DARPA Awards HPC Contracts To IBM, Cray, Not Sun
snedecor writes "DARPA has awarded a third round of funding for the next-generation petascale computing system. IBM and Cray roughly split the $494M, while Sun, with little track record, received none. This is in spite of Sun's radical proposal for proximity communication."
You can pet a dog, you can pet a cat, but you can't petascale.
You can't talk about Wikipedia's flaws on Wikipedia
The HPCA program is a "cover" (not so cover) funding to companies. The problem is that it is not so clear that it is even good for them. The reason is that "lots" of additional resources from these companies are also diverted for these projects. Since these machines have a "doubtful" application besides the DARPA contract, I think that it may be better for these companies to invest on research more related to their product or may-be products.
For example, Sun Labs was in charge of the DARPA project at Sun. They have "invested" 3 years on that. My question is "what do they have to show?".
They do not have publications on any top computer architecture conference, they do not seem to have anything that may save Sun ass. (At least from
an architecture point of view)
This is not such a strange comment, I have head it from people at IBM research itself. Some people there is not sure that winning is the best thing either.