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Post by Keith Heitmann on Nov 17, 2003 6:34:05 GMT -5
Fri November 14, 2003 12:01 AM ET
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - IBM Corp. (IBM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) said on Friday that it has built a supercomputer the size of a television based on microchip technology to be used in gaming consoles due out next year. IBM said the supercomputer, which can perform two trillion calculations per second, is a small-scale prototype of the Blue Gene/L supercomputer that it is building for the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.
The computer made it onto the Top 500 supercomputer list, which is compiled by a member of the University of Tennessee's computer science department.
IBM vice president of technology and strategy Irving Wladawsky-Berger said that the supercomputer used 1,000 microprocessors that are based on PowerPC microchip technology. The PowerPC chip is currently used in Apple Computer Inc. (AAPL.O: Quote, Profile, Research) computers.
It is also the technology that will be the foundation of the next generation of gaming consoles from Nintendo Co. (7974.OS: Quote, Profile, Research) and Sony Corp. (6758.T: Quote, Profile, Research) , which IBM is working on, he said.
He said the chips were less expensive and consumed less power than traditional microprocessors, making it possible to pack the same amount of computing power into a smaller space. Producing the chips in volume for gaming will help offset the costs of building supercomputers, he said.
© Reuters 2003. All Rights Reserved.
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Galland
Unterscharfuehrer
Resident Gun Nut
Posts: 140
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Post by Galland on Nov 18, 2003 11:10:25 GMT -5
They're going to use the G5 processor in a gaming console? That fact is ripe for cost/performance ratio jokes. :) Must... resist.. urge... Anyway, it sounds nifty to me. North Carolina State University sold off it's old Cray super computer a few years ago. The asking price was $1. The catch was that whoever bought it had to come and remove several rooms' worth of ducting and cooling equipment. Supercomp systems have come a long way since then. These days they rarely have external cooling ducts.
Galland
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Post by Keith Heitmann on Dec 14, 2003 15:59:39 GMT -5
Seems like the Japanese (NEC) have out-done IBM. They have a new super-computer that is now the fastest in existence. The IBM machine is operating at 12.8 teraflops (10 raised to the power of 12), and the newer NEC super computer is running at a recently established 40 teraflops (10 raised to the power of 40). That's 40 trillion operations per second! However, stealing NEC's thunder is good ol' Seti@home, the distributed network "super-computer" that uses thousands of home PCs to process data. At a speaking engagement in Australia one of the founders of Seti@home announced that they are operating at 66 teraflops! TAKE THAT NEC!!!
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