expects the purchase to be complete within sixty days, barring any unforeseen circumstances — the biggest of those will likely be the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York, which is now firmly in charge of SGI and all of its finances. Rackable has indicated the bankruptcy will continue, though SGI's international operations — which are included in Rackable's purchase — are not included in the bankruptcy. The company's stock price had dropped to $0.18 by the close of trading on Wednesday, from a previous day's close of $0.41 — Rackable's shares dropped to $3.88 from $4.06, but have rallied back to $4.11 as of the closing bell on Friday.
Justin Ryan is a Contributing Editor for Linux Journal.
Trending Topics
| OpenLDAP Everywhere Reloaded, Part I | May 23, 2012 |
| Chemistry the Gromacs Way | May 21, 2012 |
| Make TV Awesome with Bluecop | May 16, 2012 |
| Hack and / - Password Cracking with GPUs, Part I: the Setup | May 15, 2012 |
| An Introduction to Application Development with Catalyst and Perl | May 14, 2012 |
| Cryptocurrency: Your Total Cost Is 01001010010 | May 09, 2012 |
- A Statistical Approach to the Spam Problem
- Validate an E-Mail Address with PHP, the Right Way
- OpenLDAP Everywhere Reloaded, Part I
- Strip DRM from WMV File
- Linux--The Internet Appliance?
- Eagles BBS
- The Linux Signals Handling Model
- Boot with GRUB
- Streaming MPEG-4 with Linux
- Chapter 16: Ubuntu and Your iPod
- Editorial Standards?
4 hours 1 min ago - Great one
5 hours 35 min ago - Common form in many
5 hours 56 min ago - Awsome
10 hours 59 min ago - Euro 2012 Coupon Codes - Get 20% Off Pavtube TiVo Converter
3 days 9 hours ago - Euro 2012 Big Sale: 20% Off Instant Savings on TiVo Converter
3 days 9 hours ago - MakeMKV works as well, though
3 days 9 hours ago - Euro 2012 Big Sale: 20% Off Instant Savings on TiVo Converter
3 days 10 hours ago - Awesome
4 days 8 hours ago - Who worries approx the
4 days 10 hours ago





Comments
"freeing" down the drain...
"freeing"..
"freeing" - Just another word for nothing left to lose, I guess :-)
Too bad, SGI (and soon to be Sun) - down the drain you go!
I went to a DECUS session long ago where Maddog, who was employed by DEC at the time, was going on and on about how great linux was. I felt like throttling him at the time. We lost a great company and OS (VAX/VMS) way back then, and now look at the garbage we have to deal with instead - ms/unix/linux. Yuck.
So it's sure great irony to see Sun and SilliG die from the same circumstances...
not donating
>and was responsible for developing and
>donating OpenGL, the XFS file system,
>the SLES-powered Colombia supercomputer
I wouldn't say "donating." I'd prefer "freeing" as in free speech.