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Teragrid: Massive Grid Computing

onyxcide writes: "Envision is running a quick article on a new national grid of computing resources called TeraGrid. Half a petabyte of disk storage, 40-gigabyte-per-second national optical backbone, and 13 teraflops of computing power will make up this monster. It will allow "lavish amounts of online data to be continually available for instantaneous analysis, data mining, and knowlege synthesis." There's another article in the same magazine here: Transforming Research with High-Performance Grid Computing" LighthouseJ adds some details: "C|Net's news.com has a story about a new Compaq supercomputer named Terascale. It uses 3,000 Alpha EV68 processors distributed over 750 servers using networking systems from Quadrics. They say it can perform as fast as 10,000 desktop PC's combined in one second. The massive computer will make it's official debut on Monday at the Supercomputing Center in Pittsburgh PA."

2 of 115 comments (clear)

  1. The TeraGrid and the TeraScale machine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
    They're both NSF-funded systems. Any scientist in the country can get time on it, just by writing a proposal. A peer-review committee then decides who gets time and who doesn't, or if there's a better machine to use. They're both part of the NSF PACI (Patnerships for Advanced Computational Infrastructure). See www.paci.org for more info on getting time.

    The money for the TeraScale machine was awarded last year, and it went to the Pittsburgh Supercomputer Center. The follow-on the the TeraScale machine was an award made two months ago, the Distributed TeraScale Facility, or the DTF. The DTF award went to NCSA in Illinois, SDSC in San Diego, Cal Tech, and Argonne National Lab. The winners decided to rename the DTF the TeraGrid. They've got a web page about the new system at www.teragrid.org

  2. Grid Business Case? by hattig · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I have a friend who's currently trying to think of a business case for Grid Computing ... but is having trouble. Apart from academics and researchers, can The Grid ever become mainstream? Why should companies invest in it, i.e., your average medium-to-large corporation? The books often seem to cite creation of virtual companies and vertical integration of companies (i.e. from the component manufacturers to the end retailers), but these situations don't seem particularly realistic ... and you'd have to agree policies over data sharing for a start!