Supercomputers once worth millions to be auctioned
Dan GoldsmithSupercomputers from the 1990s – one of which originally cost $39m (£29m) - are going up for auction.
The machines, which weigh between three and four tonnes, were made by Cray, which still makes supercomputers for the Met Office and GCHQ.
The three being put up for sale by RWB Auctions, Wiltshire, are owned by Dan Goldsmith, who explained that while they were considered very powerful in their day, a laptop now has the same computing power.
He began collecting computers as a child and said these three were "fascinating", calling them the "supercars of the computing world".
Goldsmith said: "These machines completely changed the direction of supercomputing.
"When I first read about them as a teenager, they felt almost mythical. To actually own them was something I never imagined would happen."
While impressive in size and sci-fi in looks, he explained a "modern gaming PC will be a couple of magnitudes more powerful" than the machines.
"They were built with money no object - the Bugatti Veyron of computers," added Goldsmith, who owns an IT business in Watford.

One of the machines is called a Cray Triton T-932 and is believed to be one of only three left in the world.
It was once owned by the UK government and while the exact price of this one is not known, the model had a list price of $39m (£29m) at the time.
Anyone hoping to find government secrets in the gold-coloured box will be disappointed as the technology with the information inside was destroyed before being taken on by the collector.
Weighing four tonnes, it is more than 2m wide and 1.5m tall. Its cooling units are also a tonne each.
While a 1970s Cray supercomputer sold in 2024 for more than $1m (£743,955), this one has a starting price of £40,000.
Dan GoldsmithThe two others came into his collection when the University of Edinburgh was decommissioning about 19 tonnes of equipment.
He offered to pick the machines up with specialist haulage for free as long as he got it all signed over to him.
One the machines is the first Cray T3D, known as Typhoon, once the fastest supercomputer in Europe, weighing more than three tonnes and nearly 2m tall.
Comparable examples are said to have originally cost about $15m (£11m), but Typhoon now has a starting price of £60,000.
RWB Auctions"This is one of the most unusual collections we've handled at RWB Auctions," said Gareth Wasp, head auctioneer.
"The historical significance of the machines, alongside Dan's personal story and the effort that has gone into preserving them over the years, makes this a really fascinating sale."
Goldsmith has had them for more than two decades, but cannot keep them where they are for much longer.
The machines are being sold through a live online bidding system, which ends at 18:00 BST on 31 May.
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