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Convergent Technologies was a company formed by a small group of people who left Intel Corporation and Xerox PARC in 1979.

Convergent Technologies' first product was the IWS (Integrated Workstation) based on the Intel 8086, which ran Convergent Technologies Operating System - their first operating system.

Convergent later used the Motorola 68010 in their MiniFrame, and later Motorola 68020 and 68040 processors in their VME-based MightyFrame systems, running a UNIX-like operating system called CTIX.

Supplanting the IWS was the AWS (Advanced Workstation) which itself was replaced by the NGEN (New or Next Generation) workstation and used by Prime Computer as a word processing workstation; The "Prime Producer 100". The NGEN was known to Burroughs users as the B25, to Prime as the "Prime Producer 200", and was included the Intel 80186 CPU chip.

Later models kept pace with Intel CPU development at least through the 80386 era. Convergent also developed the first Motorola 68010 OEM UNIX product for AT&T, and integrated a number features (Stream-based I/O, Multinational Language Support) to the Intel AT&T UNIX base (SVR3.2).

CTOS and as a guest OS CTIX were also available on the Convergent MegaFrame, a multiple-CPU cooperative-processing machine that may have been in the super-minicomputer class of machines.

The Workslate, a very early portable computer which used a spreadsheet as the primary interface and included a mini-cassette for both voice and data recording, was also marketed by Convergent Technologies.

Unisys bought Convergent Technologies in 1988, becoming its Network Systems Division.

Defunct computer companies of the United States

Convergent Technologies

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Convergent Technologies (Unisys)".

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