Virginia Tech to Build Top 5 Supercomputer?
hype7 writes "ThinkSecret is running a story which might explain exactly why the Dual 2GHz G5 machines have been delayed to the customers that ordered them minutes after the keynote was delivered. Apparently, Virginia Tech has plans to build a G5 cluster of 1100 units. If it manages to complete the cluster before the cut-off date, it will score a Top 5 rank in the Linpack Top 500 Supercomputer List. Both Apple and the University are playing mum on the issue, but there's talk of it all over the campus."
...a Beowulf cluster of....
Oh wait, it is a cluster. DAMN!!!!!
there's talk of it all over the campus ....and we all know how reliable campus rumors are! C'mon guys, don't forget to say hi to the Olson twins when you see them on campus next year!
"Quoting famous computer scientists out of context is the root of all evil (or at least most of it) in programming." - K
That's the one thing that favors huge amounts of processors in the same box. All this "the internet is one giant distributed computer" doesn't acknowledge this. A box designed to be separate just will not have the latency advantage of a supercomputer designed from the ground up.
-Libertarian secular transhumanist
"Both Apple and the University are playing mum on the issue, but there's talk of it all over the campus."
Must be a pretty boring campus...
~ "When I'm of that age I'm just going to live up a tree."
Are they gonna run Photoshop on that supercomputer ?
play Doom III.
but there's talk of it all over campus.
Funny, I haven't heard anything about it prior to today. Guess I'm just out of the loop then...
-Julius X
remove "-whatkindofspamdoyoutakemefor-" from email to send
And it'll get skunked by 40 teraflops by Duke's supercomputer every year!
Dude, you're getting alot of Dell's!!!!!
Speech: Free
Beer: $699.00
I don't want to start a holy war here, but what is it with you with you G5 zealots? Ive been sitting at my 1100 CPU G5 supercomputer for 20 minutes as it computers a fast fourier transform of an 8Ghz guassian. 20 minutes! At home, on my 60 cpu linux beowulf cluster, the same operation would take 2 minutes if that. Also, while this operation is takiing place, Doom III won't start, and everything else grinds to a halt, even my multithreaded emacs is struggling to keep up as i type this.
My Sun Enterprise 5000 is faster than this machine at times. Super computer addicts, flame me if you want, but I'd rahter hear some inteligent reasons why I should use the G5 supercomputer over cheaper, faster clusters.
I take it you don't look at Think Secret on a regular basis. It is, easily, the most accurate Mac rumors site out there. In fact, they have posted info on numerous occasions that has caught the attention of Apple's lawyers, and have been forced to pull down and issue their standard disclaimer. Say what you will about other rumors sites (most of them simply feed off each other) but there are some startlingly reliable sources informing Think Secret. Frankly, I don't recall the last time they were wrong about anything they've posted.
--Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
Virginia Tech placed the dual-2GHz G5 order shortly after the G5 was announced. Multiple sources said Virginia Tech has ordered 1100 units
:-)
...)
Wow, that'll make Apple's quarter for sure
Seriously though, why PowerMacs ? I've always been under the impression that intelloid machines are the cheapest commodity hardware around for equivalent processing power, if not the most exciting. Would anybody know why Powermac G5s are a better choice here?
(Note to computer zealots: it's not a flamebait, it's a genuine question, from someone who is rigorously ignorant of the Mac world. And just in case, the first sentence is a joke, too
"A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
The best thing is, they were asking for volunteers to put this thing together. I signed up for a 4 hour shift next week! I'm so excited!
I got the following email the other day:
Virginia Tech is in the process of building a Terascale Computing Cluster which will be housed in the Andrews Information Systems Building (AISB). For those who are interested in learning more about this project, we will host an information session on Thursday, September 4th from 11 a.m. to noon in the Donaldson Brown Hotel and Conference Center auditorium.
We look forward to seeing you there
Terry Herdman Director of Research Computing.
I'll try to remember to take notes on this and let you all know if there's anything interesting...
Friends help you move. Real friends help you move bodies.
By my count, they'll have an R_peak of 8800 GFLOPS; unless they've got more efficient linpack code than anyone else, that will put them around 7th or 8th place.
Tarsnap: Online backups for the truly paranoid
Of all the Macintosh rumor websites, Think Secret is, by far, one of the most reliable sites I've seen. If it wasn't, I wouldn't be investing $1,200 a year in them for their message board. Of course, if you think you can do better... ;-)
8==8 Bones 8==8
Yeah, chicks dig massive...computers.
No wait, no they don't!
One thing against clusters rather than machines designed for the ground up is memory access. If on a n Single System Image (SSI) system is that any node can access memory of another over fast internconnects. With a cluster the memory has to be transfered over ethernet which even if using 10GB Ethernet is still a number of magnitudes lower than memory
Rus
Cheap UK and US VPS
Right after the Sony Playstation 2 launch, there was a big shortage. Several media stories blamed it on some "unnamed" Middle East country buying them all up to power their missles and supercomputers (because, the rumor claimed, the PS2 was just so powerful).
Wonder if Apple is trying to "pull a Sony" here...
They're probably all just for the emporium and everyone thinks they're for a super computer ;)
Hokies will know what I mean!
You obviously know very little about distributed computing.
Latency isn't the most paramount issue, otherwise render farms and clusters wouldn't be as popular as they were today.
and lets not forget about projects like distributed.net and Seti@Home. Latency is not at all the concern for them.
The article makes no mention of the operating system that will be running on this supercomputer. I for one would like to see them get this done w/ OS X rather than use GNU/Linux.
[Connection closed by foreign host]
Orientation today was postponed, however, so I won't have more details until Wednesday =/ I'm looking forward to helping out, though.
"If it manages to complete the cluster before the cut-off date, it will score a Top 5 rank in the Linpack Top 500 Supercomputer List."
Err... I think somebody's getting a bit ahead of themselves here. =) Building parallel computing systems is complicated, and it may end up being quite a bit harder to realize the predicted performance than thought (not an uncommon occurrence). I'll believe it when they have the actual Linpack numbers.
Currently the top 5 consist of 4 machines that have a Therotical maximum speed (Rmax) the are larger then the 10TFLOPS this machine will have. Then you have to translate that into peak speed which is what matter and what this list uses to rank the machines. Peak will be a good deal less, but this mostly has to do with the way the systems are interconnected and not the machines themselves. Say what you may about the G5 but the interconnect is more important.
There is only one machine in the top 5 that this cluster could beat. The rest of the world has had 6 months to build machines too.
This should be a top 10 machine for sure. Good to see more fast machines being built every day.
What about iWalk? And their WWDC coverage was like 50% accurate.
Schools have many different accounts set up to fund many different things. This is due to how donors donate money and specify that they want it to go toward a certian project or department. One department, say the CS department might have recieved donations from CS alumni. Also, having large projects like this can generate lots of revenue through grants.
Several years ago I did some work on some Virginia Tech "supercomputers" (actually, baby versions of ones on campus that were the same as huge ones they leased time on elsewhere), and I think the people talking about Altivec are on track. I never knew exactly what they did, but at that time the Math, CS, and Engineering groups were working together to simulate wing designs for the YF-22 jet figher prototype. Since I was more of a "sysadmin" (althoug h with a math and CS background) I ignored most of what was going on, but one thing I can tell you was vectors, vectors, and more vectors. The vector is king. It's an assumption, but I'll bet they are still working on similar type studies, and if built, this will be just the beast for it.
Exactly, Virginia tech has a goal to become a top 30 research university. Having known about the plan for some time, this makes perfect sense. The departments who are building the cluster, have gotten very large grants and donations from our great alumni to build this, and become a better university for it. This construction can be compared to the stadium expansions. The stadium expansion is paid out of a different set of funds, as is research. Academic fund is hurting because alumni rarely give money for academic reasons, but more for football or research.
...it is in my power to imagine a Beowulf, or indeed any large-scale cluster, of G5's...I'm overloaded.
Damn, I've been at this school for a week and I haven't found a single redeeming value. Finally, a cause to hang in there for the next couple of years.
-Waldo Jaquith
"I don't recall the last time they were wrong about anything they've posted"
iWorks.
While the AltiVec unit is very impressive, The SSE2 unit on the P4 or the Opteron would have nearly the same performance and cost a whole heck of a lot less (I am betting if this rumor is true at all, then Apple has given the units to the school).
What I am wondering is, what OS is this cluster going to run? I mean, have the BSD folks figured out how to scale? No chance it will be OS X...maybe AIX?
[RIAA] says its concern is artists. That's true, in just the sense that a cattle rancher is concerned about its cattle.
The cluster has nothing to do with Apple. They were contemplating using PPC970 CPUs (basically becasue they're cheaper than the Power4's), but AFAIK there were never plans to use complete G5 computers, or anything else made by Apple. And I doubt IBM would take CPUs from Apple to give them to V.Tech. The delay is mot likely due to performance issues; they're probably fine-tuning the OS so it's competitive with x86 / Windows systems.
The grant money that flows into a public research and occasionally teaching institution can be stagering, and absolutely dwarf the money students pay in tuition (sometimes by a factor of 10!). A better question might be, why don't the gradstudents donating their labor, possibly to patents that will be controlled by the university, recieve more consideration, and fair labor law protections.
But I would bet this will be not too dissimilar in use from the HP Itanium2 referenced earlier on slashdot. I would bet one of the paramount concerns this cluster would look at is the effect of farm runoff, and probably climatology too among other things.
--Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
This won't help sell their clustering hardware:
http://www.apple.com/server/clustering.html
eleven plus two / twelve plus one
With 1100 machines in the cluster, there must be _at least_ 2200 DIMMs. Since these must be 400MHz (PC3200) DDR, they can't be on a large 0.15 micron DRAM process, but most likely between 0.11 and 0.13u.
d /d imm_results.htm
Who cares?
APPLE G5'S DO NOT SUPPORT ECC.
The random bit error rate for 2200 DIMMs with 0.13u cells is roughly one '1' bit dropped to '0' every 9 hours. In other words: good luck getting any reliable, large-scale computation done with this cluster. (And I do mean "good luck" - they might get a run of two or three days without any problems once in a while.)
Now if only Apple would support PC3200 ECC DIMMS, which certainly do exist:
http://www.intel.com/technology/memory/ddr/vali
this cluster might be a bit more useful for real work.
-I'm about to buy another in a day or two...
... there is a pretty big gap between asking for one and actually getting one. Tell you what, let me finish this gig I got happening in Virginia and then we can start dealing with the customers that want to order G5 machines in the onsies - twosies quantities.
... now THAT is hardcore.
You mean you are about to order another in a day or two
Sincerely,
Steve.
sjobs@apple.com
PS - Seven Mac's in ten years isn't hardcore. 1100 units ordered on one purchase order before they even ship (August, 2003)
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
Well, maybe 2. The chairs are pretty comfortable.
Kinda curious why the Empo needs them, especially in the budget crunch. But I shouldn't complain (especially since I'm now an alumnus), I'll just watch University Surplus and score a used G4 from there for cheap once they retire them in favor of the G5s. (WOOHOO!)
Perhaps for modeling various atmospheric situations, helping out in the Physics department if the campus happens to be doing any research in... well damn near any area of physics would benefit from having a supercomputer handy. The applications in the CS department alone are staggaring. If you were a student of VT, wouldn't you like access to this kind of hardware. I sure would...
American fears are unfounded. Numerous universities like Virginia Tech have trained a generation of American (not foreign) students in building the finest supercomputers. MIT, Carnegie Mellon University (CMU), and Virginia Tech (to name just a few) have launched large-scale research projects staffed by top American graduate students. Their work became the foundation of several generations of multiprocessors.
By contrast, very few (if any) Japanese universities conduct large-scale research projects to build high-performance supercomputers. The Japanese government has tended to avoid funding this kind of research. Worse, there is little collaboration between industry and academia in Japan. Yet, precisely this kind of collaboration is needed for such large-scale projects: e.g. Virginia Tech is enlisting the help of Apple computer.
American companies lead by scientists trained at MIT and CMU could easily design a computer that outperforms the Earth Simulator. These companies simply have chosen to not do so because there is far more profits to be garnered by building commercial supercomputers geared for database transactions. In fact, the highest-performance commercial supercomputers nearly all come from the United States of America (IBM).
The 21st century remains Pax Americana, not Pax Asia. The hordes of immigrants trying to get the hell out of Asia and into the USA underscores this fact.
ooops, yuo = own3d!!!!y pe=99&cpumhz=1000&recordid=1&contest=rc572&multi=0
http://n0cgi.distributed.net/speed/query.php?cput
Power PC 7450/7455 G4 1000 MacOS X 10.2 2.9005 RC5-72 10,594,666.00
I know several people working directly on it and have been offered a chance to work on it (both set up and afterwards). I think I will take them up on the offer just to see it in action.
DecafJedi
DecafJedi
my weblog: apropos of something
That first column says "Report as Error" It's a link to report the number as an error if it is unusually high compared to its neighbors, not to state that the actual figure is an error. Click the link, it will explain the system to you. I must be off because being a homosexual, a Macintosh user, and a priest takes a lot of my time! At least the slashdot trolls seem to think so! Toodles!!
i would take this story to imply that a G5 powered Xserve is not going to be shipping anytime soon..... the Xserve is made to cluster and run in situations like this. i guess the rumor sites can speculate if it's G5 parts available or some other holdup on a G5 Xserve.
/. a year or so ago about a group that went from building a rack and unboxing their G4s to a running cluster in part of a day. i really don't remember the specifics but i think it was something like 30 G4s? i would guess the G5 is not that much harder... and they seem to have Apple helping. maybe they hooked up the optical cards from the Xserve...... we'll see i guess.
unless there is some reason the desktops are better for this project that i did not pick up on?
as for the above question about Macs.... depending on what they want to really do with this, Altivec is really efficient for some computations. all flame wars aside there have always been people clustering Macs for certain uses. i do not know how much of it was user preference or the software they wanted to run or the simplicity of getting the cluster running.
it is supposedly VERY simple to cluster Macs. there was a story on
I've been tempted to order a dual G5. I've resisted the temptation by realizing that my only real reason for wanting it would be to awe friends and co-workers. Pretty shallow. I was ashamed.
What a surprise to find that the folks who buy multi-million dollar supercomputers seek some of the same shallow satisfaction that moves me--bragging rights.
Still, if a single order for 1100 units causes significant delays filling orders for other customers, Apple must not have been expecting to sell many of these things. Maybe I should place an order just to help out.
When all you have is an axe, everything looks like a grindstone.
About a week ago, VT CS (and I assume Comp Eng) majors got an email telling us about it (though the email claimed it was top 10, not 5, in the world). It also invited us to volunteer to help build it. Needless to say, I signed up ASAP.
They're planning on having 3 4-hour shifts each day. They don't really know when they're going to receive the chips, just that they will get 72 hrs of warning before arrival.
For those unbelievers, here's a little proof and maybe a bit more
Here's an official word (search for Teraflop).
Also, here's the original e-mail that went out (a month ago) They never mentioned Apple though:
> Date: Mon, 28 Jul 2003 17:36:46 -0400
> From: Jason Lockhart <multimedia@vt.edu>
> Subject: Terascale Assembly Assistance
>
> Hello all,
>
> As you may know the College of Engineering in conjunction with the
> university Information Systems and Computing organization are
> building
> a 10 TeraOp, 1100 node supercomputing cluster. We are in need of
> volunteers to assist in three areas of assembly; cabling, RAM and PCI
> card install, and machine racking. We would like to get as many
> volunteers as possible.
>
> Some logistical things, there is not adequate parking for every
> volunteer to drive and park at the Computing Center. We
> would ask that
> volunteers either carpool (4 or more to a vehicle) or take the BT.
> Initial cabling will be done with the power cables beginning this
> coming Friday, August 1st. We have yet to set a start time,
> but I want
> to get an idea of who is available to assist on that day as well as
> availability for the weekend and early next week. I will forward the
> time to arrive as soon as I nail it down...should be tomorrow. The
> power cabling represents one third of the overall cabling that will
> need to be done.
>
> I need to get a list of those who will be assisting to the facilities
> people at the ISB as soon as possible. This list will be
> used to allow
> volunteers access to the building and the machine room. If
> you're not
> on the list you will not be allowed in! We want to have at
> least 30 to
> 40 people working at any one time on the project. If you know others
> that will be interested in assisting, please have them email me so I
> can get them on the roster.
>
> Thank you for your willingness to participate, and please respond and
> have others respond with "Terascale" in the subject so I can
> filter the
> volunteers properly.
>
> Thanks.
(E-mail signature removed)
Heh, the iWalk was all SpyMac. And the WWDC coverage was closer to 98% accurate.
I never thought the mac-madlib-trollbot-AC post had the power to do more than infuriate...
I stand corrected.
Bravo.
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
Read this at then go back to school.
President Steiger's stated intention his first year in office was to be in the top 25(?) research instutions. The decision to spend the money on this is probaby connected to that initiative. I'm not sure where the fuding came from, but I doubt they could do this without a lot of approval from the top.
I am, and always will be, an idiot. Karma: Coma (mostly effected by
As Zack pointed out, iWalk was not a Think Secret report; in fact, we debunked it. For WWDC, we reported that Apple would announce 64-bit Power Macs as well as a videoconferencing camera that we said would be called "iSight," -- I think we're in the clear there. iWorks? I maintain that it is still a future Apple release. As for 12-inch and 17-inch PowerBooks, while we raised the possibility of a release that week, we specifically said we couldn't confirm the delivery date: "It's unclear when Apple plans to announce the upgrades..."
Bottom line? Like any other news organization, Think Secret has occasional misses. But those misses don't appear to include any of the items mentioned here. I think our record speaks for itself.
Nick dePlume
Publisher and Editor in Chief
Think Secret
For the ones who are questioning this existence, the order is shipping, the racks (a ton of them) are there in the main Computing Center server room. First they required all servers to be moved innto racks. Then they started moving servers around, including removing the Petaplex. The power has been upgraded in the server room (the UPS backup generator actually). This caused a morning of basically all the important servers on campus having to go down for one day in the summer - I hated waking up to go switch off machines for that one. The AC has been upgraded to accomidate the huge amount of heat to be put out. It was't until I heard about the cluster that all the chages in the Machine Room made sense. Now they're recruiting help to do the grunt work of putting all the machines in the racks.
/. link to the campus geek list (If someone hasn't beaten me to it).
/. since a cluster this size is noteworthy of the frontpage. (Rumor - and this is rumor sice I haven't goe to direct sources on this - is that it will not be running OS X, and probably BlackLab or YellowDog or SuSE.)
The stated objective was to be on the next 500 list. Dell and HP were considered, but they couldn't fill the order in time (possibly as they have made announcements of other large clusters recently) and Apple promised delivery after someone leaked the story of the cluster meetign with Dell and HP to Apple and Apple jumped at the chance.
Basically, the story is not a rumor from the point of view of the geeks on campus who have been effected by the preperations. I'll probably post the
I'm disapointed about this being only on the Apple section of
I am, and always will be, an idiot. Karma: Coma (mostly effected by
Bonus Quiz: How many Coach K-coached players have gone on to win NBA titles?
Or you could just check the site yourself and shut the hell up. This test is Altivec's biggest win, the G4 absolutely embarrasses systems with three times the clock speed.
Imagine, if you will, a room about the size that a mall deparment store might be if they took out all the walls separating the individual departments. And in there, there are HUNDREDS of iMacs (the 700 mHz ones with the LCD screens- I checked the clockspeed myself on the one I used.) And along (at least) one wall, there were god-only-knows how many more G4 towers and monitors. It was an Apple geek's nerdvana.
At first, I figured it was just because the math department liked Macs better. But now that I think about it, all that people did on these computers was take tests and quizzes through a web browser. You really don't need that much power to do that, and the iMacs were the cheapest, easiest-to-set-up (remember, there were HUNDREDS of these fuckers in there) option they had.
It's because we can.
You got a link for dual Opterons for 1500 bucks with all the goodies in the G5? If yes, Id love to see it.
:) )
(seriously - I can take out a loan
Yes, but the difference is, to buy one I had to mow lawns for an entire summer, and my parents chipped in the other half.
What's the most you had to do, remember where your pen was, and shlep the PO down to Purchasing?
Please help metamoderate.
2^n
(2^n)-1
Anything in hex, eg. 0xf67d34ee, but if you're going to pull this stunt, make sure you #define DEBUG_MEM_VAL 0xdeadbeef as well, so they think you know what you're doing.
Never, never, never use a round decimal value. T&K.
Political language
Obviously you haven't looked at VT recently. Tuition and fees is only $7,500, out of state. I can only wish that my tuition were that low. Hell, for in-state students, the room and board is the same price as tuition (around $2,000). But of course, you're modded up insightful, because you pulled a random idea out of your ass and presented it as fact.
I'm a lawyer, but not yours. I wouldn't represent someone who thinks taking legal advice from Slashdot is a good idea.
Virginia Tech placed the dual-2GHz G5 order shortly after the G5 was announced. Multiple sources said Virginia Tech has ordered 1100 units
Ummmm, Virginia Tech (like many institutions of higher learning, especially in Virginia) is counting paperclips. Tuition is skyrocketing and state financial support is drying up.
There has been talk of going private and actually coming out ahead because the amount of money coming in from the state is fast dropping to the point where all the people required to maintained the state mandated beurocacies costs more.
And where did the $$$ for these 1100 G5's come from?
And 8 hours@12.4GFlops...damn you Virginia Tech, you owe me a third of a quadrilion floating point multiplies!
Hey maybe IE for Mac will be faster now?
According to Apple, there were "over 100,000" pre-orders for the G5. Now this includes single processor models, but the university's alleged order of 1100 machines is not going to make a big impact on everyone else.
Besides, the real reason that Apple's machines are late is case defects and AGP problems, amongst other issues that Apple has not been forthright about. At the keynote an honest Apple employee told me the machines wouldn't ship until October as there were many little problems and I should wait for the January refresh so I don't get a flaky machine.
And one has to wonder why anyone building a cluster would build it using desktop machines and not use the forthcoming G5 rackmount machines from Apple and IBM... which is supposed to include a quad-processor from IBM.
1. The PPC970 draws from the Power4 lineage, which I have used for a long time. The PPC970 has 2 double precision FPUs, each capable of fused multiply add instructions leading to 4 flops/cycle/processor (2 units*2flops/cycle). This is identical to the Itanium2 FPU microarchitecture. The Opteron on the other hand can only do 2 double precision flops/cycle, which makes it only half as powerful on matrix heavy scientific computations, when compared to the PPC970 or the Itanium 2. The PPC970 should really be compared in FP terms to the Itanium2 at 1/10th of the cost, and at 2GHz it is clocked higher than the top-end 1.5GHz Itanium2 Madison. Moral of the story, read thy arstechnica. 2. The standard benchmarking process (LINPACK) only uses double precision FP. If this rumor is true, then this machine is capable of an Rpeak (LINPACK) of 17.6 Teraflop, which those of you who follow top500 will realize is quite substantial. 3. If they are really using Infiniband, this should be a nice machine. Infiniband provides 10 Gbps (20 Gbps full duplex) of bandwidth, which is much faster than either Myrinet or Quadrics. Also Infiniband latency is 10us and the benchmarking process is bandwidth not latency sensitive. On the other, this stuff is really expensive. If all of this is true, this would be a major engineering endeavor. Also, it is probably cheap. However, all in all, this could well just be a rumor (come on it is thinksecret - remember iWorks). If not, this should be a fairly substantial machine.
It's just too darn hard to make a shared memory computer with 1000's of processors. So the common architecture is to make a cluster of smaller shared memory machines.
It's hard, but not too hard or impossible. The Silicon Graphics Origin 3000 supports 512 processors in a single image system with the stock IRIX kernel and 1024 processors with the "XXL" kernel.
Rumor has it Origin 4000 will support 2048 processors, as will Altix once SGI has done some major work with their kernel patches. (Altix is currently limited to 64 processors per system image).
They released Wolfenstein 3D. Long after we'd all played it out on our '286s and '386's, of course. The Mac version of Wolfenstein 3D has a better music track.
A Good Intro to NetBS
They went with the G5's because they were the cheapest 64 bit solution and because they would use less power and generate less heat than alternative systems. That is the whole of it.
They are having someone write infinaban drivers for OS X just for this cluster.
I look forward to helping install 4GB of ram + the infinaban cards in each of these bad boys.
It is great having connections!
K came along in '80-'81, and Ferry (finally) got a title in 2003, so that's 22 years. And what's a Dookie doing at UMass? Shouldn't you be representing for your Minutemen? Sure, they've kinda sucked since Coach Cal cut and run, but c'mon dude.
And that opteron system will use 3x the power and heat. Universities don't spend millions on a 'non efficient choice'. Smart people did the math, and they had facts - which you don't.
Damn, ethernet controllers must really piss you off then, huh?
You are an idiot. I guess since the tuition has not exploded at VT, then it is okay to spend at will. I guess the question of need is not in your vocabulary. Just buy it, even if it is not needed. Jerk.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
And you think $14,000 a year for out of state tuition is cheap. It still comes to over $20,000 a year for study. Stop posting numbers for semesters when you obviously imply year.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
As long as they put it on Legion, U.Va. will get to maintain state bragging rights. I don't keep up with the football rivalry, but this is much cooler anyway.
WARNING: there is a trojan on your
See, the thing is that Duke doesn't have a great song written about it like the Pixies' UMass, which was what made me a Mass fan, back in the day -- and the early nineties were when Coach Cal and Marcus Gumby and that wicked backcourt of Padilla and Travieso were tearing up the nation (plus comically named forward Dana Dingle!). But yeah, ever since then, it's been lean years for Mass basketball.
Erhm. He was replying to an AC claiming "LOL mac zealot. didn't think that one through did you. an eMac doesn't go any higher than 1GHz. If you think a 1GHz machine has any hope of doing over 10 million rc5 keys you're really trying to fool yourself."
Lars T.
To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck
Just for perspective, there have been over 100,000 G5s ordered, so this cluster is about one percent of the backlog. In other words, assuming that Apple ships all pending orders in about a month, the G5 I ordered will be delayed by about 8 hours.
First, let me say that I think it is good for Apple and therefore good for Apple users that they are supporting the VT supercomputer project by bumping their priority. This will be the first time that Apple computer will be able to claim anything like this and it should mark an important turning point in the minds of corporate and scientific buyers regarding the strength of Apple's platform. And I agree completely, 1100 machines is not going to delay anyone's order by much (or at all).
Speaking of delays: It may be a mistake at the Apple Store site, or hopefully (maybe) it is by design! - I went through the process of purchasing a dual 2ghz (stock) G5 machine to look at the shipping date and guess what? Estimated ship: 10-15 bus days. Go check it out for yourself... Is this real, or a Labor day, labor problem?
The reason that it can be true that 1+1 > 2 is that very peculiar nonzero value of the + operator
If you look at the top500 list, you see Lawrence Livermore's Linux cluster is at 3rd place. It's an 1100 node cluster of 2.4 GHZ P4's. Looks like Apple is a bit late to the party if they're only shooting for #5.
Unless the entire campus consists of five dateless wonders, I don't believe the entire campus is talking about it.
Thank you. The slashdot mod system kinda makes replying to things a moving target. When in doubt, click the parent link.
Good points. But my question is do they need such a large cluster to accomplish those objectives? Could those objectives be accomplished with a smaller cluster (and having money left over)? And if the cluster was smaller, then the money could be used on other university improvements- perhaps a wireless campus or better student lounges or better food service? I guess the reason I brought it up is because when I was in college, they were charging us $1.20 for a can of pepsi from a vending machine, and that made wonder if money was being wasted.
Rosco: "If brains were gunpowder, Enos couldn't blow his nose."
Start looking at prices for other states, and you'll realize that Virginia Tech is cheap compared to other places. If you went here and talked to anyone from the North East, they'll probably tell you what costs are like up there, and that it's cheaper out of state at VT than up north. (Quick check of PennSt. just got me $6100/semester IN state. Check some others up north and you'll probably find it gets higher quickly.)
/.
Also, it's common to give college costs by semester, as saying $20k/year isn't right either as it doesn't include summer classes, which many take (and not just because they fail, but to finish early).
I'm still paying for my college, and it helps to know what you're paying for. Or you can just whine about it on
I am, and always will be, an idiot. Karma: Coma (mostly effected by
So how does this anti-intellectual tripe qualify as insightful? Any yahoo can point at and complain about just about any non-trivial project at a research university whether it is public or private. If they were building it just to attain a certain ranking without any research proposals or plans it wouldn't be hard to find fault. Does anyone that could possibly be the case here? I think this sort of empty headed bushwhacking is a cheap shot and contemptible.
Is there something particularly about building any clusters today that is ill advised? Anything specifically about a cluster built with these parts? Why do any science that involves a large expense when the money could be applied to "lowering tuition"? Maybe because an important part of the mission of some universities is to advance the state of knowledge by performing research that would not be done by other segments of society.
Just keep an eye on the skips (dumpsters) where the computing facility dumps it's rubbish. The packaging from the new machines will be easy to spot.
Escoutaire
When a dream dreams the dreamer, the dreams the real.
How about this report? I'm still waiting, nearly a fortnight later, after they said "one Apple retail source said the new 15-inch and 17-inch models are expected to arrive later this week".
But please observe they accurately noted that this particular information is nothing but an expectation of one retail source. In fact it's quite obvious that no new releases are to be announced just a fortnight before Expo in Paris. Your long-awaited powerbook is most likely to be the Steve's Fabulous "One More Thing" (TM) during the keynote.
Also, I don't know how much PPC970s costs but considering how much dual G5s from Apple are expected to cost, PPC970 must be very competitevly priced.
Gentlemen, you can't fight in here, this is the War Room!
Someone here (me) scooped this on /. back in July. Welcome to the party.
At which point the software costs drop to zero.
Anyone know how much less expensive a cluster of AMD x86/64 machines would have been? How would the performance differ? If x86/64 is less expensive and performs on par (equal to or slightly less than) with a G5 cluster, then why not use that instead???
Apple must have given a *big* discount...
It was a joke, a parody. I'm not really Steve Jobs and I don't work at Apple.
The most I have ever had to do? Let me think back.
I was in college at the time, working a full time load my last year in school. 1989, as I recall. Working on my Senior Project I knew that if I didn't have unlimited access to a machine with a compiler (Borland's Pascal, for the record) I was not going to be able to finish it on time. The college had a computer room but generally it closed at 9pm or something insanely early like that, and was generally full of other students - so I knew I needed a machine.
I was making $5 an hour, working 40 hours a week (in addition to my full load at school)at a job 30 miles away. No parents, I was living on my own with a room-mate. I ended up selling my pistol (a nice S&W 6906 if it matters), the only thing I owned of any value whatsoever besides my motorcycle, and bought a 386sx-16 with 1M of RAM, an 8-bit VGA card with 256k of memory, both floppies, no hard drive, a 1200 baud modem, and a monochrome 12" vga monitor. I had some money saved up to add a dot matrix printer, and for a full semester programmed on that. Every day that semester I made every life decision, be it clothes, food, entertainment, liquor, caffeine, air conditioning / heating (I went the entire year in S. Texas without air conditioning, temperatures running 100+ for weeks at a time) to save money and when the next semester started I bought a used 40M hard drive, a 14" color VGA monitor, and another meg of memory.
By the time I was done the machine had cost me roughly $1,600 - earned at my $5 an hour job over the course of a year after paying for all my living expenses.
So yea, I hear ya.
Of course my last machine, the one I bought in May, I didn't think twice about. A new Dell P4/2.4 machine with a gigabit NIC, 128M of RAM, 40G of fast drive space for $300 delivered to my door took all of about three minutes on the web to configure and another two to type in my credit card number. (Where were these supercomputer class machines for $300 when I was a poor college kid?) Disclaimer - I have since added 512M of RAM, an SB Audigy and a Geforce 440mx w/ 64M to make the machine a well rounded development / game environment, bringing the cost to $500 total.
Just curious - what is the easiest you have had it when buying a machine?
Glonoinha the MebiByte Slayer
The main reason that RC5 goes so fast using AltiVec is that it includes a Vector Rotate instruction while every other SIMD engine does not. A Vector rotate is a very rare instruction (and trivial to add to SSE, etc.) that RC5 makes extremely heavy use of.
That is the ONLY reason why RC5 goes that fast on a G4/G5.
[RIAA] says its concern is artists. That's true, in just the sense that a cattle rancher is concerned about its cattle.
Sure, having a top-5 supercomputer is cool, and the bragging rights will garner the school some additional funding and scholarships, but at the end of the day after the benchmarks are run and the empty Jolt(tm) cans are recycled, what will they *do* with it?
Chip H.
halflife playable in software mode either
i think we need quantum computing faster
and where are my solid state harddrives and flying cars and genetically engineered super model sex slaves while you're at it...
Well, people also need to realize that universities slut out their resources from time to time. My school has a fabrication facility that is almost exclusively supported by industry. Basically, if they need a $1M piece of equipment (common) in the facility, industry buys it for us and can come and use it. Of course, we use it when they're not, and we rent out time on it to other companies when we're not using it.
The upside for industry is that they don't need to maintain a 100/1,000/10,000 class facility 24/7, and they get to rent out other people's $1M pieces of equipment. It's a good deal all around and only cost the taxpayers the square footage of the facility and the staff salaries which pales to the $100M+ in equipment that industry has donated. And we generate income off of the contract time to upgrade and maintain the place.
From this perspective, the cluster race makes sense:
1) by getting it in the top 5 or top 10, they earn bragging rights which is essentially the best marketing you can hope for. This brings work to the university from DARPA, NASA, industry, etc. My guess is that the project was funded by NSF or DARPA.
2) even if the university can't make full use of the cluster (faculty can *always* dream up shit to run on a cluster like this) they'll rent it out to others to cover support costs.
In the mean time, the university has a resource for students to use that likely didn't impact tuition in any way, positively or negatively. Public universities have very clear separation of funds, so research grant can't be used for tuition, and tuition funds can't be used for research or buildings. It's a very controlled situation that often times causes surpluses that can't be applied to places in need, but it also makes sure that nobody is exploited (e.g. tuition being used for supercomputers instead of instructors).
Big public universities are not taxpayer supported to the degree that you might expect. Taxpayers might cover 25% or so of the operating expenses of a major research university, but the rest comes from tuition, grants, gifts, and so on. Some public universities like University of California, aren't even directly state controlled. They are essentially a contractor to the state, educating state residents in exchange for funding, but as the taxpayer funding percentage decreases, the university acts more and more privately. The California State University system is a directly funded institution, and much more akin to what you might expect.
Okay, so I'm browsing a tech news page and come across al ink to this thread . It piques my interest and I start reading some of the posts. Then it occurs to me how totally stupid this whole thing is. People on this thread (and plenty more like it on this and a multitude of other sites) are arguing, debating, waxing poetic, philosophizing, etc., etc., about man-made, highly engineered chunks of crystal. How f'n stupid is that? I was a "car guy" at one time and we could bitch for hours about the relative merits of the Chevy vs. Ford thing. But I don't recall there being this huge pissing match over how the engines worked. If I'm not mistaken, there are no little elves that sneak into the labs at IBM and Intel at nigh and weave magical, unknown architecture into these chips. It's all plotted out very methodically by humans and computers (designed by the humans) running programs (also designed by the humans) and there is not AI or unknown natural intelligence involved. It's all there on the map. My main point is this: in the grand scheme of things, who cares! My god, people, put those big f'n brains to work on something really mysterious like the natural sciences, or something creative. Put some of that wasted effort into trying to figure out how your own thinker works. Now that's interesting and full of mysteries and possible explanations. This is not meant to be a troll post. Please don't take it as such. Just MHO.
And you know that's wrong because...? What do your sources say? Did Think Secret announce a release date for iWorks or did they simply report that it was being worked on?
--Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
Apple did offer a parity-checking SIMM option on the IIci, from 1989-92, I believe.
Four gigs? Why aren't they maxing them out?
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
Computer Orchard?
----- "Blame the guy who doesn't speak English." -- Homer J. Simpson
I'll bet on this cluster, launching Acrobat Reader will only take like 30 seconds.
(As far as I can tell, Adobe has come up with some sort of reverse Moore's Law, where each new version of Reader takes twice as long to start up... at least on Macs.)
I paid the going retail price for a Windows screen reader and got a free Unix computer!
Apple is a HARDWARE company. They make a really cool Desktop OS, and a really cool General Purpose Server OS. They do not necessarily make the best OS for a dedicated number-crunching cluster. You don't need all that Aqua/Quartz lickableness if all you are running is massive Fortran matrix apps.
When they upgrade to newer, faster machines, they can distribute what they want to other departments!
How much does that cost?
Availability? I just did a quick search on PriceWatch and nobody is selling 1G PC3200 modules. All of the listings for that capacity are actually selling "kits" consisting of a matched pair of 512M modules.
The fastest memory listed there that comes in 1G sizes is PC2700. The dual-2GHz G5 systems need PC3200.
Of course, to be fair, I did notice that Apple seems to have access to 1G PC3200 modules. Systems ordered from the Apple Store with 2G or more RAM have them installed.
The real reason they aren't maxing them out probably has a lot to do with the software they plan on running. Depending on the application and the data set, they may not gain anything in the move from 4G to 8G. And it greatly increases the cost (using Apple Store pricing, 8G costs $2600 more than 4G.)