Slashdot Mirror


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."

57 of 296 comments (clear)

  1. first dibs by pytheron · · Score: 3, Funny

    I bag the 'go-faster' stripes on the case !

    --
    "I am not bound to please thee with my answers" [William Shakespeare]
  2. Proof? by OlivierB · · Score: 5, Funny

    I wish there was some kind of engraving on the aluminium casing stating something like "Virginia Tech, Supercomputer node #758 - 2003" Then they could definitively sell it at a Premium. I mean I can get this kind of computer off ebay for more or less the smae price. I need some kind of souvenir that it's from Virginia. How about sending it through the IPOD engraving shop?

    --
    Artificial intelligence is no match for natural stupidity
    1. Re:Proof? by 11223 · · Score: 4, Informative

      What I heard is that VT isn't removing the identification stickers. I don't know if MacMall is removing them or not.

    2. Re:Proof? by in7ane · · Score: 4, Funny

      So, how much just for the sticker then?

    3. Re:Proof? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      I bet the sticker says "V-Type", and garuntees to speed up your computer by at least 10%.

    4. Re:Proof? by Lobo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Actually from what I understand, you don't get karma from being moderated funny.

      --

      -------
      Bite Me Fanboy!!
  3. Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Only 6 months of use out of these things and VT is tossing them out like yesterday's trash. Gee, thanks for doing this after delaying my order for 6 weeks back when the G5s were originally supposed to be shipping to the rest of us. Apparently you didn't need them that badly after all.

    --


    8==8 Bones 8==8
    1. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by Emil+Brink · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hardware that has seen use for six months in a super-computer, i.e. probably been run 24/7 and really stressed, sold for $200 below the price of new is considered to be priced as "trash"? Your trash must be worth its weight in gold, then. I think it sounds expensive, but then it's Apple hardware so I shouldn't be surprised. ;^)

      --
      main(O){10<putchar(4^--O?77-(15&5128 >>4*O):10)&&main(2+O);}
    2. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by Bones3D_mac · · Score: 5, Insightful

      VT isn't the one selling these systems... Apple is. VT is tossing them back at Apple for shiny new Xserves. Apparently being the 3rd fastest computer in the world isn't good enough anymore.

      --


      8==8 Bones 8==8
    3. 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.

      --
      Life is short: void the warranty.
    4. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by mbbac · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They did need them badly. Without having them so soon there wouldn't currently be a Virginia Tech supercomputer on the TOP500 list and they'd have to wait another year to try to get listed.

      --

      mbbac

    5. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by assemblyline · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Virginia Tech wanted Xserves in the first place. Apple didn't reveal them until January. Look at the benefits. Smaller case, less heat generated, less power consumed, error corecting code memory; all things which would be extemely useful in a supercomputer like this. From what I have read, the upgrade will use 25% less power and take up a third less space. If I were Tech, I would throw the current G5s back too.

    6. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by Tassach · · Score: 5, Interesting
      You are 100% correct. In a big server farm, space, heat, and power consumption are major concerns. Assuming your figures are correct and the replacement hardware has similar specs to what they are replacing, they can improve the overall performance of the system by at least 25% at the same power consumption, not counting the additional power savings that would see from the lower heat load. Less heat also translated directly into longer life.

      I'll admit that a 6-month replacement cycle is pretty short, but it actually makes sense because they're avoiding the worst of the depreciation. I'm not up on used Mac prices, but x86 server hardware depreciates around 50% per year (refurbished 2 year old x86 servers routinely sell for around 20% - 30% of their original price; refurbished 3 year old gear sells for well under 10% of it's original price. You can get a maxed out Quad processor P-III server for well under $5000 which cost $50K when new.

      That said, I don't think that this is a good deal. $200 savings on a $3000 box is only a 6.7% discount for 6 month old hardware; a 20% - 25% discount would be more in line with current market.

      --
      Why is it that the proponents of "one nation under God" are so eager to get rid of "liberty and justice for all"?
    7. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 4, Informative
      Only 6 months of use out of these things and VT is tossing them out like yesterday's trash. Gee, thanks for doing this after delaying my order for 6 weeks back when the G5s were originally supposed to be shipping to the rest of us. Apparently you didn't need them that badly after all.

      I'm fairly sure Virginia Tech wanted the 1u cases all along (makes more sense). However, they needed the cluster up in time to make the Top 100 list. Being on that list brings in _lots_ of research money. So yes, they did need them.

      --
      Why?
    8. Re:Some of us *should* be bitter about this... by hackstraw · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually the list is updated every 6 months, but the one in November is the bigger of the two because that is the time for the annual supercomputing conference.

  4. PCI-X by freerecords · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It is nice to see the inclusion of PCI-X, we can hope that this is the start of the end of "old" PCI. I was a bit confused by the decision to include Firewire in this machine. I know it is an apple kind of penchant, but surely a server won't need firewire. Who wants to use a firewire hard disk with a server? You're more likely to back up onto tape. It seems akin to a High End commodity intel server having an Audigy sound card with optical out, I don't think there is much point. I think some of the features could have been thought about more on the machine rather than lamely following the tradition of previous iMACs. However, it looks like a great machine, and Mac is coming up in mine, and many other x86 users (I believe) opinions.

    --
    tim
    1. Re:PCI-X by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Who wants to use a firewire hard disk with a server?

      I believe that the Apple recommended restore procedure for an XServe involves booking from a copy of the OS installed on your iPod (which connects via FireWire).

      You're more likely to back up onto tape.

      There's no reason why you can't plug the tape drive in over FireWire. FireWire is basically a serial variant SCSI (okay, I'm oversimplifying a bit here) and with speeds of up to 800Mb/s it's fast enough for most things. You probably wouldn't want to connect your RAID array via FireWire, but for backups it's plenty fast enough. Many tape drives only let you write at Oh, and by the way the G5 units they are selling are intended as workstations not as servers (hence the digital audio out and the Radeon 9600 Pro, neither of which is really required for a server).

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    2. Re:PCI-X by binaryDigit · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I was a bit confused by the decision to include Firewire in this machine. I know it is an apple kind of penchant, but surely a server won't need firewire.

      Actually there are lots of reasons to include firewire on a server.

      - You can hang a firewire mass storage device off of it to backup (tape, disk, etc), boot from (recovery, etc), add extra storage in a pinch, etc.

      - You can create various types of clusters using firewire. One product is the sancube.

      - It's cheaper to design in a feature that may not be used in one incarnation of a product, but may be usable in others. Case in point your comment about Audigy sound cards on high end Intel servers, those very same motherboards are probably used in both servers and high end workstations, no point in having two different motherboards just to save a few pennies off of a $500+ mobo.

    3. Re:PCI-X by tr0llb4rt0 · · Score: 4, Informative

      You can do some good high speed networking using firewire.

      It's available in Mac OS and Linux.

      http://www.homenethelp.com/network/firewire.asp

      400mbps isn't to be sneezed at. With repeaters it'd probably make a decent fail-over network in case the main gigabit link failed.

      --
      Worst .sig ever!
    4. Re:PCI-X by mbbac · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, FireWire supports transfers of up to 3.2Gbps depending on the interconnect used.

      --

      mbbac

    5. Re:PCI-X by Jo+Deisenhofer · · Score: 3, Informative

      Don't confuse PCI-X with PCI Express. PCI-X is PCI, clocked at 100/133 MHz. PCI Express is the former 3GIO technology

    6. Re:PCI-X by Theaetetus · · Score: 3, Informative
      3.2Gbits/s == 3200Mbits/s / 8 == 800 Mbyte/s

      Nope. 3200 Mbits/s / 8 == 400 MByte/s.

      1394b supports 800 Mbit/s over cat5, 1600 Mbit/s over poly-fiber, and 3200 Mbit/s over glass-fiber. Grandparent was right.

      -T

  5. My question is: by SB5 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Did Virginia Tech's System X have any impact on Apple release the Xserve G5?

    Did the Xserve get any benefit from the optimization of the Big Mac?

    Is Virginia Tech going to lose money on this deal? /still pissed at Dell for not offering Athlon's, I wanted a 64 bit processor and AMD and Apple were the only companies offering them three months ago

    --
    If what you are reading sounds funny, or sarcastic, lame, or stupid
    it is because it is supposed to be. just laugh
    1. 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.

    2. Re:My question is: by AusG4 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      At the risk of the inevitable flaming, I have to aqree with this posting. I'm not questioning Linux or it's proven abilities, but what so many Windows (and Linux) users fail to understand about Apple's business model is that it's -not- the same as the commodity market that they enjoy. Apple makes their products in a "holistic" manner... they tightly control the hardware, operating system and pre-installed applications in order to deliver a seamless experience to the end user.

      Bottom line... if you're the kind of person who feels Apple hardware is overpriced because you can't assemble it yourself and run Linux on it, then you're missing the point and Apple probably doesn't want your business anyways. It's not outright stupidity that has kept Apple out low-end market all these years... it's a market they've intentionally chosen not to enter. Case in point.... Steve Jobs killed the whole Macintosh clone market when he returned to power at Apple. UMAX and PowerComputing were offering faster machines for less money, but were totally clueless when it came to delivering any value-add on the end-user experience.

      I'm not saying this is in a "snob" context... it's just the reality of their business model. Apple wants to sell a G5 (or iMac or PowerBook) to somebody who -doesn't- want to assemble their machine. The whole point of the Macintosh is in the fact that you don't need to do any of that.

      Take heart though... IBM is apparently going to be (or already is) selling 970 (G5) based systems in some form running some flavor of Linux... so if it's only the bad-ass CPU you're after there will be other ways of getting your little flippers on them.

      --
      bash-3.00$ uname -a
      SunOS panda 5.10 Generic sun4u sparc SUNW,Ultra-2
  6. Seems like no discount by henryhbk · · Score: 5, Interesting
    So they got them at least at educational if not below educational (must be extra discounting for thousand+ machines). They then use them for 6 months, tax free (educational institution) and then sell them only $200 off list? The apple store for education lists the G5 DP 2.0 GHz with 512mb and 160gb drive at $2699. Hmmm... Doesn't seem like it's such a deal for people, and seems like a virtual profit for them!

    As someone else noted, if they were engraved or etched or something that would make them special.

    1. Re:Seems like no discount by gunnk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Maybe some folks buy Apples without the educational discount because they aren't eligible for it and figure taking a couple of hundred dollars in discounts for which they don't qualify would be stealing.

      Honesty/Intregrity can mean paying list price sometimes.

      --
      Life is short: void the warranty.
    2. Re:Seems like no discount by lewp · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well, I would pay retail, but stealing all that music from the recording industry has completely fucked up my morals.

      --
      Game... blouses.
  7. So, why did the sale happen so early? by Coutal · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Why couldn't VT hold their horses?
    my bet is... they could.
    no one likes building any cluster (not to mention a supercomputer) out of desktops, esp. ones configured like desktops (gfx, no ecc, ...)
    but apple really wanted the PR of having the computer cluster, and perhaps to list the revenue in 4Q2003.
    so i can't blame them - looks like a fair deal.

    1. Re:So, why did the sale happen so early? by LennyDotCom · · Score: 3, Insightful

      apple really wanted the PR of having the computer cluster

      No VT needed the PR probably more then Apple now they get grant money out the wazoo

      --
      http://Lenny.com
    2. Re:So, why did the sale happen so early? by despik · · Score: 4, Insightful

      but apple really wanted the PR of having the computer cluster, and perhaps to list the revenue in 4Q2003. so i can't blame them - looks like a fair deal.

      You fool. Apple wanted the PR, so they forced the G5s down VT's collective throat. Yeah, right.

      Why couldn't VT hold their horses?

      Because they had a deadline to meet if they wanted to make that Top CPUs list.

      --
      "I seem to have mastered a certain amount of control over physical reality."
    3. Re:So, why did the sale happen so early? by zerocool^ · · Score: 5, Interesting

      No VT needed the PR probably more then Apple now they get grant money out the wazoo


      Please don't begrudge us this. Virginia's state legislature has cut over 28% from our 2002 level of funding, while just recently passing laws which effectively cap tuition hikes at about 5% per year. My tuition has gone from $1500/semester (2001 in state) to almost $2200/semester (2004 in state).

      And please don't respond with "blah blah, if they used the money more effectively". We're up against the wall here. About 5 professors in my department (History) out of 25 or so have been laid off, or sent on research sabbatical so that they don't have to be paid. We've fired over 1/2 of the maintenance staff, and people on campus no longer have trash cans in their dorm hallways - they have to take their trash outside to a dumpster. The snow trucks in Blacksburg have far less salt than they had last year to clear the roads (I only think of this as I sit here at Netmar and watch today's 3 inches of snow fall). I now this isn't grave hardship, but seriously, we've cut about everything we can.

      The supercompuer gives us both grants and positive PR. Students see that, despite the state of the economy, we're trying to push to the top of research institutes. We're trying to push ourselves above 67th (or whatever) on that college engineering school ratings, trying to compete with our neighbor down interstate 64, who, for no discernable reason, has an engineering program with the inflated ranking of ~ 15th. And yes, we get grants from the government and money from private industry in exchange for timesharing on the bigmac.

      Just let this one go. We need the money, the BigMac has not only made us money, but has raised awareness of the university. It's a good thing.

      ~Will

      --
      sig?
  8. Re:an extra 512 megs??? by philbert26 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Why oh why do companies use mail in rebates?

    So they can make money when people forget to send the form on time, or fill it in incorrectly.

    Several companies in the UK do the same for extended warranties. They say "pay lots of money and if your machine doesn't break, we'll refund it after five years". You typically get 30 days after the five years to get your money back, and most people will just forget.

  9. Wear issue? by weave · · Score: 4, Interesting
    What about the wear issue? I assume those processors were cranking around 100% for good portions of the time, generating a lot of heat. The room had some pretty intense cooling, but individual computers probably still heated up a lot.

    Should that be a concern? Do these 6 month old computers already have 2-3 years of typical mileage on some of their components?

    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:Wear issue? by ZombieEngineer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There is a large number of cases in the engineering world where running something continously flat out is far better than starting and stopping. Cases that come to mind are gas turbines (gas turbines for power generation have a lifetime measured in 100s of starts, the number 500 springs to mind). There is also a class of heat exchangers (printed circuit heat exchangers, transfers approx 5 to 15 MW of heat in a block of aluminium the size of a typical car engine) which are also very sensitive to thermal cycling.

      ZombieEngineer

  10. And what about the students? by Peter+Cooper · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is an educational and research establishment, not a commercial enterprise.

    You'd have thought (as some students were hinting here at /.) that Virginia Tech would have sold the units to students, freshmen, whatever, at a knock down rate. Or even used a ton of them within the university itself.

    Yet more profiteering from a supposedly educational institution.

    1. Re:And what about the students? by Raven42rac · · Score: 4, Informative

      First of all, how is this profiteering? They are trading in their G5s to upgrade their cluster, Virginia Tech is not selling the "old" ones, MACMALL IS! Virginia Tech is simply trading them in. So you would rather have Virginia Tech eat all the money that they spent to purchase the original lot of 1,100 instead of making them look much better to potential customers who want to purchase the use of their cluster, by leveraging the money they have already spent? It is in business to make a profit, like it or not, it is not their primary main objective (Chinpokomon!) but it can not be ignored, either. I respect your opinion that some of the G5s should have been kept around for use in labs, by students, etc. Then again, we don't know if VT traded ALL of their G5s, they just might have kept some for the uses that you and I laid out. I suppose this just shows, on a grand scale, the high resale value of Apples!

      --
      I hate sigs.
  11. Non-linear processor usage by kulpinator · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Not to mention that PowerPC chips "load" non-linearly compared to other architectures -- that is, they become far less efficient at, say the top 8-10% of CPU usage time, both electrically and logically. If true, this could definitely shorten their lifespan if it causes excessive heat stress.

    Unfortunately, I don't have anything to back that up. Occasionally Google is not so friendly.

    --
    Karma: Positive (mostly due to rash moderations)
  12. Imagine a Beowulf Cluster... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    oo..damn.. it was!

  13. Re:Ironically... by gunnk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Probably the only actual record the big mac can claim is the shortest time to obsolescence. Not to downplay the achievement though...

    Well, it's the fastest supercomputer ever built with off-the-shelf components and the number three fastest machine on the planet -- and that's before the upgrade.

    They will probably make quite a decent profit out of this, despite the $200 discount. They must have got pretty decent discount from apple for both bulk buying and promotion. And any self respecting geek will want one of these over a stock G5

    As someone else pointed out, these are refurbished by Apple and then sold through MacMall. VT isn't selling them, but traded them back in to Apple for credit towards the Xserves.

    --
    Life is short: void the warranty.
  14. Re:an extra 512 megs??? by ch-chuck · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why oh why do companies use mail in rebates?

    so they can stick low price tags in big numbers on the shelf. That's gotten me a few times - you see, "Oh, an X for only $19.95!" so you take it up to the counter, and the cashier rings you up for $39.95 - often by then the consumer is already psychologically committed and just pays it. It's a common tactic, rebates are just one methode of exploiting consumer naivety. Bottom line is, it generates more sales.

    --
    try { do() || do_not(); } catch (JediException err) { yoda(err); }
  15. Definintely charging for celebrity by mactari · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple's online store is charging $2399 for refurbed dual G5s, and the student store's price for a new dual G5 is $2699, $100 less than the MacMall refurbs from Tech. You can even take $26 more off for getting rid of the internal mode, which the supercomputer refurbs don't have either.

    Even if you add the extra 512 megs of RAM from Apple's site (where prices aren't the best), these Va Tech refurbs are only $100 less than what a student would spend on the same box new. Not to mention these 2 GHz duallies are rated as "Buy only if you need it - Approaching the end of a cycle" on the Macrumors buyers' guide page.

    So not a deal at all if you're a student (though I have to think students at Va Tech could get the inside track on the boxes -- anyone know?) and not a great price for a refurb if you're Joe Schmoe. And not a box with great longevity, relatively speaking, either, if Macrumors has the lifecycle pegged.

    Wait for a processor speed bump unless you're dying to own a little bit of celebrity.

    --

    It's all 0s and 1s. Or it's not.
  16. Radeon 9600s in the servers by bjb · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Looking at the specs of those machines, it seems that there is a Radeon 9600 in every G5. Now I know that OS X takes advantage of 3D hardware, but as a server, this is almost a wasted expense, especially considering the number of servers that they bought.

    What would be spiffy if there was a way that they could do SOME of the math on the GPUs. I never saw a product that could do that, but it would be rather fast. No?

    --
    Never hit your grandmother with a shovel, for it leaves a bad impression on her mind...
    1. Re:Radeon 9600s in the servers by clf8 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ok, everyone keeps calling these servers and wondering why they've got firewire and a nice video card. Apple sells XServe's if you want a pure server. Typically, these machines would be used by some media professional (layout, design, audio, movies, animation) for which these things make complete sense. These aren't XServe's, these are PowerMacs and as such should be loaded to the gill.

      VT didn't buy XServe's to start because there was no G5 version. Now that there is, they are, which over the long run the cooling and power expenses should more than compensate for any money lost on the computer swap deal. Oh yeah, and they've still got the 3rd fastest supercomputer in the world.

  17. WOAH! Hold yourself up a second! by Justabit · · Score: 3, Funny

    I beg to differ. I believe that the G5 XServe is an iMac decendant, in the same way that we are decended from somethingopithicus and will continue to evolve into pure being of light. [this neatly ties in all three /. stories, beat it if you can. 1.this story. 2.light chips. 3.culture in animals.]

    --
    "Persistance is Fertile" - Me. I can quote myself if I want to.
  18. Re:You have truly no heart by Justabit · · Score: 4, Funny

    It dosnt have to be an engraving, although it would look nice on the metal finish. It could be a sticker at the very least or a plaque mounted on the side....with a free t shirt saying " I paid nearly $3K for a G5 and all I got was a lousy supercomputer"

    --
    "Persistance is Fertile" - Me. I can quote myself if I want to.
  19. Top 500 list by Troy+Baer · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Why couldn't VT hold their horses?

    My guess is that both they and Apple wanted to have a spot on the last Top 500 list, with all the associated press at the Supercomputing 2003 conference. Apple's been trying to convince somebody, anybody to build a large HPC cluster with their hardware since the G3 came out. Until the G5 came out, it made very little sense economically -- the per-system price for Apple kit was 30-40% more than comparable Intel-based stuff, and the memory bandwidth and 64-bit floating point performance was the same or worse. The G5 fixed that, for the most part

    Nobody in their right mind wants to build a cluster out of machines in desktop/deskside chasses. We've done it once, with the first generation Itanium systems where there was no rackmount option for a 2-way box, and we'll never do it again -- remote management of those machines was and is actively painful. (Our 1st-gen Itanium cluster is out of production service now, but it's been partitioned up into smaller clusters at universities around the state as part of the Cluster Ohio project, which we still manage.)

    --Troy
    --
    "My life's work has been to prompt others... and be forgotten." --Cyrano de Bergerac
  20. You forgot one by BoomerSooner · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They used to run all simulations twice to verify the non-ECC RAM was returning the desired result. As a consequence the system will speed up two-fold in real life use. Now that is a performance gain!

  21. look at the specs... not for servers..... by johnpaul191 · · Score: 3, Informative
    There is a lot in these machines that a clustered supercomputer setup REALLY doesn't need. One article i read about this said the VT designer wanted to buy the chips right from IBM initially. It came down to the PowerMac G5 being the ONLY way to get those chips at the time. I guess when he made his pitch to Apple they either would not say when they expected to ship Xserves, or they were worried about looming supercomputers. i also read elsewhere that in the next year or so there are a few other massive machines that will be coming online and it's possible they would fill up the top 5. it came down to timing where a $7 Million setup could land in the top 5 machines up against machines costing 20 times as much.

    anyway if you look at the specs you can see all the silly stuff.... that cluster does not need 1100 Superdrives, or 1100 Radeon 9600 cards..... let alone size and whatnot... i'm sure it was done because the Xserves were just too far off and it was the only machine out there with the G5/970 chip for sale to anyone.

    look at the specs:


    The systems sold by MacMall are listed as 2.0GHz Power Mac G5s equipped with 1GB DDR SDRAM (2 512MB memory cards); equipped with 160GB ATA drives, a SuperDrive, ATI Radeon 9600 Pro graphics processor, Gigabit Ethernet, 3 USB 2.0 ports, 2 USB 1.1 ports, 2 FireWire 400 ports and 1 FireWire 800 port, along with an AirPort Extreme card slot and no modem -- in other words, a stock Power Mac G5 Dual 2GHz system with a memory upgrade from 512MB to 1GB


    it does seem the pulled the fibre cards out... they are optional in Xserves... maybe they just swapped those? i don't know if they are the same in both machines normally.

  22. Re:"Big Mac" is getting bigger! I'm buying a VT no by reiggin · · Score: 4, Funny
    "A Lisa 1 sold on ebay for $10,000"

    And an original Lisa sold from Apple for $9,999. Hmmm. $1 profit. There's your return on investment.

  23. Re:VT must be covering their Xserve purchase by wankledot · · Score: 3, Informative
    They've stated a number of times that they paid full price for them. Plus, they traded these machines back to Apple for Xserves, so they're not making a profit in the getting-a-check-from-Apple sense of the word.

    I believe refurb products have a 90 day warranty from Apple.

    "massive wear and tear" is also known as "verified reliability"' to some people.

    --
    My sig is blank, I typed this by hand.
  24. ECC? (was: You forgot one) by nystagman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This may be juuuuuust a bit off-topic, but...

    With the inclusion of ECC in the new XServes, and Apple's slow-but-steady propogation of high-end features towards the lower end, how likely is it that we'll see ECC in some future rev (maybe even this alleged-real-soon-now bump) of the desktop G5s?

    It's been many years since my computer architecture coursework, so I am not sure that there's even a real cost-benefit reason to do so. I look forward to reading any brilliant insights that /.'ers are capable of bringing to the party.

    --
    Theory and practice are the same in theory, but different in practice.
  25. Re:ECC? (was: You forgot one) by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, from what I can see there is barely any difference between the memory controllers on the two systems. It looks like it was just a new revision of the same ASIC. Apple doesn't exactly provide many details on this, but it looks like the new memory/processor controller chip would be a drop-in replacement for the chip used on the original Powermac. Therefore it's possible (even likely) that they will use this new revision on the next revamp of the G5 line. In fact, they could well start slipping them into the current line-up without telling anyone about it.

    I don't anticipate that Apple will sell any desktop G5's with ECC memory installed at the factory, but if the memory controller supports ECC you could easily replace the factory memory with third-party ECC memory.

  26. Re:My question is:, MAC by Hoser+McMoose · · Score: 3, Informative

    That's an integer multiply-add. The PowerPC 970 can do a double-precision floating point multiple-add, and that is what the Opteron and P4 lack. They can get pretty decent throughput for this sort of thing using SSE2, but only about half of the throughput, clock for clock, that a PPC 970 can get.

    Given that getting on the Top500 list seemed to the main goal of this system, and that list uses only the (very limited) Linpack benchmark which is essentially nothing but multiply-adds, this makes the PPC 970 a much better chip. Of course, for real-world code, the difference might not be nearly as large and in many situations the P4 or Opteron could easily be a lot faster.

    Of course, one question that could easily come out of this is WHY doesn't SSE2 include a double-precision floating point multiply-add instruction? You would have to ask Intel about that one, because it seems like a natural instruction to have in SSE2 if you ask me. Even with the updated SSE3 they didn't add this.

  27. 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

  28. Re:My question is:, MAC by stephentyrone · · Score: 4, Informative

    Not every. But most. Solving ODE's usually boils down to iterating a (possibly implicit) linear system. Solving PDE's with finite differences does too. Or with finite elements. Or spectral methods. Lots of statistical computations do too.

    Certainly there *are* scientific applications that don't involve multiply-adds, it's just that the vast bulk of scientific computations that are suitable for parallelization really boil down to solving linear systems, some kind of linear iteration, least-squares problems, or some combination. All of which are solved using lots of multiply-adds. So, while linpack isn't the end-all and be-all of hpc benchmarks, i'd say that it's a pretty good guideline; i'd also say that the speed of multiply-adds matters a whole hell of a lot for scientific computing.