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Sun Donation Spurs Linux Cluster at Purdue

An anonymous reader writes "Purdue University, with a $3.6 million gift from Sun Microsystems, is giving recycled PCs new life as a computer cluster that makes high-performance computing power available in undergraduate classes. 'Previously, my students could only do what I'd describe as 'proof' animations - small, low-resolution and not presentation quality,' [Professor Richard] Paul said. 'With access to this computing power, the students will be able to ship their software files of instructions to the Linux cluster, and it will come back in three or four hours with modeling, lighting and animation. Students will get to experience the whole thing in terms of scale and presence, and they can do longer animations.' More images of the current Linux cluster and other servers at Purdue are out there."

12 of 253 comments (clear)

  1. LOCs? by seanadams.com · · Score: 4, Funny

    'With access to this computing power, the students will be able to ship their software files of instructions to the Linux cluster, and it will come back in three or four hours with modeling, lighting and animation

    I'm sure glad he didn't use an arcane technical word like "program". That sure would have confused the layman. By the way, how many Libraries of Congress can the cluster store?

    1. Re:LOCs? by Disco+Stew · · Score: 2, Funny

      You must not have got the memo.

      'software files of instructions' is the official terminology now.

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  2. great by digitalsushi · · Score: 1, Funny

    great. now there's little kids crying everywhere. last time i browse in the living room.

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    slashdot: where everyone yells sarcastic metaphors to themselves to understand the issue
  3. this makes me laugh by narkotix · · Score: 5, Funny

    In addition to the Sun Mircosystems gift, Morgan J. Burke, director of intercollegiate athletics, will announce a $1.2 million gift from Cisco Systems Inc. that is enabling Purdue sports fans to access real-time football game data via wireless personal digital assistants (PDAs)

    havent they heard of a little device called an AM radio?

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    We played dungeons and dragons for 3 hours.....then i was slain by an elf
  4. The sad thing... by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 2, Funny

    The sad thing is that any one of those recycled PCs is probably more powerful than the one on my desk :o(

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    Beep beep.
  5. Just like the old days by Saint+Aardvark · · Score: 3, Funny
    "Previously, my students could only do what I'd describe as 'proof' animations small, low-resolution and not presentation quality," Paul said. "With access to this computing power, the students will be able to ship their software files of instructions to the Linux cluster, and it will come back in three or four hours with modeling, lighting and animation. Students will get to experience the whole thing in terms of scale and presence, and they can do longer animations."

    Interesting...like what used to happen with print jobs. How long 'til a student goes to the sysadmin on duty asking for their animation job to be niced down a point or two?

  6. Re:What are these? by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 3, Funny

    2 racks of "Origin 2000" super computer nodes.
    1 rack of "Onyx 2" visualization nodes

    It's questions like these that the high resolution pics are designed to answer. Gaze upon those blinking lights, mere mortal.

  7. Re:Linux Cluster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    OMFG you have like 27 shitty PCs! I have more than that in my linen closet, fag0t.

  8. Re:Why Perdue? by DARKFORCE123 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Maybe Sun should donate the money to you so that you can afford some spell checking software along with your desires to purchase world peace. Last time I checked Purdue didn't have a 'e' as the second letter.

  9. Re:I know I don't understand by paradesign · · Score: 2, Funny

    maybe not customary, but highly reccomended.

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    I want 2D games back.
  10. Still no cure for cancer by Ignis+Flatus · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Many think of using high-performance computing for computational science and research," Bottum said. "At Information Technology at Purdue (ITaP), our mission is to support learning as well as discovery. While research is critical, we're also building for the classroom."

    But now students can print "Hello World!" in ray-traced, spinning, textured 3-D letters. Yay!

  11. Re:Why Perdue? by Nick+of+NSTime · · Score: 3, Funny

    What is an impoverished person going to do with a supercomputer? High-powered calculations of negative numbers?