Dell $38m Supercomputer [not] More Costly than VT's G5s
An anonymous reader writes "According to the Austin Business Journal, Dell's 3-teraflop, 600 server supercomputer cluster cost the University of Texas $38 million. As The Apple Turns has pointed out that this is 7 times the cost (and a quarter of the power) of Apple's cluster at Virginia Tech! " Update: 10/14 17:56 GMT by M : worm eater writes "The Register has posted a correction to the widely-reported story that a 3.7 terraflop Dell cluster cost the University of Texas $38 million. As it turns out, the computer cost $3 million, vs. $5.2 million for the 17.6 terraflop Mac G5 cluster at Virginia Tech."
Monday, 5:57 PM: Virginia Tech's G5-based supercomputer is (sort of) running-- with 17.6 teraflops of theoretical performance. Meanwhile, Dell tries to build something (sort of) similar, but it winds up with a quarter of the power and seven times the price, and Apple (sort of) announces Xgrid, a product for "parallel and distributed high performance computing"...
Monday, 5:57 PM: Today's holiday episode is now broadcasting. Don't forget to take your shot for a free AtAT shirt (tee or turtleneck) by entering the Q4/03 Beat The Analysts contest; guess closest to Apple's final reported quarterly profit or loss, and you get the garment-- or your choice of creaky old software from the Baffling Vault of Antiquity(TM). You've only got until Wednesday at 4 PM, and in the likely event of a tie the earliest entry wins, so why wait? Enter now!
Up, Running, & Kicking Tail (10/13/03) Fun fact: believe it or not, folks, AtAT's wild success isn't confined to these here United States. No, seriously, it's true! The show actually has semi-regular viewers holed up in such far-flung corners of the world as Iceland, the Dominican Republic, and Delaware-- and for the benefit of those fans, we thought we'd explain that, here in the U.S., today we celebrate a holiday called Columbus Day. Columbus Day, for the uninitiated, is one of our most sacred occasions: a day on which we reflect on the many cultural and technical achievements of the city of Columbus, Ohio. We celebrate Greater Columbus's world-famous quilts, its shrubberies recreating Pointillist masterpieces, and (most importantly) its commitment to the preservation of really old TV sets by wondering why the bank is closed and our mail never came. A good time is had by all.
So if this is such a major holiday, why are we broadcasting, you ask? Well, normally we wouldn't, but faithful viewer Nathaniel Madura pointed out that Slashdot just referenced a BBC World report on that G5 supercomputer down at Virginia Tech, and we're just a little giddy about the existence of a Mac-based cluster than can chew through 17.6 trillion floating point operations per second. Yes, the thing is up and running (at least enough to run performance testing), and reportedly it pumps out 17.6 teraflops of raw perforated aluminum muscle while sucking down enough juice to power 3,000 average homes. Wow, is it getting warm in here, or is it just us? (It's just us-- the G5s are cooled by means of 1,500 gallons of chilled water pumped through every minute. Ooooo, frosty.)
Kudos to the Virginia Tech team who pulled this off, because frankly, this is the sort of technological triumph we'd normally only expect to come out of, say, Columbus, Ohio. Now, what's interesting about that 17.6 teraflop figure is that if you scope out the last compiled list of the world's top 500 supercomputers (from last June), you'll notice that, if 17.6 teraflops is Virginia Tech's "theoretical peak performance" score, it'll probably slot in nicely at number three. (Scores are ranked by "Maximal LINPACK performance achieved," so it's just guesswork so far.) The top-ranked Intel-based cluster is currently ranked at number three, with 2,304 2.4 GHz Xeons and a theoretical peak performance of 11 teraflops. Gee, more processors, a higher clock speed per processor, and 63% of the performance. Now that's efficiency, baby!
We'll have to wait until the next top 500 list comes out in November to see if "Big Mac" (as the VA Techies apparently call it) really takes third place, or if the real-life LINPACK scores push it down lower-- but we figure a top five placement is a safe bet. One of the world's bestest supercomputers made of Macs and running Mac OS X? Why, it's a Columbus Day miracle!
4x The Bang, 1/7 The Buck (10/13/03) Meanwhile, we know that the G5 supercomputer is delivering more pluck per processor than any other supercomputer out there, but what about bang for the b
Don't anthropomorphize computers, they don't like it.
Go Apple's Enterprise division! Apple's are more expensive huh?
[Nelson]Ha-ha![/Nelson]
"If anyone needs me, I'm in the angry dome."
Any advantages of the Dell supercomputer over the G5 setup?
But using a cheaper system that had more power would make sense.
I told you Macs were cheaper!
Seriously, though: How?
tasks(723) drafts(105) languages(484) examples(29106)
Of course Apple gave them a little bit of a deal on these systems, but on the whole, the bid process was made based upon who gave them the best deal. Apple won out in the free market making this supercomputer cluster one of the most inexpensive supercomputers in the world. Imagine it, we have ASCII blue, ASCII red and ASCII white guarded by guys with guns, and here we have a tech school that appears like they are going to enter the 500 list at potentially number 2. Cool.
Visit Jonesblog and say hello.
UT is in Austin. Dell is in Austin.
Can you say "sweetheart deal," boys and girls? I knew you could.
The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
Please don't expect to "scale" supercomputing with any sort of linearity, either in terms of "cost" or "power" (doublequotes because methinks both concepts are rather ill-defined in this situation)...
Nuff said! Go Apple! Let the sheople go with the Farmer in the Dell... The wolves are coming!!! Peace
Ohh...I can feel the legal pain already.
tasks(723) drafts(105) languages(484) examples(29106)
So wait, let me see if I get this straight. Are they acutally implying that supercomputers built starting five years ago are actually more expensive per unit of computing power than supercomputers built today? Why, if that were true, and if the same thing applied to workstations, then you'd be able to get a 2 gigahertz machine today for what a 500 megahertz machine cost five years ago. Ludicrous I tell you. Simply ludicrous.
Stop-Prism.org: Opt Out of Surveillance
$38e6 / 300 servers = 1.2667e+05 $/server
Methinks the price tag includes a lot more than the hardware costs.
The comparison with the VT supercomputer is almost certainly not apples to apples (so to speak)
You can never equivocate too much.
You can see the thoughts going through Dells head trying to find an excuse
"Ok they. Look better, um ok no they don't. Well they perform better, um no. Ah they are more reliable, um ok not necessarily true.Ah they run Linux and Apple, oh damn its BSD isn't it"
Rus
Cheap UK and US VPS
Finally, a single example of someone saving money on the purchase of an Apple!
I guess this means the price of that new Apple desktop machine is going to drop to 1/7th of that of a similarly equipped PC, because right now it's pretty much the other way around, and I am not 'switching' so I can pay more to receive far less.
I wonder if the university is going to have to pay for system patches like ordinary users do, and how this is going to affect the cost for the system.
but the numbers jumped at me:
38E+6/6E+2 $ is about 60000 $ per machine. Seems to be a little much for a cluster of "cheap" machines, right?
Isn't there more to it?
Ok, off, reading the article.
went towards mice with more than one key
vodka, straight up, thank you!
Apple was and still is more expensive hardware platform and all the Apple's PR trough you little fanatic will NOT change that fact.
Supporters of the University of Texas' $38 million Dell cluster 'investment' today asked for their money back so they can build their own G5 cluster and hopefully regain at least a portion of their self-respect.
One UT suppporter was quoted as saying "We didn't get lousy clusters....we got lousy cluster planners!"
So if I were to imagine a beowulf cluster of Dell clusters, I would really be imagining an G5 cluster...
deep...
ascii art
WHACK! BANG! Ouch! That hurts! I'll bet DULL never even kissed U. of Texas on the back before the back oriface insertion, to let them know it was coming. There's nothing quite like the feeling of getting SCREWED, especially with cheap commodity PC hardware. And to add salt, vinegar, and isopropyl alcohol into the inury (mustn't allow any infections), the DULL supercomputer has SUPER electricity usage too, and even more power hungry COOLING requirements. Well, we all live and learn. RISC-vectorized computing is the way of the future, not more MEGAHURTS.
(/me happy new mac user)
This goes to show that allot of the things that ppl have to say about Apple and their computers are stereotypes from the days when they were true. People (esp. in the /. crowd) bitch about apple and their cost, mainly because they don't like the OS, or because it is a closed set of standards, but in reality, the price/performance ratio of Macs are just as good as PC's are out there.
Yes, you can't build your own Mac for $300, but you get what you pay for.
Dell is also a Texas company, and Michael Dell might have been a dropout^h^h^h^h^h^h alumni who donates cash.
maintainance contract? or the time and effort to design and build a system out of common hardware? floor space?
so what they're trying to say is that Texas didn't get as many donations right. Because if i wanted to go out and personally buy all that HP from Apple and Dell it would cost a whole lot more and Apple would be the highest.
Is bigger and cheaper than your e-penis. Seriously, if people are willing to spend whatever amount of money on a solution that does the job, who cares how it stacks up price/performance wise against another system?
This is rather vague. $38M probably includes a lot more than the cost of the machines. I think before we go off comparing Apples and oranges, we'd better calibrate the scales first.
Surely, Apple gave them a deep discount to help for promotional purposes. After all, we DO know that Apple's, in practice, are more expensive.
Of course, if they used COTS parts instead of Dell stuff, it would be cheaper. But they probably didn't know what they were doing...
The average Mac is probably 7 times more expensive than the average Dell, so how is this possible? I know that G5s are powerful, but are they really that much more powerful?
Would be more appropriate to chalk this one up as IBM beating Intel, since neither Dell or Apple are very resposible for developing the technology in the products they sell.
I'm not about to risk my karma with this, but IMO:
That may be, but I'd rather be 1/4th the power than pay Apple taxes over the life of the cluster, AND be limited by the suckyness of apple to begin with. You're comparing 64bit to 32bit still, which isn't a valid comparisson. You could smoke a rope and use the Apple cluster... I'll wait and wank over a chaper AMD based cluster built without the help of somebody like Dell.
Just because it's 7 times more expensive, doesn't mean an x86 cluster is more expensive. It means an x86 cluster from Dell is more expensive. Somebody building a cluster like that more than likely isn't out for support as it takes more than that to keep a supercomputer up. In fact building a cluster out of Dell would specifically be a bad idea.
I'm just realizing though that this isn't news, this is just pure flamebait.
Too bad the Austin Business Journal didn't realize that the cluster is only 1/4 the power and 7x the price as the Apple G5 cluster just created. Now imagine if they spent all that money on an Apple G5 cluster, it would easily be the faster super computer cluster in the world. Now if only people would give Apple credit when it is due, because it is certainly due at this point in time.
Lets just hope Apple can keep up the good work and keep the G5 line updated and in pace with the x86 lines from Intel and AMD. This in my mind has always been Apple's real problem. They always release a decent product, but never seem to keep pace after they make the initial release. If they finally manage to do it this time, it should be a real boon to the IT business.
We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
Well, VT are clearly getting a very good deal on their hardware. $5m for 1100 nodes works out at $4,500 a node.
Speccing up a dual G5 at the Apple store comes out at over $5,000. They also need to pay for the power and cooling hardware to run the thing.
Looks like they are getting a very good price from all their suppliers/contractors...
The retail price for the processing hardware for the UT cluster is very similar, a dual PowerEdge 2650 with 4Gb of RAM is also about $5,000. If they had taken the workstation route favoured by VT (by using Dell PWS 450 boxes) it wouldn't have saved them much as they come in at $4,600 at a similar spec.
The article says "The cost of the five-year project is about $38 million" and "The university plans to add at least 200 servers to the cluster within a year", so it isn't costing them $38m for the 300 node cluster they currently have.
Damn, just found the original press release showing that the Dells are 3.06 GHz boxes. That pushes the price per node up to over $6,300.
Austin has its nose so far up Dell's butt that they would make a supercomputer of their PocketPC's if they were asked to. You think there was even a QUESTION of who would build their supercomputer?
And don't try to tell me that the Company-Formerly-Known-as-Compaq had a shot even though they're based in Houston...well not really anymore anyway.
There is no gravity...the earth just sucks.
Dell surrenders
http://yofoshizzle.com Make it sizzle...
Hey...let's just remember the standard response. "PCs are so much cheaper than Macs". "I can build a PC cheaper than your Mac". Am I missing any?
"He uses statistics as a drunken man uses lampposts...for support rather than illumination." - Andrew Lang
...cost the University of Texas $38 million...
Great, just great. Now I see why the UT system gets 70% of the land grant money, and A&M only gets 30%. I'm glad Oklahoma kicked the shit outta UTA this last week. Serves 'em right.
Saw 'em off, beeeeooottch!
Spread the RC luvin'
You're gettin' dope slapped by the provost and the comptroller and the Texas lege...
Not to mention the next site visit by NSF - that should be a hoot.
This should be on the Apple Hot News page.
"Win treats sysadmins better than users. Mac treats users better than sysadmins. Linux treats everyone like sysadmins."
How much REAL WORK does that G5 cluster do?
Just because you have a cluster with mega TFlops doesn't mean it'll do more real work that something more expensive with less mythical peak performance.
paintball
So I hit Dell's website and at educational pricing the servers they bought run around $4k apiece. Which means that this solution should be very price/performance competitive with the VT cluster.
I hit the UT page and found that the $38M number came from a press release about their investment in quite a bit of stuff, including the "Institute for Computational Engineering and Sciences (ICES), a new center for interdisciplinary research and graduate study in the computational sciences." I.e. at least one new building.
jim frost
jimf@frostbytes.com
This is totally OT, but wft.
...
/.
So, there are these 2 homosexual computer programmers.
The first says to the second - "Do you want the key to my heart?"
The second says - "No, I just want your ASCII".
Get it? ASCII? lol
OK. Its pretty bad. But, wtf, its not the worst joke you've ever heard.
-----
AC: The choice for OT posts on
I'm sure that Dell has a similar relationship with UT as Micron Technology has with Boise State University here in Idaho, e.g., they provide free or heavily discounted equipment to the university.
-h-
Turn That PC Into a Supercomputer By Leander Kahney
Story location: http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,60791, 00.html
02:00 AM Oct. 14, 2003 PT
A small chip-design firm will unveil a new processor Tuesday it says will transform ordinary desktop PCs and laptops into supercomputers.
At the Microprocessor Forum in San Jose, California, startup ClearSpeed Technologies will detail its CS301, a new high-performance, low-power floating-point processor.
The new chip is a parallel processor capable of performing 25 billion floating-point operations per second, or 25 gigaflops.
According to the company, the chip has the potential to bring supercomputer performance to the desktop.
An ordinary desktop PC outfitted with six PCI cards, each containing four of the chips, would perform at about 600 gigaflops (or more than half a teraflop).
At this level of performance, the PC would qualify as one of the 500 most powerful supercomputers in the world.
"That's a supercomputer on the desktop," said Simon McIntosh-Smith, ClearSpeed's director of architecture.
The souped-up PC would cost about $25,000, ClearSpeed said. By comparison, most of the supercomputers on the Top 500 list are clusters of hundreds of processors and cost millions of dollars.
The most powerful supercomputer in the world, Japan's Earth Simulator, operates at about 10 teraflops, consumes a warehouse-size space and cost $35 million.
Soon to be in prototype, the chip may be on the market within a year, ClearSpeed said. The company, which is based in Los Gatos, California, and Bristol, United Kingdom, said it will be providing prototypes to computer manufacturers by the end of the year.
When it comes to market, the chip will likely be sold to consumers as a co-processor -- an add-on PCI card that works in parallel with a PC's main processor, just like an add-on graphics card. But instead of boosting graphics performance, the chip will help compute intensive math calculations.
Similar capabilities are already built into Apple's G4 and G5 Macs, which have a floating-point co-processor called AltiVec, which handles complex, data-intensive calculations for the main processor. But whereas AltiVec is four-way parallel, ClearSpeed's chip is 64-way, the company said.
"You might class it as a big evolutionary step of AltiVec," said Mike Calise, ClearSpeed's president.
The second generation of the chip will be 128-way parallel, and then 256, and so on, Calise said.
He said server manufacturers are looking at the chip with a view to building petaflop machines -- monster supercomputers capable of a quadrillion floating-point operations a second -- or the equivalent of 25 Earth Simulators.
A petaflop machine based on the second generation of the ClearSpeed chip would take up about 20 server racks, the company said.
Calise said computer manufacturers are very excited about the new chip.
"Right now it's awe, shock and when can I get my hands on it?" Calise said.
ClearSpeed said the new chip is also very low-power, operating at about 2 watts, which would allow it to run off a laptop battery and wouldn't require special cooling.
"At 3 watts, you could put it in a PCMCIA card," said McIntosh-Smith. "With two chips on a PC Card, you can have 50 gigaflops on a laptop, running off a battery. That's equivalent to a small Linux cluster on your notebook."
McIntosh-Smith said that down the line, a PC Card with a pair of second-generation chips would perform at about 200 gigaflops, which is equivalent to a big Linux cluster and would nearly qualify the laptop for today's Top 500 supercomputers list.
Appropriately, the chip will be described at the Microprocessor Forum during a discussion of extreme processors.
Though supercomputer performance on a desktop machine may seem like overkill, Calise said there is ever-growing demand in science, government and industry, especially Hollywo
the cost in that journal article seems much much too high. poked around and found this article at infoworld: http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/10/03/HNdellcl uster_1.html
they quote a dell spokeswoman saying that a configuration like that costs about 3 million with installation. it also states that UT gets an educational discount, but doesnt say how much they got off the $3million.
if the 38 million were correct, theyd be spending on the order of 120,000 per machine....a 2650 with highest processors and max ram only comes out to $13,500 on dells site...yeesh
...or you'd realize that you shouldn't have run your mouth...heh heh heh
Blar.
$38 million works out to $63000 for each one of the 600 Dell nodes. But the 1750 and 2650 are your run-of-the-mill $3500-$4000 Xeon rack mounts. Where are the other $59000 per machine going? Someone is comparing apples and oranges (no pun intended).
Also, "flops" is a pretty meaningless measure of performance. If you want to use benchmarks, at least use SPEC, and on those, the Macs are not particularly outstanding in terms of price/performance.
Finally, the Macs aren't rack mounts and they require manual modification for use in clusters; that alone makes them an iffy choice. VT can get cheap student labor to do that sort of thing and may not care about bulk, air conditional, or maintenance costs, but all of those matter big time in the real world.
Sorry, but someone is dreaming if they think G5's are the epitome of cluster computing. They may be better than previous Macs, and they may have entered the realm of plausibility, but you are still going to be far better off with rackmounted 1U dual-processor Linux machines in every respect.
Stupid question: Are these really supercomputers or superclusters? I always think of a computer as one unit not a collection of units.
Strange women lying in ponds distributing swords is no basis for a system of government.
That would be ASCI (Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative), not ASCII. Character sets: easy. Simulating detonation of nuclear weapons: hard.
...think of the profit.
Ah they run Linux and Apple, oh damn its BSD isn't it
It is well-known that *BSD squeezes a more performance out of the same piece of hardware than Linux can, plus the Apple uses a RISC processor which is a lot more efficient than the Intel CISC processors, so you get a double-whammy happening here in Apple's favor.
That, sir, is a sweet image!!... *drool*
First of all, they bought 300 servers. They will be adding more in the future. Second. The 38 million is "NOT" the cost of the computers. It's their total work, hardware, research and "EVERYTHING" budget for the next 5 years. If you take out 5 years of paying salaries for setting up everything, and keeping it all running smoothly, setting up everything for all the research and projects their going to use it for... Its gonna take out a nice chunk of the budget. Also keep in mind that since they WILL be adding more compututers to it this budget might allow for a lot more processing power still to be arriving.
*There's Klingons on the starboard bow, scrape em off Jim!*
Sounds like a deal to me!
Peace
I thought that seemed like a lot of money and wondered where it all went. I configured a PE1750 and PE2650 on dell.com. I could not find in this article or any other articles the exact configs of the computers so I guessed. Since the purpose of the system is raw computing power, I added 2 3.06 GHz Xeon procs to both (the most those servers will take), upped the RAM to a respectible 4GB and left the hard drives at stock (1 36gb 10k SCSI drive). Both systems priced out to just under $6k each. $6k*600 total systems (300 each according to the article) is $3.6M.
Heck, even maxing out these computers, 5 146GB SCSI drives, 12GB ram, all the fiber cards it can hold etc. puts them at about $24k each, *600=$14.4M.
I think without seeing an itimized list of costs for these two supercomputer clusters it is difficult to tell how much more one cost than another. The UT one might include things like racks, switches, cabling etc. that the Apple cluster doesn't include in main cost.
... can you imagine the behometh they could produce with their budget if they used a similar approach?
17.9 TFLOPS/ 3 TFLOPS = 7?
besides the people that pointed out the obvious apples to orange comparison in this post...
it just seems to me that people here love to dump on dell. you repeatedly hear how they are under the thumb of MS on slashdot, but totally ignore their huge linux efforts as pointed out with these clusters
but it's 3.67TFlops - which if you insist on taking to the nearest TF is 4. Anyway, read all about the 'LoneStar' system here http://www.tacc.utexas.edu/resources/hpcsystems/
Taken right from the apple news site... The Latest Apple based supercomputer plans on using 1100 dual processor G5's to reach a maximum speed of 17.6 Teraflops... Meanwhile, the Dell supercomputer is currently expected to hit 7, ... with 300 servers...
The point of this being. Triple the dell, you have 900 computers, and 21Teraflops...
Guess apple news is exagerating the speed bonus?
*There's Klingons on the starboard bow, scrape em off Jim!*
depends on if you're talking real money, or more&more of the same old phonIE payper liesense softwar gangster FraUD.
A telling glimpse into the relationship between Wall Street and corporate America during the technology stock boom has emerged from e-mail exchanges introduced as evidence late last week in the federal trial of Frank P. Quattrone, the former star technology banker at Credit Suisse First Boston.
Advertisement
While not exposing anything illegal on its face, the e-mail exchanges in summer 2000 between Mr. Quattrone and Michael S. Dell, the founder and chairman of Dell Computer, offer a look at the quid pro quo arrangements that were believed to have been made between investment bankers and corporate executives during the technology stock boom that ended in 2000. During that period, bankers often tried to attract new business by offering corporate executives access to hot initial public offerings, while executives held out the possibility of giving the bankers business in exchange for the shares.
During cross-examination of Mr. Quattrone, federal prosecutors introduced into evidence Government Exhibit No. 1060, a July 2000 e-mail exchange discussing the chance to reserve shares in the initial public offering of Corvis, an optical networking company. Under such an allocation arrangement, the recipient would be able to buy the shares at the initial offering price, while most other investors would have to wait until after actual trading began - often missing out on early gains.
"My team has gotten word to me that you are personally interested in having Dell Ventures receive a meaningful allocation of the I.P.O. of Corvis," Mr. Quattrone wrote to Mr. Dell. "Given the intense interest in this space we anticipate this will be a complete zoo, so I wanted to check if your interest was really there." Dell Ventures is the company's investment arm.
Mr. Quattrone also asked if Mr. Dell would be available to be the keynote speaker at Credit Suisse First Boston's technology conference, an annual gathering for technology chiefs in Scottsdale, Ariz.
And then, in the same message, the supposed wall between investment banking and research was breached. Mr. Quattrone asked Mr. Dell whether First Boston should hire a certain research analyst to cover computing, noting, "We are still trying to finalize our selection of a PC analyst (slim pickings.)'' Dell is the largest maker of PCs.
Mr. Dell's reply was no less direct. "We would like 250k shares of Corvis," Mr. Dell wrote. "I know there have been efforts on both sides to build the relationship and an offering like this would certainly help." He also said he would be available to speak at the technology conference, but only "if our I.R. team wants me to go," he said referring to his investor relations staff. He added, "They may be waiting to see who your PC analyst is."
Mr. Dell made it clear that the proposed analyst candidate would not do, saying he had consulted Dell's senior vice president for business development and strategy, Tom Meredith, who had been dismissive. "I would tend to agree,'' Mr. Dell wrote. "Not sure he has credibility anymore with the street. You might be better off with a fresh new talent."
Repeated telephone calls over the weekend seeking comment from Mr. Dell or Dell Computer were not returned. A spokesman for Mr. Quattrone and his legal team declined to comment.
The e-mail transcript was introduced as evidence Friday afternoon by federal prosecutors who are trying to prove that Mr. Quattrone obstructed a government investigation into Credit Suisse First Boston's procedures for handling initial public stock offerings. Reporters did not receive copies of the messages until after the trial was recessed late Friday afternoon.
The e-mail exchange between Mr. Quattrone and Mr. Dell took place on July 26, two days before the public offering of Corvis's shares. People who received the pretrading allocations would have been able to buy them at the offering price of $36.
This can't be! All the people supporting the free-trade agreement that is sending jobs overseas said the saved $$ would be passed on to the consumer! Seriously tho it's lame. My job was sent to India so they could cut costs and they're blowing $$ like this.
Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
Of course, there's also this concept of "theoretical FLOPS", which is open to interpretation... we'll have to wait and see what the LINPACK (and other such benchmark) numbers report.
...and you'll get silent data corruption/system panic every week. Apple's G5 system doesn't support ECC memory at this point, and it's a killer I think. Nobody with a right mind would buy such a huge cluster with tera bytes of memory without ECC or chipkill.
Whereas the previous quoted 5M cost of the BIG MAC is hardware. Unless given the breakout of the costs on the Austin machine I doubt any fair comparison can be made.
* Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
Not that kind of purchasing power, but the super computing power rather..
According to this Wired article a small firm in CA called Clear Speed will soon revolutionize the PC space with Super computing power.
I know we will all believe it when we can find these chips on Bestbuy aisle no:4, but still currently from where I am sitting (I am sitting on a Microsoft biztalk server 2004 training session, boring as hell, being inundated by claims of innovation by a clueless trainer who programmed in Visual basic for her entire life), Clear speed is as close to Innovation that I can think of and its more of them that this industry/world need, and less of Microsoft.
Oh..lunch time.. gotta go hit on some free sandwiches. Viva la microsoft..
Rapid Nirvana
I think you are correct about Dell... they focus on cost-cutting and logistics. However, at Apple, they design everything from the case down to the custom VLSI chips on the motherboard. That's what makes them different, and that's what makes their stuff just a bit more expensive.
"'Lonestar' consists of 300 Dell PowerEdge 1750 and PowerEdge 2650 servers running the Linux operating system from Raleigh, N.C.-based Red Hat Inc. [Nasdaq: RHAT]. Dell worked with Seattle.-based Cray Inc. [Nasdaq: CRAY] to design and install the cluster."
If Dell had to contract Cray to help them build the cluster, I'm sure that aspect wasn't cheap. I'd imagine that most of the actual costs associated with getting the Dells into an efficient cluster were more mundane things than buying the servers themselves. I can't imagine 600 Dell boxes costing 38 million, so I'm under the impression that planning, design, construction, maintenance, etc. add to the price of the servers significantly.
--- What
Dell is Austin's biggest employer. University's like to give back to their town and area, endearing the locals. Also, by pumping more money into the area it becomes a better place and more people would be willing to come there. I'd be willing to wager that most, if not all, of the work was done by the local Dell plant. This isn't a coincidence guys, this was more than just a business deal, it was giving back to the community that supports the school.
ssh dellcluster.utexa.eduw ord@dell]$ uname -a
p ple MacOS DOS 10.2.9
login:acoword
pass:
[aco
2.4.24-dell-1337 DellOS
[acoword@dell]$ wc -c bigfile
17 825 792
[acoword@dell]time cp bigfile testfolder/
Time : Took 117.3 seconds
[acoword@dell]$logout
ssh g5cluster.vtech.edu
login:acoword
pass:*****
A
READY.
c:>dir bigfile
17 825 792
c:>time : copy bigfile testfolder\
Time : Counter overflow, operation taking too long!
c:>exit
Apple cluster: 1100 machines, 17.6TFlops = 16GFlops/machine
As if the numbers weren't terribly useless already, here's "conclusive evidence" that Dells are better than Apples. But really, who cares? As long as something useful is being done with the power that's there, does it matter?
Hey guys, think about this a bit... If it were SO much cheaper, and SO much faster, this wouldn't have been news. Somehow the books are cooked. Unfortunately, I don't know enough about the separate systems and the FULL RETAIL costs of each to do an even comparison. Remember: All CPUs don't calculate the same. Not all clusters are designed equal. The only way to really compare, and get around the PR hype is to see some benchmarks, and to find out what each cluster would have cost your average (really rich) Joe/Jane on the street. ~D
This sig has been enciphered with a one-time pad. It could say almost anything.
UT means UT at Austin.
... er, uh ... 1893 )
UTA means UT at Arlington.
Shhhh! Don't say 30%. We told 'em we'd send 'em the difference next year. (We've been doing that since '93
Yeah, Sooners win at football. T-sippers win at life. Fair trade. Texans prefer pro football anyway.
Karma whore
...but at least it cost 7 times as much.
They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
Ignoring the whole building you'll end up needing...I think I could have gotten them a better deal.
That's interesting. While the clusters we have here at the UW Atmospheric Sciences deptaretment aren't that big, they sure as hell didn't cost that much money. http://eos.atmos.washington.edu/clusters/
We have two 18 node dual processor (Athlon MP 1800+'s) clusters with dual Athlon MP 2000+'s in the head node. They came to less than $25,000 per cluster... Now, if they were to scale this up to around the same amount of nodes UT has, it would only be about 400,000 + <insert cost of extra networking equipment here>. Surely, this wouldn't cost $38 million.
So, you say this isn't a comparable unit. Fine, triple the amount of nodes... you still cruising in at around $30 million less. There has to be something there doing there that costs extra money.
funnIE how they come from different places, but have identical wording? LIEk minds ?think? aLIEk? or, is it just another georgewellian fuddite corepirate nazi /pr? ?firm? fraudulent mindphucking?
A series of letters supposedly written by US troops in Iraq detailing their successes in the country were all written by their commander, it has emerged.
The publication of the letters, in several US newspapers, comes as the Bush administration has stepped up efforts to win over an American public increasingly sceptical of its handling of the situation in Iraq.
Critics said if the letters were found to be part of an organised effort by the military to win over US hearts and minds regarding the conflict it could be a violation of military ethics.
However, the soldiers' commander, Lieutenant Colonel Dominic Caraccilo, told ABC News on Tuesday his staff had written the letters merely to get "good news" back to the US more efficiently.
He says he then sent it round to his soldiers saying they could send a copy home if they wanted to.
"We thought it would be a good idea to encapsulate what we as a battalion have accomplished since arriving Iraq and share that pride with people back home," he said.
'Positive aspect'
The missives detailed the lives of soldiers from the 2nd Battalion of the 503rd Infantry Regiment and their efforts to re-establish law and order in the northern Iraqi city of Kirkuk, where they are based.
The soldiers "wrote" of rebuilding police and fire departments and of repairing water and sewer plants in the area.
The letters came to light when some of the soldiers' families sent them to local newspapers.
Editors became suspicious when they noticed the letters had identical phrases even though they were signed by different soldiers.
"After nearly five months here, the people still come running from their homes, into the 110-degree heat, waving to us as our troops drive by on daily patrols of the city," read one line.
One soldier's mother said she knew it was not her son's words as he did not have the linguistic ability.
But Amy Connell told the New York Times she passed the letter - signed by her paratrooper son, Adam - to the Boston Globe newspaper because she was proud of his achievements.
"I wanted the positive view put out there,'' she told the paper.
To make it to the Top 500 Supercomputer list, you have to post more than theoretical performace. Sorry, the story is interesting but you need hard benchmark numbers from both machines to make a fair judgement.
On a supercomputer, communications overhead between the nodes is a big deal. Fast processors that can't be adequately fed don't cut it.
we used that money to provide food, housing, or medicine to people?
...All in the name of
I know the guy in charge of running the hpc center at UT as well as ALOT of other power players at universities here in Texas. Let me just say, all it is, is a 38 million item on their resume. They get these grants not in the name of science, but to say "our school has the biggest cluster". It's just marketed as "scientific acheivements" and "advancements in science".
The same goes for some other things that Texas universities are trying to procure right now. A hpc fiber wan that goes nowhere. A grid project that does nothing.
I believe everyone of you would be appalled by the amount of money that only a few people here in Texas truly get access to.
science...
I'll probably get fired for speaking the truth.
It isn't just the raw machine cycles that count. How much of the machine is used to just run the OS? On the machines I worked with (200+ nodes), over 1/2 of the computing power was being used to run the OS.
And we had a "master node". The master node was a single point of failure for the whole parallel thing. It did the workload management. By my rough calculations at the time, a 400 node cluster would have pegged that machine in the day.
I'm sure that the individual cluster machines are faster, but these are valid things to consider in reviewing one machine vs another.
... also came with a building.
Apple zealots will swallow anything.
I'm sure a large chunk of the mark-up in the price for this cluster was due to them involving Cray.
It's interesting that his comes up. This month's Linux Journal had an article with a guy with no cluster experience building a large cluster using...drumroll...Dell systems. Cheap. And he did it with out expensive consulting services from big names. He's now on one of those international comparison lists for top-performing clusters.
I want to see the monitor they got with that computer. If it follows their pricing structure of basing the config/price on the monitor, VT must have gotten a new jumbotron.
Apple's gunna make bank charging them for new software versions every year
But, they are a very cool group. It *was* TICAM before (Texas Institute for Computational and Applied Mathematics). See http://www.ices.utexas.edu/.
:)
Actually, everyone involved with HPC at UT is cool. If I weren't already a PHB, I would probably go look for a job at TACC or ICES
There exists no way of exchanging information without making judgments. --Bene Gesserit Axiom
Notice that the Apple system is a 64 bit system, the Intel based system uses Xeons and is 32 bit. That is an interesting difference in a configuration this size. Cluster or not.
Either Dell seriously ripped off these guys, or somebody is lying about how much the cluster costs.
Let's just pretend that they used all Dell 2650 PowerEdge servers, since they're the more expensive model. Let's also assume they COMPLETELY maxed out the possible configuration on each machine, which is highly unlikely considering that means stuff like 730 GB of storage for each machine... but just to give the benefit of the doubt to whomever priced this stuff out, let's pretend they did.
If you go to Dell.com, and MAX out the compatible configuration for a PowerEdge 2650, it's tough to get the machine past $20,000.
For instance, the following beast costs $18,190:
Dual 3.06Ghz Pentium 4's
12GB of RAM
5 146GB Ultra 320 SCSI HD's.
PERC3-DI RAID 5 HD Controller
2 Gigabit Intel Ethernet Cards
Lots of other stuff... every option decked out, dual power supplies, etc. 3 year "gold" support. Etc.
Considering a $38M cluster consisting of 300 machines means each machine costs an average of about $127,000... where did the extra $108,810 a machine come from?
At $18,190 per machine, the cluster would cost about $5.5 million. In other words, it would cost about the same as the Apple cluster. (Again, that's with lots of stuff NOBODY would put in each machine of a cluster... 12GB of ram!? 730GB of Ultra 360 SCSI storage!? Don't think so.)
Again, I remind you all; this is assuming 100% PowerEdge 2650's. Their numbers make even LESS sense if you have some PowerEdge 1750's in there. (They're a lot cheaper and less powerful.)
If you price out a reasonable config for a 2650 (as in minus the storage, and "only" 4GB of ram each), you get a machine that costs about $9,500. So a cluster that will perform pretty much identically to the pricey one above would cost $2,850,000. In other words, more than 13 times cheaper than the $38M clusters that must perform WORSE because it has the slower PowerEdge 1750's in there somewhere. In addition, the "economy" cluster, as I like to call it, is about half the price of the Apple cluster. You also have to consider that Dell would probably give a slight discount to somebody buying 300 servers.
You also gotta wonder about the performance cited for the Apple setup. This is the same company that insisted for years that not only did they have the fastest hardware (a lie), but they had super computers for sale (a distortion of the truth, aka a lie).
Me thinks there is something fishy going on here.
Check the math. $38M/1000 servers = $38,000/server. I'm pretty sure Dell's 1U servers are a little cheaper than that.
Thank you. Drive through.
And I feel really stupid when I pay $15 more for a video game. Can you imagine being off by many millions of dollars?
-- Having a Creationist Museum is like having an Atheist place of worship
Sure its 7x the cost, but its more usable than an OS X cluster. There are already a plethora of programs that simply work. Whereas if you have an OS X cluster you'll have to reinvent or port existing apps/deamons to OS X. More man hours, programming hours, debuging hours, testing hours, then finally implementation. So that 7x the cost eventually evens out.
This is a test. This is a test of the emergency sig system. This has been only a test.
A "Center" at UT is a special term for a particular type of organized unit, often a research unit. It does not necessarily mean this place gets its own building. In fact, at UT, space is such a premium that most "Centers" don't have their own (yeah the place is huge, but has lots of people). In fact, I'd venture to guess that NO center has its own building. TICAM used to occupy Taylor Hall, but since the ACES building was erected (adjacent to Taylor), both Computer Sciences and TICAM-cum-ICES occupy lots of space there. There's also some cool gear throughout.
And, I'm sure there are people still over at the Pickle Research Campus, up a little north. This is where most of the supercomputers live. Big rooms with lots of AC. Ooh, and halon!
There exists no way of exchanging information without making judgments. --Bene Gesserit Axiom
At least you can trust that you are not having any silent data corruption when your apps run on the Dell cluster.
No ECC in a supercomputer, what were they thinking?
Do the math:
600 Xeons at 3.0 GHz each with 2 FLOPS/cycle = 3.6 TFLOPS
But...
By next year, according to their web page, Texas is acquiring
400 more Xeons, bringing the total to 6 TFLOPs.
At Dell's current market price of about $6000 per 2 CPU node,
plus a rough estimate of $2000/node for Myrinet, that's maybe $4000 per CPU, for a total of 4000 X 1000, or about $4 milion.
So where does the $38 million number come from?
Apple.
In what bizarro world?
$4K * 600 = $2,400,000. Add to that (let's be REALLY frugal) a $600,000 interconnect, though it's probably four times that price. Now we have $3 million. VT's system cost about $5 million. At seven times the performance, this says that VT's system has 4.2 times the bang for the buck than the U Texas system. To compensate, that had better be one dang impressive service contract Dell gave U Texas.
Right. Ooh, maybe they threw in a printer.
Due to the scaling costs of interconnects, usually a bigger (# machines) system has worse bang for the buck than a smaller system. Not so here apparently. Any way you want to slice it, it looks like U Texas got screwed.
this is 7 times the cost (and a quarter of the power) of Apple's cluster
The article describes this as a 50-year deal. That surely isn't just for the purchase of 600 servers and associated clobber. This sounds more like a 5-year build-and-manage deal. Probably some building costs, certainly some installatiopns costs, and five years wirth of (probably 24/7) sysadm. The Apple was just the hardware, IIRC
Consciousness is an illusion caused by an excess of self consciousness.
... considering that the entire premise concerning costs is false. This is an operating budget, not the cost for the contract.
How many FPS will it get in Quake?
Have you seen my stapler?
The trouble with 1U and 2U rackmount boxes are they are aren't suited for sitting on your desk. In another couple years, VT will be able to retire the cluster and then distribute the G5s (which are already conveniently enclosed in a desktop case) to faculty and other staff.
Nope, you obviously didn't realize anything.
All editorial writers ever do is come down from the hill after the battle is over and shoot the wounded.
Some folks are laughing at the "weaker" Dell cluster costing more, but here's thigns taht you need to consider:
The per node cost (just the node, not dividing the cost by 600)is more. 4000-6000 is alot more then a run of the mill G5 costs. IF they maxed it out (and that's a big if!) they would have cost around 8000 a piece. They probably did not max it out as they may be using NAS for storage. Then the racks on the Macs were literally custom jobs due to the fact that G5's are not rack mountable.
Infrastructure is EVERYTHING on a supercomputer. Miranet ain't cheap. We are not talking gigabit ethernet here. The interconnects are very specialised. Granted, it COULD be ethernet, but it depends on what your calculating.
Redundant power means alot now adays and the G5's ain't got it.
Pluse there's the sys admin salaries, the programmers....etc etc. My bet is the G5 supercomputer did not divulge those costs.
Every Mac Head is so totally convinced that the cost of running a farm of Macs is cheaper and I am not so sure of that.
Gorkman
teraflops are a poor measure of performance. Since both computers use different architectures, each flop could be of different complexity, it can take more or less flops (floating point operations) to perform the same operation depending on whether you're dealing with cisc or risc.
It is my understanding that the G5 doesn't support ECC RAM, so how can you trust it's results? With that many machines, the statistics of a bit error in RAM gets quite high.
So you have fast incorrect data.
Please correct me if I am wrong.
From the article: The cost of the five-year project is about $38 million. That leads me to think the cost includes more than just the equipment cost.
If it was just the matieral cost, that would be around $63k per server (given 600 servers costing $38 million). Some how I doubt Dell could build a single server that would cost so much.
I'm gussing there will be alot of man power required to make use of this thing. You'll probably find a lot more of your expense there. Not to mention facility costs to house, power, and cool the thing.
"Failure is not an option, it's part of the standard package"
The article makes it plain that this is the just the beginning of a five-year project that will eventually spend $38mil, and which will end up with a lot more than 300 systems (200 to be added next year alone, for example) too. Comparing this to another project without knowing all the details of both is pointless.
imagine a beowulf cluster of Dell's....
no... no.... NOOOOOOo!
The cluster runs OS X -- page 13 --
:)
As much as you all would like it not to be so, it is, and that's that
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
Here's another article on the new cluster- apparently the initial 300 servers will be dual 3.06 Xeons connected with Myrinet.
cannot be correct. or if it is, it includes the cost of the construction of the facility, all hardware associated with networking the cluster, and providing it power. Even at 20,000 a piece, generous for a 2 proc box, the cluster should cost in the neighberhood of 12 Million for the machines. Apple is cool but, boys and girls lets not get carried away.
I posted this elsewhere...The cluster is running OS X -- page 13 --not linux you nimrod...
;)
Besides, if it was running linux it would be liable for the 'SCO tax' what with Linux' inability to do 64 bit without SCO's 'contributions'
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
...on how to use them. 20 CDs and a specially-trained MBMO instructor. (Multi Button Mouse Operation). That probably came in at a cool $1.6 mil. Also, the followup and review courses at a mere $500K each. We are talking about academic Windows users here.
I think this special "Deja Vu" program written by Srinidhi Varadarajan is supposed to take care of all the fault tolerance issues, like machines crashing in the middle of an operation, or making mistakes.
I don't understand much about how it works, but I think it's supposed to provide real-time error correction on a massive scale, which probably means it's doing a lot of redundant work.
I wonder if the quoted FlOPS figure is with or without Deja Vu running for error correction? If these machines are cheaper than the ones used in most supercomputers, but have more faulty components, then it seems unfair to quote performance measurements made without the resource overhead of this fault-tolerance software (which will presumably always be running) subtracted out first.
-Phat Tony.
Can anyone tell me how to set my sig on Slashdot?
University of Texas kyboshes MacNN's cluster story
In Texas - its supposed to be big!
This retraction of the original story should put an end to this discussion: http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=12114
is about $3 million!
An article at The Inquirer reports a spokesperson from UT describing what the $38 million entailed, including a building, an academic chair, and a couple computer systems.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=12114
...the infamous whore of a city, Austin, bending over for the current Sugar Daddy corporation. Please. Universities 'giving back' to their communities?? Put that ludicrous BS back where the sun don't shine - universities primary way of 'giving back' to their community is SUPPOSED to be producing educated leaders. So much for that. It's all about who knows/blows who. If they want to waste taxpayer money on second-rate toys, it's their call - but it IS sad.
Not to mention Apple having a decent sized office in town...
-l
Help cure AIDS, cancer, and more. Donate your unused computer time to worldcommunitygrid.org. Join Team Slashdot!
Who are you weenies? Talk about panties in a bunch -- you can't accept the fact that Apple delivered a kick-ass cluster for pennies on the dollar compared to a Dull? And it smokes the competition? I never got my hackles hackled back in the day whenever IBM announced a new 'Deep Whatever' that could smoke my Dell P1 166(no joke!)
Sheesh, I think some folks around here need to lay off the Intel-kool-aid. AMD is not a religion, though it sure seems like there are a lot of zealots out there;)
95% of the marketplace? That makes for a lot of rabid PC-fanboys. Makes the 5%-ers look downright domesticated...
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
Though, I think that anyone of us can clearly see that $38m for 300-600 Dell servers is a bit much. It doesn't take a great leap to realize that this is for many more things then just 'puters.
9
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s px /corp/pressoffice/en/2003/2003_10_03_aus_000?c=us& l=en&s=corp
That said, it is interesting to note that when the figure of $5.2 mil was published for the VT system, it was also stated, much like the TX system that this was the 5 year cost of the total project, not just the computer itself. Is that a real world project cost or just a Public Relations number remains to be seen.
After reading an article from the VT school newspaper, it appears at least, that the project was designed at VT, VT staff worked out the software details, and that a great amount of savings was realized at VT by the use of a small army of volunteers, the article also mentions that the whole project was completed in 3 months time which also helped cut costs. In fact, the G5's didn't even arrive at VT until September.
http://www.collegiatetimes.com/index.php?ID=202
BBC also has a nice little warm and fuzzy.
http://www.bbcworld.com/content/template_clicko
The press release I found on Dell's website, states that "Dell services worked with Cray to design and deploy the cluster." I imagine that those services did not come cheap. Even if the services were ultimatly donated by Dell, I doubt dell would let TX not include the "retail cost" of those services in thier numbers so that Dell atleast receives the "good will" of thier charity (ala MSFT).
http://www1.us.dell.com/content/topics/global.a
My feeling is that at the end of the day, the project at VT will still come out to have a better cost / Tflop using the Apple G5's. What intersts me the most however, is the notion that the VT project was in fact designed by the VT staff and set up was aided by many volunteers much like the Open Source software community approaches building app's, while the TX project appears to have been designed by Dell and Cray and installed by Dell services, no mention of volunteers at TX thus far.
It has been clear in the the articles I have read, including the first notice asking for volunteers to help in installation, that the budget for the VT project was kept to a low threw the VT staff and volunteers pitching in to make the project happen in such a short time.
Besides, how hard would it be to get a bunch of us to volunteer to help install a Super Computer Cluster at a University? That's certainly a volunteer T-Shirt I wouldn't mind having and a day off well spent.
Hopefully, when the dust settles, VT's system will serve as another example of how a community of volunteers can come together and participate in the completion of project for the greater good of community, knowledge and education. If the economics of the VT project hold true, could this be the advent of an "open source like" movement in super computer installation around the world?
Because I just went to Apple's web site, and 1100 G5 dual CPU machines at their regular price would cost me a whopping 3.3million bucks! WTF!!!! How did VT get such a sweet deal? Then, to find out how I was really getting shafted by Apple, I went to Dell.com and configured a Dell 650n workstation as follows: dual 2.4GHz Xeon CPU's, 512MB DDR266 Non-ECC RAM (Apple's is DDR400), 160GB IDE HD (Apple's is Serial ATA), 48XCDRW (Apple's is a DVD-RW), ATI Fire GL (Apple's is a Radeon 9600), RedHat Linux, and the price for 1100 of these only came to 3.2901million bucks! What a ripoff those G5's are! Apple's close to $10000 more expensive! And who cares if the G5 has Firewire 800 and the Dells only have Firewire 400? Or that the Dell only supports 4GB instead of 8GB like the G5? Who would ever need more than 4GB anyway? I can't believe Apple's still in business! It's just a matter of time before people catch on and realize these G5's are a ripoff and Apple goes out of business.
Hey, I'm a Mac zealot, I know. I love to make Apple look good, for any reason. But this story has too many inconsistencies.
The Slashdot blurb and the article don't even match. And As The Apple Turns is being quoted as a technically informed Mac news source?
Anyways, yes, $5 million for the G5s. Now let's add in the price of those racks they sit on. Let's add in the price of the cooling system, the network equipment, cables, power supply. Contractors. $38 million doesnt' sound so far off the mark when you think about what all that stuff.
CAn'T CompreHend SARcaSm?
Wonder how long before Jonathan Ives designs a big funky polycarbonate fanless server room to fit all the cases into - could be an interesting project - water cooled transparent, wicked lighting type effects or something.. :-)
Judging by the comments of the pro-Apple crowd, I've decided that most Apple users are retarded. As many, many people have pointed out, this is obviously an apples to oranges comparison (no pun intended). As someone pointed out, the hardware cost of the Dell cluster is under $3M, which is comparable to the Apple cluster. Now, who knows what the other $35M over 5 years is being spent on. It could be for a building to house the cluster, in addition to support staff, maintenance contracts, power, air conditioning, etc. All of these costs are important to consider. VT will definitely have to fork over a lot of $$ to keep this beast running, but they have decided not to report those costs. What is irritating, however, is that the pro-Apple crowd is refusing to acknowledge any of the above logic and instead is deciding to rant on mindlessly about how great Apples are.
Then I assume they will take this into account when the benchmark it?
If this were an OS to OS comparison between Windows and OS X, perhaps we wouldn't be getting so frothed up. But this is hardware, and dammit, PC hardware is supposed to *always* be cheaper than Mac hardware!
To summarize what others have said:
1) Dell gave UT a sweetheart deal
2) Apple gave VT a sweetheart deal
3) Nobody has dredged up any information to indicate that the $38M UT spent includes the cost of a building. As csoto pointed out:"A "Center" at UT is a special term for a particular type of organized unit, often a research unit. It does not necessarily mean this place gets its own building. In fact, at UT, space is such a premium that most "Centers" don't have their own (yeah the place is huge, but has lots of people). In fact, I'd venture to guess that NO center has its own building."
4) Hardware is only a portion of the total cost, obviously. UT and VT have set up their supercomputing projects differently. This again is obvious.
5) The really important point of all this is that VT manage to put together a very powerful supercomputing cluster using Macs at a cost that in no way can be considered more expensive than if they'd used PC hardware.
You can argue that costs would have been cheaper had they built their own, or used PCs from some source cheaper than Dell. But they still would have had to deal with labor costs in assembling the PCs, or higher maintenance costs associated with keeping all of those commodity PCs running properly.
UCLA is already using OS X to run Beowulf-style clusters. Tokyo University is replacing over 1,100 Linux PCs with OS X boxes.
Even the total cost of installing, operating, and maintaining large numbers of Macs running OS X is cheaper than either PCs running Windows or PCs running Linux, people often seem incapable of absorbing that information.
You can talk all you want about the Reality Distortion Field, but the truth is that Apple is always working against an incredibly strong bias that says Apple is always more expensive.
That's simply no longer true.
Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
Well, I'm sure Apple has the ability to give some pretty deep quantity discounts on projects of this sort without "bidding below cost" just to get the sale and publicity.
Some recent reports on their 17" Powerbook, for example, showed their cost of production to be roughly 50% of what they sell them for. That's a much better profit margin than most vendors get for their portables - especially for a new model that just cost them a bundle in "tooling up" expenses (such as dies made to cast the plastic parts in,etc.).
The G5 tower is quite likely a similar story.
i think this thread is proof that macheads are zealous, but not idiots. even the shortcomings of this article's bias aren't enough to shutter out the common nerdity of us all. cheers to that.
https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
Well, as someone already pointed out this slashdot article is bogus too.
I am sick of this many number of lies from slashdot. Which idiot is going to believe in what writes on slashdot.
Call me back when it will run all my legacy DOS programs...
I thought this was settled...$3000...dual 2Ghz G5...
I don't think anyone would really argue the low-price-point-computer issue, but I think we could safely cede the mid to high-ground argument once and for all...
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
The 38 million is the entire project cost, according to the artile, not just the cost of the machines. Your comparison is flawed, Apple zealots.
You have to include the design cost, e.g. a prof or university IT persons cost would be easily $200K-300K when overhead is folded in. Then you ahve to include housing costs for both systems: How much does it cost to feed and cool 300K watts, and so on.
I bet Dell and UT 'probably didn't know what they were doing...'
/., then we really would be cooking with gas." I guess you just need to be a little quicker next time in order to help the PC world save face. The computing world really needs great minds like yours...right...
It's not like they are a big computer company or anything, right? And I mean what does a college computing department really know about computers, right? I bet they are kicking themselves wondering "if only we had the vast knowledge of that one AC on
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
Yes, slide 13 does indicate that they will be running OSX.
Did you notice that slide 11 indicates that they are using Gigabit Ethernet? They're not. They're using InfiniBand which is 10ghz. This PDF is months old, it even says so if you'd read it.
I love my mac, but stupidity should be painfull.
IBM has a site in Austin that does some of the development on the eserver xSeries line (PC servers). However, since Sam P. lives in Armonk, NY, the previous poster is correct about the location of Austin's nose.
TartanBlue
Of course they are waterproofed. Do you think apple would leave that out. Come on, they are leaders in Industrial design.
Additionally, they have been linked to Bush's star wars program to provide an anti-theft system.
Face it, pc's suck. Mac's are better.
Plus in a photoshop test my Apple II beats a Dual Xeon 2.4Ghz by 15 seconds.
Doesn't 3TFlops/300 machines
=10GFlops per machines?
Even if the hardware costs the same, I happen to think it probably does, you are still looking at a huge performance difference.
My guess is that Dell (a Texas company) is being favored on this project to cut it's teeth in the SC world. They sought out Cray's help in putting this all together. Chances are they will get better at this as time goes by, but the performance difference is still pretty awesome.
In the SC world, performance is everything, Apple has done a good job of it at VT. Let's not get all partisan on defending Mac's (as the Apple wonks are into) or mindlessly defending Dell's offering simply because it uses Linux (as a lot of otherwise level-headed coders are doing).
Apple did a good job. Dell will get better. Accept and move on.
"Curiosity killed the cat, but for a while I was a suspect."- Steven Wright
The following just appeared on macnn.com:
Dell cluster vs. Apple cluster; redux
Tuesday, October 14, 2003 @ 12:05am
MacNN reader Dave Shroeder writes: "The University of Texas just rolled out a $38M Dell/Linux cluster that will achieve 3.7 Tflops, not even yet at full capacity. Compare that to Virginia Tech's $5.2M Apple/Mac OS X cluster that achieves 17.6 Tflops, constructed in 3 months." Several readers followed up on the pricing and cost issues involved: [updated]
"The $38M total was NOT for a single supercomputer. Please correct this information immediately. It was announced inFebruary for a total package that included:
The establishment of the new Institute for Computational Engineering & Sciences (ICES) at UT, including:
four new endowed faculty chairs in ICES at UT additional funding for the research endowment and the visiting scholars endowment in ICES
the completion of construction of the ACES building (the 4th floor) for use by ICES and TACC
and the establishment of a terascale distributed computing infrastructure at UT, hosted by TACC, including: two supercomputers at TACC (the cluster you refer to, and the other IBM system)
two massive storage systems at TACC
three leading-edge components to increase UT's networking infrastructure
increases in operations funding over five years for ICES and TACC
The original author also followed-up on the his note: "The 17.6 Tflops figure is Rpeak (theoretical max performance). LINPACK Rmax (maximum achieved performance), the measured benchmark by which rankings are judged, will be announced at a session on November 18 at Supercomputing 2003.
"It may also be worth pointing out that the $38M figure is for the 5-year life of the project at UT, while the $5.2M figure is the initial cost of the asset itself at VT, and does not include operational money. The dollar amounts aren't directly comparable.
"In fact, based on all the responses I've gotten, this story, as posted, probably isn't very accurate. It might be better to link to both of the articles, mention that the numbers are just theoretical max performance and that "real world" numbers will follow. One could imagine that Apple is bound to make a good showing in price/performance, but the price/Tflop figures are not accurate because the prices include different things."
How do you guys think rackmount affects price/size of this unit?
It's no secret that rackmount components cost substantially more than tower components... my question is: does rackmount really save the space?
The G5 creates an insane amount of heat, and would require 3U and at the very least 2U... If you took a G5 and turned it on it's side, that'd be the equivilent of 3U.
They seemed to have packed these G5s in special racks (Wider than normal), to allow 3 of them stacked side by side. There also appears to be little to no room between them vertically, making them nearly as small as 3U cases, and saving the price of rails, rackmount case/psu. Also allowing easier changing of broken ones (just buy a standard one and insert), no taking off rails, making sure cases are the same, etc... saving time in the long run I think.
Personally, I'm not a big fan of rackmount, but what do y'all think?
It seems that the comparison between the two universities is not an apples to apples comparison.
http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=12114
The Code Ninja is swift with his tool, precise in his delivery, and deadly accurate in his execution.
Even if one were to entertain the moronic statement that FLOPS isn't a very good performance metric(what is then?) across architectures, is FLOPS not the right performance metric to assess the power of one architecture? Are you really just denying the VA results for no good reason? Are you saying we should run SPECmarks on the VA and UT clusters? Are you really that dim? Is your existence really that threatened by the prospect that you might not be on the greener side? Is your grasp on reality really so tenuous that you must resort to calling your fellow computer-users zealots and fools? Do you actually think that the VA cluster's potential second place supercomputer status is fraudulent? Why would 5%-ers have so much sway?
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
+ tax, according to the Medium/Large Business Dell online store. Probably a lot less with a volume discount. 2 x 3.06GHz Xeon processors with 1MB L2 cache, 2 GB memory in each server and no OS (Linux is free, right? :p ). The $6.2M 1000 1U server cluster (2000 processors) would have a theoretical throughput of 12.24TFLOPS.
If you're looking for a bargain, the same basic 1U PowerEdge 1750 is only $4,126 each (+ tax) for dual 3.06 Xeon 1MB L2 cache CPUs and 2GB memory. That brings the total down to a more reasonable $4.1M for the 2000 processor cluster and still provides 12.24TFLOPS of performance.
And if you really have the space, almost the same theoretical peformance is available with 2000 Optiplex desktops: $2.9M for 2000 GX270 systems, each with a single P4 3GHz (512KB L2 cache) and 1GB memory. 12TFLOPS for a bargain.
8086 and its offspring should have died back in 1987, when 80386 was designed to boot into "legacy 16 bit" mode.
Here's the website for UT's TACC (Texas Advanced Computing Center) program:
http://www.tacc.utexas.edu/
The site also features pics!
http://www.tacc.utexas.edu/lonestar_gallery.php
From Infoworld Dell delivers Linux cluster deep in the heart of Texas
Dell's list price of a configuration similar to Lonestar is $1.9 million, with services and installation charges expected to bring the total cost to around $3 million, a Dell spokeswoman said.
From the Inquirer: University of Texas kyboshes MacNN's cluster story.
Cost of supercomputer only part of $38 million
By INQUIRER staff: Tuesday 14 October 2003, 17:09
THERE'S MORE THAN MEETS the eye to a story published by MacNN and reported here today about the cost of a Dell cluster versus an Apple Mac OSX cluster.
See Dell Intel cluster costs 30 times more than Apple system.
Tina Romanella de Marquez, communications and development manager at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC), says that the $38 million mentioned by MacNN is for far more than just a supercomputer.
She said: "The $38M total you refer to was not for a single supercomputer. It was announced in February for a total package that included:
"The establishment of the new Institute for Computational Engineering & Sciences (ICES) at UT, including:
our new endowed faculty chairs in ICES at UT
additional funding for the research endowment and the visiting scholars endowment in ICES
he completion of construction of the ACES building (the 4th floor) for use by ICES and TACC
"and the establishment of a terascale distributed computing infrastructure at UT, hosted by TACC, including:
two supercomputers at TACC (the cluster you refer to, and the other IBM system
two massive storage systems at TACC
three leading-edge components to increase UT's networking infrastructure
increases in operations funding over five years for ICES and TACC".
She adds: "There are many more things that were needed to create ICES and establish a terascale distributed computing architecture at TACC. This point was made by TACC Director, Jay Boisseau, during the Lonestar dedication ceremony. The value of the specific computer referred to was approximately $3.0 million. And, no tuition funds were used in this process. Most of the money did not even come from UT. The package included $8M in discounts and donations from about 10 leading technology vendors, and over $15M from a generous foundation." And, she continued: "The VaTech number ONLY includes the actual computer, not the cost of the building, power, cooling, people, or anything else needed to actually operate it."
So that comparison goes out the window, then.
yes but the dell one can actually run more than just photoshop
*ducks*
FYI that was me ducking, not ducks quacking.
Thank you I'll be here all week.
Personality #2, stop that! #6 is now in control! We're not psychotic!
> "The Register has posted a correction to the widely-reported story that a 3.7 terraflop Dell cluster cost the University of Texas $38 million. As it turns out, the computer cost $3 million, vs. $5.2 million for the 17.6 terraflop Mac G5 cluster at Virginia Tech."
It's Teraflop, not Terraflop, and the link goes to a page on The Inquirer, not The Register.
As it turns out, the computer cost $3 million, vs. $5.2 million for the 17.6 terraflop Mac G5 cluster at Virginia Tech.
3.7 tflops / $3M = 1.23 tflops/$1M
17.6 tflops / $5.2M = 3.38 tflops/$1M
So with the Apples you get 2.75x more computing power for the same $$.
Sounds like a an easy argument to get by the Dean's office...
Share and Enjoy!
Correct me if I am wrong. I thought that Dell only used P4 and Celeron processors, due to a deal with Intel.
...that those bukkake slupring Mac fanboys learn that their computer is not a real computer. And their OS is not an original OS. x86 is da bomb! combine that with *nix and you have a clear winner in terms of price and performance. G5 is shit. You fucking Mac loving twats need to shut the fuck up.
The Dell MFLOP/$ is about 1.23
The Apple MFLOP/$ is about 3.38
Aprox. 2.75 times the preformance for their dollar.
.sig error: carrier signal lost.
A dual AMD Opteron system gets similar perforamnce when compared with a dual G5 system at a substantially lower cost. Plus you have more options in terms of cases, and may be able to get a rackmount solution.
Vote for Pedro
...just wait. ;)
Imagine an x86-based cluster at less than the price of the Big Mac and faster. Intel used over 2000 CPU's at 2.4GHz. Now imagine the number of 2.4GHz AMD Opterons in a cluster. We'll see...If you do the statistics on even ECC RAM, you start to see that problems with errors are still possible.
ECC doesn't eliminate errors, it just reduces the likelihood.
You'd to best to double-check your results in another fashion altogether.
Krill
Why is the AMD logo attatched to this story? Mods, please correct! Talk about a newsworthy story getting hit with errors...
On a completely unrelated note, go tsunami! (UT's nearly campus-wide 802.11b WLAN)
In this case, you're also building a whole office to put your computer in. (as UT built a new building to house the computers)
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
Indeed. And now we can see that UT got a totally killer deal. Why, they paid only about $800,000 per teraflop while Virginia Tech, using horribly over-priced Apple hardware, paid an absurd $300,000 per teraflop of computing performance. As you can see, uh...wait a minute. Hmm...[spin, spin, spin]
Ah. So what do those Hokies think? That money grows on trees? How on earth are we going to see a recovery in the tech sector when people are only willing to pay for cut-rate supercomuter solutions that can't even run Windows natively?
Babar
The $38 mill is the cost of building a brand new building, and supporting the cluster for five years (staff, power, networing, repair, ac, etc). The price on the macs is just the price of the actual machines.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
I was wondering why this article showed up with an AMD icon. Neither Dell nor Apple use AMD chips. But theyre all in Austin!
Now it makes sense. Kind of.
that were always treated to a moving target with mac zealots. If the hardware is slower than x86, we get drowned in claims that the actual productivity is in the software, that is until some positive benchmark comes out touting fast mac hardware. Then hardware speed is the be all end all. Same thing happens with cost, availability software, ergonomics. Surely, I'm treating mac fans as a monolithic culture which is always misleading but cmon, give us a break. The precious mac platform would probably go a whole lot further with less slavering from the loyal adherents.
That's simply no longer true.
Burp.
Apple is always more expensive.
Your brain has been warped by the Reality
Distortion Field. Objectivity negated.
I would expect to see the price of super compting dropping dramatically in the comming year. This is based on the press release from Clearspeed regarding their new processor. Here is a wired article that talk a little more about it. Its worth the read.
Sounds like another round of Apple Benchmarking (tm) conducted like at the release of the G5s :)
Ouch. Terraflops for teraflops. I will be waiting to see terrafeet (for astronomical distance measures) in US corporate press releases and popular science articles.
-- Imperial units must die --
Morons learn the diffrence between a bunch of a computers, and a bunch of computers a new building to put them in and staff, mantnence, power, AC for five years...
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
That the UT price includes the power, staff and even the building to put the computers in. Not just the individual computer cost.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
second, i have never heard labor factored into the cost of a machine (tho to call either of these beasts, just a machine is a shame, lol) but it would be reasonable for someon to calculate the TCO based on computing power and the cost of cooling, interconnect, etc.
third, the macs are using SATA which is today's technology, not ancient scsi, score one for cheaper hardware.
last, can't you just accept that apple finally hit a home run on the high end of the hardware world, for a welcome change from the stagnation of the wintel world? ? ? ?? ?
"You never want a serious crisis to go to waste." - Rahm Emanuel
four new endowed faculty chairs in ICES at UT
Yikes, the furniture prices of today. To even be included on a list of just seven entries summing up a multi-million budget, those must be Aeron chairs. I wonder what's so special about faculty chairs anyway?
$3 million for 3.7 Terraflop = $810k per Terraflop
$5.2 million for 17.6 Terraflop = $295k per Terraflop
Which means the Dell is 2.75 times more expensive.
I have no doubt Dell 3 Teraflops cluster costed 3 millions but if you do the math it is still more expensive;
3 millions for 3 Teraflops [Dell] = 1 Teraflops / million$
17,6 Teraflops for 5,2 millions [Apple] = 3,38 Teraflops / million$
The mac is still less expensive but I doubt people will see it that way for the same reason people say Macs are more expensive because you can get a Dell at a cheaper price, what they deliberately choose not to realize is that the Dell won't be as powerfull and will be cheaper. Price isn't everything when it comes to the cost, what you truly get spec-aside is what is important.
does this story use the AMD icon?
...and we will have the full picture. Once again slashdot finds the truth...
I guess the zealot's rush to judgement has been foiled again.
Manipulate the moderator system! Mod someone as "overrated" today.
Did no one see the disclaimers at the bottom of the page. As the apple turns is by turns amusing, downright stupid, and infuriating - this is as it's meant to be. The register is perhaps a slightly more reliable news source.
One thing they don't do is serious news, or serious stories. They have a long running story about Mike Dell's obsession with copying Steve, which is quite amusing, but not *entirely* true.
Note the disclaimer at the bottom of the site
DISCLAIMER: AtAT is not a news site any more than "Inside Edition" is a "real" news show. We make "Dawson's Creek" look like "60 Minutes." We engage in rampant guesswork, wild speculation, and pure fabrication for the entertainment of our viewers. Sure, everything here is "inspired by actual events," but so was "Amityville II: The Possession."
So lighten up.
Building a supercomputer cluster from PC hardware is going to be far cheaper. Of course, it will take you about 2-3 times as many pc's (more electricity, more space, more heat, shorter MTBF), but you can do it.
ok...some of these comments (and those in other postings) are absolutely fabulous. Totally based on conjecture and in some cases a very narrow view of the world, but hysterical.
c ale/). Pay particular attention to the presentation, which has ALL the info in there you need.
You guys are at least providing us with entertainment. Some of you need to go look at the Terascale page at VT (http://computing.vt.edu/research_computing/teras
Also read the press release that VT put out the first week of September....again, nothing that hasn't been already answered has been asked by this round of posters.
Man you guys are funny...lol
One set of doors cost our athletic department over one million dollars. Go UT admin!
====
Crudely Drawn Games
Unfortunately, these systems are not fitted with raytracing accelerator cards. So, no.
Since VT put the system together themselves we should really be comparing the $5.2M figure to Dell's $1.9M figure keeping in mind that Dell's number is list.
This same coworker points out that sustained performance is anywhere between 20% and 60% of peak on the top 500 list so that should be kept in mind. But he did get to do some preliminary QCD lattice simulation test runs on a dual G5 and he was getting 800 MFlops on one cpu and 1400 MFlops with both cpus on lattice sizes that did not fit in cache. This was an interesting result because the one cpu case was comprable to the best performance he has seen on x86 but the two cpu case beat the best dual cpu x86 he has seen by about 200 MFlops due to the better memory bandwidth on the dual G5.
The thing is that he has an SSE2 optimized version of the lattice code that beats the pants off of the G5 version. He expects to see a similar boast to the G5 numbers with AltiVec optimisations but cannot be sure. The trouble is that with AltiVec he can only do single precision. I am not sure which compiler he used on linux for the x86 numbers but he used the beta IBM compiler on OS X for the G5 numbers.
The G5 system is still 2.74 times cheaper. The dell is $810,810.8/terraflop The G5 is $295,454.5/terraflop.
Ironically, this mistake really helps out Dell.
If there was no mistake made in the first place,
then it could been reported that the G5 delivers
significantly (but not ridiculously) more bang for
the buck in the world of clustering. The pendulum
has swung past erasing the original
misreprentation and into erasing what could have
been the fair representation in the media of cost
of Macs versus Dells that seems to constantly
elude Apple.
Shame...
Anyone?
This is a typical hype-story. Now, I'm from Tech, and we can count, but the math used is leaving a lot out of the equeation.
r e1.html
...is all free
The press release quote from the Roanoke Times is "Tech plans to spend $5.2 million over the next five years on the computer cluster, which eventually will be housed in the university's fledgling Institute for Critical Technology and Applied Science." and is here: http://www.unirel.vt.edu/vtnetletter/sept03/featu
We'll pretend the facilities already existed and all of the people will be working for free (that's what graduate students are for anyways, right?)
So...
12000 SF of dedicated facility space (and a 24x7 staff)
Assembly, testing, and operation.
Sole use facility items (1.5MW of UPS and Diesel Generators)
170 Tons of cooling (HVAC & assoc components)
Now, from the $5.2M (over 5 years) comes:
Power: 3MW x 24hx365.25dx5y x (1000x0.06c/kwH) = $7.89M
Oops, even if all the network, racks, cableing, custom cooling parts, and computers were FREE, we'd still be $2.5M over budget. Whoops.
This is somewhat simlar to UAB flying an amatuer radio satellite for $20,000. If you ignore the costs of everything, it always sounds cheap.
Heck, I can get you a brand new Mercedes S Class Limo for $50. That's as long as you don't count the $2000/mo lease payment for the next four years, and maintenance, or the $40,000/yr for the chauffeur (that's really operating budget, so it doesn't count toward the cost of the car).
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
$3 million for 3.0 teraflop, vs. $5.2 million for the 17.6 teraflop
You don't need a calculator to know that.
Truth, truth, truth...
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
It's unfortunate that a number including various different ICES projects got attached to the supercomputer project alone. However, it's important to take this person's comments with a grain of salt.
Case in point: Miss de Marquez incorrectly claims Virginia Tech's total quoted cost for Apple's solution "ONLY includes the actual computer."
That's patently not true. VT's announced cost expressly included both the InfiniBand interconnects and the (massive) piped-water cooling system that, incidentally, accounts for most of the facility's projected electricity use.
Also note that Miss de Marquez labels the "value of the specific computer" $3 million. Does that number include cooling, power, the building and labor? There's no way to know, but that information certainly is available for Apple's machine. Telling.
Head on over to VT's page for more info: http://computing.vt.edu/research_computing/terasc
Your use of the term 'da bomb' is retarded. You are retarded. You are a waste of resources. You are obviously a stunted individual, friendless, hopeless, destined for total obscurity. I look forward to not ever hearing anything about you. I have no doubt that you will eventually kill yourself once you have exhausted your limited ideas and realize that your l33t skillz don't even assure you a job at the local pretzel shack.
;)
I'm sure your 'bomb' of an x86 with it's 'original' OS (WTF does that mean?)is real fast at downloading that bukkake porn that you fantasize so hard about, knowing that you will never find yourself in that same situation. It must really hurt inside knowing all this and still pretending that it doesn't. I sit here with my friends and we laugh at your infantile stupidity. Your opinions on these matters are always welcome because while you think that your barbs are so quick and biting -- oh that gay humor -- every AC post like yours is hours of laughter for us. So please keep them 'coming'
I would return the "Shut the fuck up" sentiment, but I do really look forward to half-wits such as yourself, with their endless blathering about their PC's being 'straighter' than our Macs.
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
I was just trying to keep it a notch below rude and insensitive :)
We apologise for the fault in this post. Those responsible have been sacked. -- Signed RICHARD M. NIXON
It's probably too late, but MOD THE PARENT POST UP!!! I knew the G5 was a sweet machine, but i didn't really know how sweet until I saw it all spelled out like that. Wow. /me drools longingly now.
So, from a price/performance standpoint, the Dell was indeed more expensive, or are you all really that bad at math? The way I do math tells me that the dell cost $1M per teraflop... right? VT payed $5.2M for 17.6 (approx.) Tflop... or $295 grand per Tflop. I think VT got a better deal!
You don't get support, you just get to talk to some confused guy in Mombai who just started, and has to get through a huge volume of calls a day. You can't get parts within the week, you need a third party supplier that actually keeps things in stock to get your Dell parts from. Dell have reduced costs a lot by cutting inventory and support costs - however this doesn't help the customer.
If you have a system like this you have a few of your own support guys, keep spare parts in stock and order them direct from the manufacturer - not a re-seller (no matter how big they are) like Dell. ie. You run it like an industrial plant that is worth a fraction of the amount you lose for a weeks downtime.
Even at $3 million, it would aparantly cost $18 million in dell products to build what $5 million in apple products cost?
The Register issued the correction that it really was the Inquirer all these years. The editors apologize for the error.
It's not offtopic, dumbass. It's orthogonal.
Did anyone bother to factor in her salary? If not, she is going to be pissed!!
The Inquirer!? Someone here took them seriously? They even make The Register look good!
The did not buy the memory from Apple
so much back and forth on which is better/faster/cheaper. the only important thing to me is that Apple IS competing in this space at all. to see them price competetive (or even favorable) is simply remarkable. very interested to see how things add up in November when final results are in. and again when they upgrade to OS X 10.3...
http://www.infoworld.com/article/03/10/03/HNdellcl uster_1.html
'The "Lonestar" cluster at the University of Texas is expected to deliver theoretical peak performance of 3.45 TFLOPs (trillion floating point operations per second) after it is benchmarked by the Top 500 list of the world's fastest supercomputers. Rooholamini said. This would rank the cluster in the top 10 percent of clusters deployed worldwide in terms of performance, he said.
Dell's list price of a configuration similar to Lonestar is $1.9 million, with services and installation charges expected to bring the total cost to around $3 million, a Dell spokeswoman said.'
Providing 25% of the performance at 60% of the cost, that's what I call a real bargain.