IBM claims to have the world's fastest supercomputer.

Cobalt2112

[H]ard|Gawd
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(From AP:IBM Says Blue Gene Breaks Speed Record Sept. 29, 2004)

NEW YORK - IBM Corp. claimed unofficial bragging rights Tuesday as owner of the world's fastest supercomputer.
For three years running, the fastest supercomputer has been NEC's Earth Simulator in Japan.

"The fact that non-U.S. vendor like NEC had the fastest computer was seen as a big challenge for U.S. computer industry," said Horst Simon, director of the supercomputing center at Lawrence Berkeley National Lab in California.

"That an American vendor and an American application has won back the No. 1 spot — that's the main significance of this." :D

Earth Simulator can sustain speeds of 35.86 teraflops.

IBM said its still-unfinished BlueGene/L System, named for its ability to model the folding of human proteins, can sustain speeds of 36 teraflops. A teraflop is 1 trillion calculations per second. :eek:

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory plans to install the Blue Gene/L system next year with 130,000 :eek: processors and 64 racks, half a tennis court in size. The labs will use it for modeling the behavior and aging of high explosives, astrophysics, cosmology and basic science, lab spokesman Bob Hirschfeld said.

The prototype for which IBM claimed the speed record is located in Rochester, Minn., has 16,250 processors and takes up eight racks of space.

While IBM's speed sets a new benchmark, the official list of the world's fastest supercomputers will not be released until November. A handful of scientists who audit the computers' reported speeds publish them on Top500.org.

Supercomputing is significant because of its implications for national security as well as such fields as global climate modeling, astrophysics and genetic research.

Supercomputing technology IBM introduced a decade ago has evolved into a $3 billion to $4 billion business for the company, said Simon.

Unlike the more specialized architecture of the Japanese supercomputer, IBM's BlueGene/L uses a derivative of commercially available off-the-shelf processors. It also uses an unusually large number of them.

The resulting computer is smaller and cooler than other supercomputers, reducing its running costs, said Hirschfeld. He did not have a dollar figure for how much lower Blue Gene's costs will be than other supercomputers.
 
Hmm on yahoo news it mentions that Bluegene can't do some things other SCs can, like model 3D explosions of a nuclear blast. :D
 
they should put it to good use rather than just proving its the fastest comp.
 
"modeling the behavior and aging of high explosives, astrophysics, cosmology and basic science" aren't good enough uses for you?
 
haha, maybe more like 'fastest pr0n server on earth!' or 'makes 12 cups of coffee a second'? :p
 
Theoretically, all computers are capable of the exact same
calculations. There's no calculations this computer can do
that your PC can't do. However, in practice, the difference
between a job taking a day to run versus taking a year to
run makes the difference between what's considered "possible".
For example, early Cray Supercomputers didn't support virtual
memory, based on the argument: "If you're willing to take
the performance hit of paging, you don't need a supercomputer."
So, the Cray-2 (circa 1984) was the first supercomputer to
have enough RAM to make 3d computational physics reasonable
to do. You *could* do it with any earlier machine, but you
spent so much time moving data back and forth between memory
and disk that it would take years to get any results.
 
L0s7 4 Lyf3 said:
Imagine what'd happen if this thing was with the [H]orde.... *drool*



It would bang cores out faster than a starved crack head at a all u can smoke party!...or something to that ill effect :D
 
It is still riduclously slow compared to the seti at home or folding at home computers. Which are 61.86 TFLOPS and 196.89 TFLOPS respectfully.
 
mmm...TFLOPS

:drool:


lol

i say we hire a bunch of ninja assasins to kill all the security guards at this place there gonna put it...then hire some moving guys to haul it all out...
then buy a tennis court..or just half of one...and put it all back together.. piece by piece...then fold for the [H]orde


or maybe we can just gawk...
 
draksia said:
It is still riduclously slow compared to the seti at home or folding at home computers. Which are 61.86 TFLOPS and 196.89 TFLOPS respectfully.

This thing when finished next year is *supposed* to be able to run up to 300 TFLOPS... dunno if it will actually reach that but it makes even distributed computing look small :eek:
 
Well i mean the 5th faster supercomputer belongs to virginia tech that just have a insane amount of g5's networked together. Which just goes to show you anything can be powerful in mass volume.
 
cr3do said:
Well i mean the 5th faster supercomputer belongs to virginia tech that just have a insane amount of g5's networked together. Which just goes to show you anything can be powerful in mass volume.

I have a buch of old 133mhz lying arround collecting dust :p
 
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