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Government Linux Gaming Supercomputer

pupkick writes "Wired news has a story about a government supercomputer running Linux that 'pits two opposing teams of soldiers against one another in a fight for control over a city under siege.'"

20 of 179 comments (clear)

  1. GOVERNMENT LINUX GAMING SUPERCOMPUTER?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    error: oxymoron overload!!!

  2. Greetings professor Falken by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    How about a nice game of chess?

  3. And it's name is: by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 5, Funny
    WOPR

    Please select a game

    • city under siege
    • chess
    • tic tac toe
    • Global Thermonuclear War
    • CowboyNeal's Wild Wild West
  4. Does it have the UT2004 voiceovers? by Gentoo+Fan · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Wicked sick!"

  5. CS? by poison_reverse · · Score: 5, Funny

    counter-terrorists win!

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  6. Good news! by Otter · · Score: 5, Funny

    Between this, Tux Racer and xbill, Linux now has three games!

  7. Checking Facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    They need to double check their facts:

    From the story:one at the Maui High Performance Computing Center in Hawaii and the other at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio

    From Photo Gallery: thanks to two supercomputers in Virginia and Hawaii.

  8. Interesting idea but... by farlcow · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How seriously can one base decisions on the results? We've had weather simulation software in development for decades and the weather man on TV still can't tell me if it's going to rain tomorrow. It seems this simulation takes human emotion/reaction into account on a large scale, I would think that is much harder to simulate than a weather pattern. Also, who is in charge of programming the human simulations? I would hope they would consult very closely with people actually from the area in question.

  9. This sounds like the DARPA project... by tcopeland · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...Cougaar.

    There are a bunch of distributed agents scattered around lots of machines; some use more resources than others, and the system moves them from machine to machine in response to high loads. Nifty stuff, and open source - BSD licensed!

  10. This is new? SimWar? by slowhand · · Score: 4, Interesting

    IIRC, Maxis, the company that brought you SimCity, SimEarth, SimTrain, SimAnt, SimWhatever has contracted with companies for several years providing its simulation engine for use in petroleum refinery research, manufacturing automation, factory floor managment simulation. I would be surprised if they HAVE NOT done similar work with DoD. Me thinks a nice beowulf cluster of xboxes running linux would make a nicer story...

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  11. government uses linux a lot by carnivore302 · · Score: 5, Informative
    The article suggests that the US government doesn't use linux supercomputers all that much. Because I felt the opposite is true I did a quick search on google which confirmed my initial beliefs. Mind you, I don't know if all these stories are true or hoaxes, but a couple of interesting ones are

    Linux NetworxTM EvolocityTM cluster supercomputer to study smallpox genomics in light of the threat of possible bioterror attacks here

    The Linux open-source operating system powers a new government supercomputer that will help meteorologists forecast the weather more accurately. here

    New SGI supercomputer to scale Linux to 1,024 CPUs
    The National Center for Supercomputing Applications will use it for research here

    And the list goes on and on.

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  12. COOL! A Police Academy 6 simulator by hal2814 · · Score: 5, Funny

    'pits two opposing teams of soldiers against one another in a fight for control over a city under siege.'

    So I imagine one groups of soldiers is led by Capt Harris and the other team is led by Lassard and that zany Police Academy squad (minus Mahoney of course).

  13. All residents of Ames, Iowa by RealProgrammer · · Score: 4, Funny

    ..please report to the disintegration chamber. Your former city has been destroyed.

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    sigs, as if you care.
  14. Re:Complex people ? by JPriest · · Score: 4, Informative

    The idea is not that new, the ARMY has some warehouses full of tank sims plugged into a central servers (usually IRIX/SGI). It is pretty cool to place several companies in there with some geeks throwing computer tanks/rpg's/crunchies etc. at you. One of the few things I did in the ARMY that was actually in the brochure :)

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  15. Getting a bit unfair now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Back in the cold war there was a bit of a counter balance to the USA's military technology from the USSR, and both countries tended to support countries fighting against the other (see russian migs in Korea, US troops in Vietnam, Stinger missiles in Afghanistan). In the horrific act of war there was a counter balance to make things fairer, so technology alone couldn't prevail, and the most technologically advanced countries couldn't impose rules over their 3rd world adversaries. With the dissolution of the USSR this counter balance is relying on increasingly ancient Soviet technologies, which are becoming ineffective against Western military advances (how many planes did the Iraqi army shoot down? How did the Iraqi Soviet era tanks compare to the Americans) Not to sound like i am supporting one side or the other, or sound like i am supporting the actions of supposed terrorists, I am starting to think the idea of war in this world is getting a bit unfair and one sided. Some people put the defeat of the IRA partially down to the introduction of body armour for the british troops, their Armalites just weren't effective any more. How can peoples who want to fight counter this? The only weakness that currently can be exploited is Wide Spectrum electrical weapons (sorry probably wrong name), that can fry electronics of the more advanced Western armies (US army no longer teaches troops to read maps, only GPS). But this is increasingly countered by 'hardening' installations and equipment. Is there any wonder that 'terrorists' or 'rebels' have to resort to alternative weapon systems and war methodology? What hope do they stand in the modern battlefield? What hope for the future, China is the only real counter weight but they don't seem too keen on sharing. Whatever side you were on

    1. Re:Getting a bit unfair now by tbone1 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      You know, this has always been the way it's been, even before Rome and Carthage were duking it out.

      At the same time, consider that the US troops put themselves at greater risk by attempting to reduce the risks to civilians, even in enemy territory. And they try to keep things like electricity, water, and sewer systems running. Terrorists aim for civilians and infrastructure.

      And if you are hoping for Communist China to be a world-saver, go stand in front of that advancing armored personnel carrier and ask their opinion.

      Go ahead, mark me as flamebait, but worrying about how we can make things fairer for people who try to kill innocent civilians seems like some REALLY misplaced worry.

      --

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  16. I hope these guys read Sun Tsu.. by killpog · · Score: 4, Interesting

    No wait, they do... General Norman Schwarzkopf said he never understood the true meaning of the word Byzantine as it applies to politics until he had taken command in the middle east. And he had studied the area EXTENSIVELY prior to his deployment there. These systems are modeling behavior of of crowds, soldiers in combat, "battlefield detainees", traffic patterns, weather, weaponry, supply lines, AND the political climate. The people playing these games ain't high school video gamers. They are retired or otherwise very experienced military personnel that advise the JCS. All of them are very well educated in the art of war, and it's drawbacks. That's why they're so quiet about it.

  17. Is it only me or by panurge · · Score: 4, Funny
    Am I insulted by the idea of being modeled by a Pentium? I think I deserve at least a couple of Opterons. And, the day I'm having today, I'd need at least 4G of Ram and a dedicated interrupt controller.

    It's a pity that in a battlefield simulation all that processing power would be wasted as I'd just be an immediate civilian casualty, but with luck I might manage to drop my old Laserjet 5M out the window on one of the combatants first.

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  18. OSGW: Open source guerrilla warfare would help... by bennomatic · · Score: 4, Interesting
    If they want to get a good simulation of battling against an ad hoc local army which has no centralized command, they should consider letting people from the public command small numbers of opposing (i.e. defending local) troops.

    Bush's suggestion that the only problem with the war currently was that we "won too quickly," that the enemy was supposed to stand, fight and be killed instead of retreating and coming back with car bombs the way they have, is ridiculous. It shows how out of touch he and his advisors are with the real world. All you have to do is look at American history: George Washington lost just about every battle he fought in, but the tactic of fight, retreat, and live to fight another day won the war.

    Since they seem to be unwilling to learn from history, before our beloved administration engages in another wasteful bloodletting, maybe the high end of the chain of command should take a moment to see how regular people would fight if thrown into the situation.

    Heck, make sure some 10-14 year olds are able to play. They're brutal! I remember when Warcraft came out, those little snots would pull some amazing tricks to kick butt right out of the gate. Remember the Grunt Rush offense?

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