$24.5 Million Linux Supercomputer
An anonymous reader wrote in to say "Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (US DOE) signed a $24.5 million dollar contract with HP for a Linux supercomputer. This will be one of the top ten fastest computers in the world. Some cool features: 8.3 Trillion Floating Point Operations per Second, 1.8 Terabytes of RAM, 170 Terabytes of disk, (including a 53 TB SAN), and 1400 Intel McKinley and Madison Processors. Nice quote: 'Today's announcement shows how HP has worked to help accelerate the shift from proprietary platforms to open architectures, which provide increased scalability, speed and functionality at a lower cost,' said Rich DeMillo, vice president and chief technology officer at HP.
Read Details of the announcement here or here."
1. IBM ASCI White,SP Power3 375 MHz
;)
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
It runs AIX.
2. Compaq AlphaServer SC ES45/1GHz
Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center
Haven't used it, but I'm guessing Tru64.
3. IBM SP Power3 375 MHz 16 way
NERSC/LBNL
Once again, AIX.
4. Intel ASCI Red
Sandia National Labs
A poor home-grown OS (no offence) called Cougar or TFlops which doesn't even support X11 or sockets.
5. IBM ASCI Blue-Pacific SST,IBM SP 604e
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Can you say AIX?
6. Compaq AlphaServer SC ES45/1GHz
Los Alamos National Laboratory
I assume Tru64.
7. Hitachi SR8000/MPP
University of Tokyo
No idea. Sorry.
8. SGI ASCI Blue Mountain
Los Alamos National Laboratory
IRIX.
9. IB SP Power3 375 MHz
Naval Oceanographic Office
Don't know for sure, but you can bet it's AIX.
10. IBM SP Power3 375 MHz 16 way
Deutscher Wetterdienst
Again, I'm sure it's AIX.
All Unix. No, no linux on there yet, but Pacific Northwest will be right up there near the top, and Lawrence Livermore is also probably getting a linux cluster of almost that size pretty soon. That will make two in the top few slots.
No Windows on these puppies!
What about Google?!? It should qualify as a Linux supercomputer. For those who don't know, Google, the popular search engine, uses a huge cluster of PCs running Linux.