Cumulus Computer Corporation (1990–1993) | |
Company type | Private |
Industry | Computer |
Founded | June 1987Beachwood, Ohio | in
Founder | Martin Alpert |
Defunct | April 1993 |
Fate | Bankruptcy liquidation |
Products | |
Number of employees | 350–450 (1992, peak) |
Cumulus Corporation (often shortened to Cumulus Corp.) was an American computer peripheral and system manufacturer active from 1987 to 1993. Based in Beachwood, Ohio (a suburb of Cleveland) and started by Tecmar founder Martin Alpert, the company set out to exclusively manufacture expansion products for IBM's Personal System/2 (PS/2) family of computers—mainly RAM expansion cards. It later released cross-platform CPU upgrade cards and memory expansion cards for other platforms besides the PS/2. Beginning in 1990, the company began trading as Cumulus Computer Corporation and began releasing complete systems of their own. Initially a success story for the tech industry in Cleveland,[1] a botched stock launch in 1992 proved disastrous for the company's ailing cash flow situation, and in 1993 the company was liquidated amid massive debt to suppliers and lenders.