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Own a Piece of An Apple-Based Supercomputer

Graff writes "Now that Apple has come out with the Xserve G5, Virginia Tech has been swapping out parts of their 'System X' supercomputer for the more compact 1U Xserves. MacMall is selling some of those System X component G5 systems with an approximate $200 savings and an extra 512 megs of RAM over a normal G5. You can read more about it at MacCentral."

4 of 296 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Wear issue? by dario_moreno · · Score: 5, Informative

    on the contrary. My 4 years experience with clusters show that after the first two months of burn-in where many components fail, you aftewards have a higher MTBF than with PCs used "normall", because in the Beowulf case the AC power is regulated, the machine is almost never switched on and off (major cause of damage because at startup every component consumes power at the same time, voltage drops, and damage occurs), temperature is kept constant, the machine is kept in a safe room where nobody ventures more often than once a week because of the cold and the noise, therefore there is no dust in the machines or grease on the contacts.

    --
    Google passes Turing test : see my journal
  2. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by gunnk · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm going to have to disagree with you concerning the amount of wear and tear.

    Most computers fail either in the first month or so of use or after many years of good use. In the first case it's usually a bad component that slipped by quality control. In the latter it is simply the ravages of time. Longer quality control "burn-in" times would eliminate many of those first month failures, but the vendor really doesn't have the time/space for long burn-ins.

    Now, the Number One way to shorten the life of your computer is to turn it on and off frequently. The computer heats up when you run it and cools when it's off. The expansion and contraction of components associated with these temperature changes stresses every solder joint on every component -- and may even stress the chip-level components themselves. To lengthen the life of your hardware (at the cost of extra electricity), leave your system on unless you aren't going to be using it for a significant length of time (i.e.: don't power cycle more than once a day).

    These G5's have been on for approximately six months straight in a very well-controlled temperature environment. This is a burn-in that virtually guarantees that there were no manufacturing defects. However, since they weren't power-cycling on a regular basis, it was actually a VERY low-stress environment.

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    Life is short: void the warranty.
  3. Re:My question is: by Selecter · · Score: 5, Informative
    They looked at Opterons and they looked at Dell( Xeons.) THEY WERE REJECTED based on cost and performance issues ( the G5 can perform a fused multiply + add in one clock cycle, multiply that times billions of iterations ) and thats something the Opteron cannot do.

    The G5 was the clear winner out of all the chips on the market, and Apple was the clear winner of the platforms considered, and they considered *ALL* of them worth considering.

    The success of the venture simply proves the superiority of keeping an open mind and not bringing tired old pre-conceptions (Apple's slow, Apple sux, etc.) to your work.

  4. SOLD OUT as of 10:20AM PST by Photo_Designer · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just called, no need to call.. they're all gone.. shucks.

    -Jim