Cydrome (1984–1988) was a computer company established in San Jose of the Silicon Valley region in California.
Cydrome moved from an office in San Jose to a business park in Milpitas on President's Day 1985.
This site was used to host meetings of the Bay Area ACM chapter's Special Interest Group in Large Scale Systems (SIGBIG), in contrast to then SIGSMALL for microcomputers, which are now called "PCs," and its present-day national SIGHPC.
Software pipelining in a custom Fortran compiler[1] generated code that would run efficiently.
In most cases the compiler would find instructions that could run in parallel and place them together in a single word.
In 1987, the machine saw its first public appearance at the first Supercomputer Conference held in Santa Clara, CA.