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Virginia Tech Upgrade: PowerMac G5 to Xserve G5

An anonymous reader writes "Virginia Tech officially announced that they will be migrating their G5 Supercomputer from PowerMac G5s to Xserves. According to the article, the Xserve G5s will reduce power consumption, heat production and decrease the system size by a factor of three. The pricing of the upgrade is still being determined, and according to Srinidhi Varadarajan, they are working on getting "very good homes" for the PowerMac G5s which will be replaced."

8 of 314 comments (clear)

  1. Upgrade cost by Kris+Thalamus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does anyone know what the university got in return for allowing Apple to film the installation and staff for the Xserve promotional videos? A reduced price upgrade may have been part of the initial agreement

    1. Re:Upgrade cost by Kris+Thalamus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Still, unless Apple gave a substantial incentive, it seem extravagant to purchase 1100 G5s and the tower accommodating racks to house them, only to upgrade them a few months later.

      Also, a savvy Slashdot reader, leaked the plans some time before the upgrade was officially announced.

  2. Instead of going 3x smaller by laurensv · · Score: 5, Insightful

    why not have a few more Xserves, I mean they already have the infrastructure for that much heat/power/room, so why don't they supersize the Big Mac?

  3. Video Cards & Optical Drives by BandwidthHog · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Now for all those people who droned on and on about how foolish VTech were for not getting stripped down boxes, here's the reason.

    --

    Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
  4. Re:I'll take one... by bluekanoodle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    How is this Insightful? The Lead in stated the reasons as a less power consumption, less room needed, and less heat produced. Last I checked trying to save money on Electricity, Cooling and Floor space was simple good use of students tuition dollars.

  5. Old news by Chanc_Gorkon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Correct me if I am wrong, but I thought that Steve Job's himself had already said this in his Macworld Keynote. An excerpt from someone's notes:

    Jobs talks about the G5 processor and Virginia Tech SuperComputer, who wanted "the first" 1,100 dual-2GHz Power Mac G5s. ("We pissed off a few people" getting them the first ones.") Cost them only $5.2 million and sending ripples through Supercomputer world. Jobs shows Virginia Tech Supercomputer video. It uses Infiniband networking; it took less than 3 weeks to assemble. Now in the top 3 Supercomputers. First academic machine to break the 10 teraflop barrier. The entire system runs on Mac OS X. Jobs says he expects to see a few more [Supercomputers] popping up hear and there

    So VT is probably going to be THE FIRST to recieve G5 Xserve's.

    --

    Gorkman

  6. Re:why? by eggboard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Space is finite, so reducing your space needs by 2/3rds and reducing your expensive air-conditioning budget by some amount is actually a huge argument in favor of upgrading. The Xserves are cheaper cycle for cycle than the Power Mac G5s, too.

    The other issue: with 2/3rds of your space free, you can wait for faster G5s to appear and slot those in with very small amounts of disruption. Or a grant comes through for a $1,000,000 for more computers -- boom, you're done. No lengthy process of finding more space, spending more to build out a/c, etc.

    --
    Freelance tech journalist for the Economist, MIT Technology Review, Macworld, and others
  7. Re:I'll take one... by shotfeel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Will they even be selling them?

    I don't know anything about VT, but how many computer labs could benefit from new G5's?

    How about other departments? Do they have a need/use for them? If nothing else, put them on faculty desktops.

    Then there's always the possibility of reselling them to the current students.