Supermicro Announces Quad-Opteron 1U Motherboard
hpcanswers writes "Supermicro, a producer of systems for the high-performance computing market, has announced a 1U-sized quad Opteron motherboard for the OEM market. The product, which is on display at CeBIT this week, supports both HyperTransport and PCI Express. It also consumes 1000 watts of power. Supermicro's announcement is all the more interesting because the company has historically only supported Intel processors."
Funny, I've got 20 1U and 2U supermicro opteron servers. Are you sure you researched this statement?
"It also consumes 1000 watts of power" 1000W seems a little high... Four dual core opterons doesent need half of that! Even less for single core. The article suggest using 55W opterons.
Supermicro has offered AMD solutions for a quite while now - just not under their "main" brand name. If you don't know that their Aplus products exist, you won't find them. Although I'm sure no one would go on record, I'd wager that Intel has pressured a heavily Intel-dependent vendor to not promote AMD's product.
In fact, go to SuperMicro's home page, and you'll notice no mention or links to their AMD based products.
This isn't the first time that this has happened. When AMD first shipped the Athlon, very few board makers dared to ship Athlon solutions for fear of Intel shorting them on chipsets. I recall, but cannot substantiate, that Asus and Abit first shipped Athlon boards under a "shadow brand", much as Supermicro is doing here.
I, for one, cannot wait to buy some of the Supermicro^h^h^h^h^h^h^h^h^h^h, um, Aplus gear.
For the sake of comparison, I run a 530 Watt PSU on this system, which draws about 100 Watts from the wall. Yaay for cool-running AMDs!
Maby you cant fit it in 1u, but Tyan makes the K8QW that supports 8 Opterons with the M4881 add on processor board. Meaning you got 16 cores of pure powa. Go ahead, compile the internet. I'd be interested in knowing if there was anything higher than that.
That's a LOT of juice!
If you actually built a rack full of 22-24 1KW 1U servers you should probably apply some forethought to how you're going to get rid of more heat than is generated by four of these:http://www.paragonweb.com/TNF1613.cfm. Also, you should probably have the power company increase the multiplier on your meter, lest it spin like an AOL CD on an angle grinder: http://homepages.newnet.co.uk/martynarnold/aol.htm
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some of thoes boards have HyperTransport slots, pci-x, pci-e, scsi and sata. Thay sell them as
o n/nForce/H8DCE.cfm
o n/nForce/H8DCi.cfm
o n/nForce/H8DC8.cfm
High-End PCI-e Graphics (SLI Supported)
High Performance Gaming Workstation
http://www.supermicro.com/Aplus/motherboard/Opter
1. Dual AMD® Opteron(TM) Support, (Dual Core Ready) 1000 MHz HyperTransport Link
2. nVidia® nForce Pro 2200 (CK804) / nVidia® nForce Pro 2050 (CKIO4) Chipset
3. Up to 16GB DDR400 SDRAM (or) Up to 16GB DDR333 SDRAM (or) Up to 32GB DDR266 SDRAM
4. Dual-port Gigabit LAN / Ethernet Controller
5. 8 SATA ports
6. 2 (x16) PCI-Express, 2 (x4 using x8 slot) PCI-Express, 3 32-bit 33MHz PCI
7. AC97 6 channel Audio
8. 8 Fan support with Speed Control
H8DCE-HTe is the same with
1 HyperTransport slot, 2(x16) PCI-Express, 1 (x4 using x8 slot) PCI-Express, 3 32-bit 33MHz PCI
http://www.supermicro.com/Aplus/motherboard/Opter
1. Dual AMD® Opteron(TM) Support, (Dual Core Ready) 1000 MHz HyperTransport Link
2. nVidia® nForce Pro 2200 (CK804) / nVidia® nForce Pro 2050 (CKIO4) / AMD8132 Chipset
3. Up to 16GB DDR400 SDRAM (or) Up to 32GB DDR333 SDRAM (or) Up to 32GB DDR266 SDRAM
4. 2 Single-port Gigabit (CK804/IO4) LAN / Ethernet Controller
5. 4 SATA ports
6. 2 PCI-Express x16, 1 PCI-Express x4, 2 PCI-X 133/100MHz, 1 PCI-X 100MHz, 1 32-bit 33MHz PCI
7. AC97 6 channel Audio
8. 8 Fan support with Speed Control
http://www.supermicro.com/Aplus/motherboard/Opter
1. Dual AMD® Opteron(TM) Support, (Dual Core Ready) 1000 MHz HyperTransport Link
2. nVidia® nForce Pro 2200 (CK804) / nVidia® nForce Pro 2050 (CKIO4) / AMD8132 Chipset
3. Up to 16GB DDR400 SDRAM (or) Up to 32GB DDR333 SDRAM (or) Up to 32GB DDR266 SDRAM
4. 2 Single-port Gigabit (CK804/IO4) LAN / Ethernet Controller
5. 4 SATA ports
6. 2 PCI-Express x16, 1 PCI-Express x4, 2 PCI-X 133/100MHz, 1 PCI-X 100MHz, 1 32-bit 33MHz PCI
7. AC97 6 channel Audio
8. 8 Fan support with Speed Control
SCSI * Dual Ultra320 SCSI drives with Host RAID * Adaptec AIC-7902W Dual-Channel Controller
ZCR * Supports Supermicro All-In-One Zero Channel RAID card AOC-LPZCR1 (or) * Adaptec 2010S or Adaptec 2020S
"It also consumes 1000 watts of power."
WRONG!
The board requires a 1000 Watt power supply, not neccesarily 1000 watts of power. The power supply is the upper limit of how much the board can consume. Most computers come with a 300 watt power supply even though they normally use only about 100 Watts.
That being said, this board probably consumes quite a bit of power (but much less than 1000 watts) if it needs such a heavy duty power supply.
Fast Federal Court and I.T.C. updates
If, on the other hand, you use Google to search for 1u, the very first link gives a nice, detailed explanation on exactly what 1U means.
Don't underestimate the power of The Source
In fact, in the telco world, this is exactly how it works. The standard is to use -48vDC. Sun (among other manufacturers) makes servers that run directly off of DC (the Netra 120 on the referenced page).
Don't underestimate the power of The Source
i'll be dead before using a gamer chipset for serious usage
what you don't realise is that it's not your regular NForce4 gamer's chipset. nVidia has a separate professional line, see here to which this one (nForce pro 2200) belongs.
1U is exactly 1.75" high. It's an old standard for putting the holes in 19" and 24" racks, designed to allow devices of different heights to be stacked efficiently by having the screw holes laid out according to certain well-defined patterns. The patterns are quite old, and caused a lot of problems when the US tried to switch to metric (and basically failed in the computer manufacturing industry).