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Supercomputer To Use Optical Router

Izmunuti writes "From a NYTimes article: 'Highlighting a radical departure in the design of the fastest computers, the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology plans to announce on Monday that it will use an optical router designed by a Texas company as the heart of a campus-wide supercomputer that will be woven together with optical fibers.'"

7 of 174 comments (clear)

  1. Re:How times change... by Soko · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I think perhaps you're a bit confused, my friend. It _is_ digital in that it's sending information as numbers, it's just carrying those numbers on an analogue signal.

    The medium isn't important in digital, it's the message. Whether I send you a sequence of 20,000,000 numbers via carrier pidgeon or blue/green modulated laser light isn't important (other than latency) - it's the fact that those 20,000,000 numbers got from A to B via some means other than picking them up and carrying them.

    So, we are all digital now, and have no need to go back.

    Soko

    --
    "Depression is merely anger without enthusiasm." - Anonymous
  2. Re:How times change... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    First: These optical signals are interpreted digitally.

    Second: If you spread your devices over campus, you will not generally get "insane speeds". No signal can be sent faster than lightspeed. So if we are accessing a piece of information 1 km away, latency will be over 6.6 microsec...

    Now, you can get a fast link in the sense of sending a lot of information per second, but this is not usually what you really need in a supercomputer.

  3. Doesn't SGI uses something similar? by leeet · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Corect me if I'm wrong but I always thought SGI was using light in it's interconnectors between machines? That's how they can achieve amazing throughput.

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    -- Leeeter than leet
  4. Is it really faster? by El · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was told by a fiber-optic transceiver engineer that signals actually travel faster in copper coax than in fiber (in both it's less than c, the speed of light in a vacuum). So couldn't you get even better results by hardware-switching a coax signal? And how usefull is only being able to talk to 1 other node at a time? Sounds to me like these guys have reinvented the T-bar used to connect IMB System 370 channels together... (albeit with much better performance).

    --

    "Freedom means freedom for everybody" -- Dick Cheney

  5. Steve Wallach by bstadil · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Don't forget Steve Wallach he was one of the protagonists in Tracy Kidder's Pulitzer winning book The Soul of a new Machine about the 32bit Data General next generation machine Nova that was going to leapfrog Digital's Vax. An excellent read by the way.

    He still drives a Porche with Convex as number plate.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  6. Tanenbaum by Shade,+The · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Andrew S Tanenbaum's book on Computer Networks points out a similar trend; that bandwidth is increasing faster than processor speed. In the future, it'll veyr likely be faster to transfer information about than to process it locally. And that means that distributed computing might become intrisic to most software.

    The internet in itself might become a resource for idle CPUs. With a few billion or more individual systems networked up, playing that game of Quake 10 might rely on the processor time borrowed from others.

    1. Re:Tanenbaum by 4of12 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I find where bandwidth has been increasing to where it is not the major practical limit to my computing.

      More and more, I find that latency is what limits my experience, be it on the network, to a disk array, or to the main memory from the CPU.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."