35f432fe188901ce2db1cea26c3f0d420c4c42ac
lrnassar
  Mon May 20 10:12:03 2019 -0700
Removing some dead links and updating a redirect, no RM

diff --git src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/credits.html src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/credits.html
index 79fcdff..74499be 100755
--- src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/credits.html
+++ src/hg/htdocs/goldenPath/credits.html
@@ -5510,30 +5510,30 @@
 <p>
 During the initial stage of this project, from January 2000 to June 2001, we received no direct 
 federal funding to develop the working draft other than travel support. However, we gratefully 
 acknowledge the support for our personnel provided by our basic bioinformatics research grants, 
 especially DOE grant DE-FG03-99ER62849 (to develop gene-finding methods), but also NSF grant 
 DBI-9809007, UC BIOTECH grant 99-11, a grant from the Sloan Foundation, the David and Lucille 
 Packard Foundation, NIH grant GM-52848, and the Zahler grant that provided support for Jim Kent in 
 the early stages of this work. </p> 
 <p> 
 We are particularly thankful for the risks that Patrick Mantey (UCSC Dean of Engineering), 
 James Gill (Vice Chancellor for Research), John Simpson (UCSC Provost), and M.R.C. Greenwood (UCSC 
 Chancellor) were willing to take in advancing us the money in February 2000 needed to build the 
 original 100-node LINUX cluster used in this work, and in the case of Dean Mantey, additional 
 personnel support. Phokion Kolaitis, Chair of Computer Science, contributed as well. </p>
 <p>
-We thank <a href="http://www.compaq.com/" target="_blank">Compaq</a> for providing an additional 
+We thank Compaq for providing an additional 
 100-CPU computational cluster in Cambridge, MA for use by the public human genome effort. We thank 
-<a href="http://www-01.ibm.com/software/info/ilog/" target="_blank">ILOG, Inc.</a> (now part of IBM)
+<a href="https://www.ibm.com/products/software" target="_blank">ILOG, Inc.</a> (now part of IBM)
 for providing discounted licenses to its CPLEX linear programming software, which was essential for 
 some of our early experiments.</p> 
 <p> 
 In December 2000, <a href="http://www.hhmi.org" target="_blank">HHMI</a> began providing support for
 equipment and personnel. In the summer of 2001, HHMI provided the primary funding for a new cluster 
-of 1000 CPUs running LINUX purchased from <a href="http://www.sgi.com/" target="_blank">Rackable</a>
-(now SGI), with additional support from <a href="http://www.ucop.edu/california-institutes/" 
-target="_blank">CISI</a> and <a href="http://www.genome.gov/" target="_blank">NHGRI</a>. Dubbed the 
+of 1000 CPUs running LINUX purchased from Rackable 
+(now SGI), with additional support from 
+CISI and <a href="http://www.genome.gov/" target="_blank">NHGRI</a>. Dubbed the 
 UCSC KiloKluster, this equipment became the computational backbone for the initial years of the 
 Genome Browser project. </p>
 
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