News
Antelope 5.2-64 released
2012-05-01
Antelope 5.2-64 is now available
Talks posted from Trieste EAUG Meeting
2012-03-01
The slides from talks given at the Trieste, Italy EAUG meeting are now available at http://www.brtt.com/events/eaug2012
European Antelope User Group Meeting in Trieste, Italy
2011-12-16
The European Antelope User Group Meeting was held in Trieste, Italy on 23-24 February, 2012. For more detailed information, please go to http://rtweb.units.it/
Antelope User Survey
2011-3-18
Boulder Real Time Technologies, Inc. is conducting a survey of users, hoping to learn more about how and where Antelope is used and how it might be improved. If you use Antelope, please take our survey, and give us some feedback.
Thank you.
Antelope Solaris/SPARC End of Life
2011-1-5
Boulder Real Time Technologies, Inc. expects Antelope 5.3 (Spring 2013) to be the last version of Antelope which supports the Solaris/SPARC architecture. See announcement..
Welcome to Boulder Real Time Technologies - BRTT
BRTT provides software which supports the collection, archiving, integration, and processing of environment sensors, particularly seismic sensors.
Antelope was originally developed and supported on Sun Solaris SPARC systems. In later years, it was ported to Linux and then Apple Mac OS X.
The recent demise of Sun Microsystems and the direction which Oracle has taken, combined with the relatively poor performance of Sun SPARC systems has forced BRTT to pursue other options. In recent years BRTT has focused on Apple Mac OSX systems because of their low cost, high performance and the appeal of a single vendor who could provide quality integrated hardware and software, much like Sun provided years ago. We continue to offer support (for a few more years) for legacy SunOS 5.10 SPARC systems, but are no longer attempting to track Oracle hardware and software.
We have offered Antelope for several different versions of Linux going back at least 10 years. With Antelope Sun/Solaris system support going away in several years, we have been concerned about finding a suitable platform replacement for enterprise-class systems. We had hoped that Apple would continue to support the enterprise computing community, as they did in the past with their Xserve rack-mounted systems. However, it has become apparent to us that Apple is moving away from the enterprise-class computing community, especially after the EOL of their Xserve product line.
Accordingly, we are currently pursuing development of Linux-based Antelope systems using enterprise-class computing hardware and software. In our upcoming software release we will offer full support for a particular Linux version in use today in many enterprise-class environments.
Some of the places where Antelope is used around the world.