Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Athena, Royal Huisman, 90.0 metre, 2004











Athena is a clipper-bowed 3-masted gaff rigged schooner built by Royal Huisman Shipyard in 2004 for internet entrepreneur James H. Clark. Clark purchased a 47.4 meter sloop, Hyperion, from Royal Huisman in 1998. As Hyperion was nearing completion, Clark began to consider the possibilities of a larger yacht, which could include a theater, library, more guest space and a more capable galley.

Athena can be chartered from €250,000 per week in the Caribbean, or in summer 2010 cruising the South Pacific, with charters there start at €275,000 per week.

Athena is the winner of the Show Boats International Award for Best Sailing Yacht over 40 Meters for 2004.

Dr. James H. Clark (born March 23, 1944) is a prolific entrepreneur and former computer scientist. He founded several notable Silicon Valley technology companies, including Silicon Graphics, Inc., Netscape Communications Corporation, myCFO and Healtheon. His research work in computer graphics lead to the development of systems for fast rendering of computer images. He is also a devoted sailor and the owner of several high-tech sailboats that he has helped to design.

Biography
Clark was born in Plainview, Texas and endured a difficult childhood. He dropped out of high school after being suspended, and spent four years in the Navy. Clark began taking night courses at Tulane University's University College, where despite his lack of a high school diploma, he was able to earn enough credits to be admitted to the University of New Orleans. There, Clark earned a Bachelor's degree and a Master's degree in physics, and then a PhD in computer science from the University of Utah in 1974. Clark then worked at NYIT's Computer Graphics Lab, served as an assistant professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz from 1974 to 1978, and then as an associate professor of electrical engineering at Stanford University from 1979 to 1982.

Clark's research work concerned geometry pipelines, specialized software or hardware that accelerates the display of three dimensional images. The zenith of his group's advancements was the Geometry Engine, an early technology for rendering highly graphical computer images he developed in 1979 with his students at Stanford.

In 1982, Jim Clark and Abbey Silverstone along with several Stanford graduate students formed Silicon Graphics, Inc. The earliest Silicon Graphics graphical workstations were mainly terminals, but soon newer models were stand-alone graphical UNIX workstations with very fast graphics rendering hardware.

During the mid-1980s, Silicon Graphics began to use the MIPS CPU as the foundation of their newest workstations, replacing the Motorola 68000. Soon, Silicon Graphics became the world leader in the production of Hollywood movie visual effects and 3-D imaging. Silicon Graphics did not rely on high sales as they could charge more for their special high-end hardware and graphics software.

However, by the early 1990s, Clark had a falling out with Silicon Graphics management and got the itch to start a completely new and different enterprise. In 1994, Clark and Marc Andreessen, the co-creator of the World Wide Web browser Mosaic, founded Netscape. The founding of Netscape was a pivotal point that helped launch the Internet IPO boom on Wall Street during the mid to late 1990s, and Clark reaped the financial benefits of the Internet boom—with an investment of $5 million US, he earned $2 billion US. Just as the Internet boom was about to completely bust, Clark got the urge to move on again.

In 1998, Jim Clark came up with the idea of streamlining the insurance hassles and paperwork associated with the healthcare industry. He came up with the idea of a company that would help make access to more efficient healthcare easier. Although his original idea was a bit too ambitious, it did lead some inroads in administrative streamlining of medical records technology, but an Atlanta, Georgia startup company, WebMD, was already making inroads toward the same goal. Knowing that WebMD had financial backing from Microsoft, Clark decided to merge his newest startup, Healtheon, with the original WebMD to form the current WebMD Corporation. WebMD also provides a vast resource of online, reliable health information on the Internet.

In 1999, Jim Clark launched myCFO - a company formed to help wealthy Silicon Valley individuals manage their fortunes. While Jim Clark served on the Board of Directors most of myCFO's operations were sold to Harris Bank in late 2002 and now the successor operates as Harris myCFO.

Clark was chairman and financial backer of network security startup company Neoteris, founded in 2000, which was acquired by NetScreen in 2003 and subsequently by Juniper Networks.

Clark was a director and investor in biotechnology company DNA Sciences, founded in 1998, which went bankrupt and was acquired by Genaissance Pharmaceuticals Inc. in 2003.

In 1999, Clark donated $150 million to Stanford University for the creation of an interdisciplinary biological sciences program called Bio-X.[3] In October 2003, the James H. Clark Center for Bio-X was completed largely thanks to his funding.

In the Fall of 2005 Clark and David Filo of Yahoo! each donated $30 million to Tulane University's School of Engineering for merit based scholarships to provide education to deserving students regardless of financial situation in the discipline of engineering. However, after Tulane's restructuring that saw the elimination of nearly all engineering disciplines, the board requested Clark and Filo allow the funds to be used for other programs.

Jim Clark was the main subject of the 1999 bestseller The New New Thing: A Silicon Valley Story by U.S. author Michael Lewis. ISBN 0-340-76699-9

Clark has been married four times and has two children. In 2000, his daughter Kathy married Chad Hurley, co-founder of YouTube. The divorce from his third wife of 15 years, Nancy Rutter, a Forbes journalist, is reported to have cost him $125 million in cash and assets in the settlement. Soon afterwards he began dating Australian model Kristy Hinze, 36 years his junior. Hinze became his fourth wife when they married in the British Virgin Islands on March 22, 2009.

Yacht type: Sailing Yacht
Sub type: Schooner
Imo: 1007237 MMSI: 319012000
Call sign: ZCNP
Flag: Cayman Islands
Port of Registry: George Town

Length Overall (m): 90.00 Length Overall (ft): 295.28
Length On Deck (m): 77.04 Length On Deck (ft): 252.76
Length Waterline (m): 60.52 Length Waterline (ft): 198.56
Beam (m): 12.20 Beam (ft): 40.03
Draught Max (m): 5.77 Draught Max (ft): 18.93

Shipyard: Royal Huisman Shipyard BV
Year: 2004
Hull: 378

Naval Architect: Pieter Beeldsnijder Design, Dykstra & Partners
Exterior Designer: Pieter Beeldsnijder Design
Interior Designer: Rebecca Bradley Interior Design

Hull Material: Alustar
Superstructure: Alustar
Gross Tonnage: 1103
Displacement: 1126
Class: Lloyds Register
MCA: Yes

Guest Cabins: 1 Master cabin, 3 double staterooms, 1 twin staterooms
Guests: 10
Crew: 18

Engine Manufacturer: Caterpillar Inc
Model: 3516B DITA
Number of Engines: 2 Type: Diesel
HP: 2,000 KW: 1,491

Total HP: 4,000 Total KW: 2,983

Max Speed: 18.9 Cruise Speed:
Propulsion: Twin Screw

Fuel Capacity (Liters): 103,255 Fuel Capacity (Gallons): 27,280
Water Capacity (Liters): 29,215 Water Capacity (Gallons): 7,719

Sail Area: 2623 m2

Source of technical information: www.superyachttimes.com

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