nCUBE was a series of parallel computing computers from the company of the same name. Early generations of the hardware used a custom microprocessor. With its final generations of servers, nCUBE no longer designed custom microprocessors for machines, but used server-class chips manufactured by a third party in massively parallel hardware deployments, primarily for the purposes of on-demand video.
Die of nCUBE 2 processor
Three single-chip nCUBE 2 processors on a 1" x 3.5" module with memory.
nCUBE 2 circuit board with 64 processors and memory
The Intel Personal SuperComputer was a product line of parallel computers in the 1980s and 1990s.
The iPSC/1 was superseded by the Intel iPSC/2, and then the Intel iPSC/860.
Intel iPSC-1 (1985) at Computer History Museum (S see also other photo)