Stanford University Design System

From Computer History Wiki
Revision as of 17:03, 7 January 2024 by Jnc (talk | contribs) (Originated by Phil Petit)
Jump to: navigation, search

The Stanford University Design System (generally referred to by the acronym, SUDS) was a very early and influential CAD system, the "first interactive electronic design system"; originated at SAIL by Phil Petit.

It was used to design the Superfoonly (for which it was created; the Superfoonly later became the predecessor to the KL10), the S-1 supercomputer (where SUDS was integrated into what became the SCALD CAD system, by Tom McWilliams and Curt Widdoes), and the SUN workstation. It was ported to ITS at the MIT AI Lab, where it was used for the Knight TV system, and the CONS and CADR LISP machines.

SUDS became an important part of DEC's CAD constellation; Dick Helliwell, who had taken over "further development and maintenance of SUDS" moved to DEC with it. SCALD was later spun off to an important startup company in the CAD field, Valid Logic Systems.

External links