Rent A Bit Of Weta Digital
An anonymous reader writes linking to this story at stuff.co.nz, excerpting: "Five hundred powerful computers used by Weta Digital to help create the special effects for the Lord of the Rings may be put up for hire.... The pizza-box sized IBM blade servers each incorporate dual 2.8 gigahertz Intel Xeon processors and 6 [gigabytes?] of memory." Update: 03/22 07:08 GMT by S : The linked story says 6 megabytes of memory, we don't believe 'em.
Shoulden't that read 6GB?
I'm rather tired of waiting for graphics to progress to the level they will be in in the year 2010 or so. I'd like to see these machines, which rendered Lord of the Rings, use their nearly unlimited processing power to let me play a game -- perhaps Half-Life or Quake 2 with a new rendering DLL -- to spit out 60fps of pure ray-traced bliss.
:)
Or just fire up InTrace with a scene of 1 billion polygons of a super-detailed scene of sunflowers, with multiple reflections and all the other goodies, and crank it to 1600x1200.
I can dream, can't I?
seti@home!
Imagine distributed.net being a CPU co-op. They take problems from clients in need of a ton of CPU, farm it out to distributed.net members, and at the end of the month/year you get a small check for all the CPU cycles you spent helping solve problems.
Awesome furniture, accessories and cabinetry in Santa Rosa, CA: http://humanity-home.com/
Posting anon as I have an interest in some of these companies :
http://www.respower.com/ - 250+ machines (~500GHz), 250GB ram
http://www.rendercore.com/ - 700 machines
http://www.render-it.co.uk/ - 82 cpus (131GHz), 82GB ram)
The only 'interesting' thing here is that it's WETA's farm. Other than that, I doubt they offer the wide selection of software (lest they struck deals lately) not to mention field experience with 'oddball' files.
Good luck to them, though
Correct me if I'm wrong here but aren't the Xeons currently 32 bit? Doesn't that mean they can't address more than 4 Gigs? I thought that's what the whole big deal was with 64 bit. Now maybe if they were G5s...
Please...
This may be an old news, but the details of that machine is here. That's some stuff to drool over. Some excerpts:
And now this machine is up for a rent. Here's the company website.
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Error 500: Internal sig error
(i'm thinking less general-purpose computing purchase, and i think you are thinking more
yeah, so i thought 6Megs was a typo at first, but then i considered the mere possibility that they may just have spec'ed their RAM to their direct process requirements, 'embedded system' style.
and, i still don't see why not... though your point about RAM being available in sizes less than 64 megs is valid, i've seen 8meg dimm's for 2ghz Pentium systems, cheap, all over the place. remember, this is new zealand we're talking about, not fry's, burbank. they want something easily replaceable, locally.
maybe then the question would be 'where did the other 2megs go', and that might answer your videocard situation. plenty of 2ghz Pentium mobo's do video sharing...
i know it doesn't make 'sense'. but, on the other hand, i don't see why not. why buy so much ram if you've determined that you don't really have to for your specific application? i've seen tons of systems designed, and put into exceptional use, that way
but hey, it could be a typo. 6gigs would 'make more sense', I suppose...
; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --