Supercomputer Built With 8 GPUs
FnH writes "Researchers at the University of Antwerp in Belgium have created a new supercomputer with standard gaming hardware. The system uses four NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GX2 graphics cards, costs less than €4,000 to build, and delivers roughly the same performance as a supercomputer cluster consisting of hundreds of PCs. This new system is used by the ASTRA research group, part of the Vision Lab of the University of Antwerp, to develop new computational methods for tomography. The guys explain the eight NVIDIA GPUs deliver the same performance for their work as more than 300 Intel Core 2 Duo 2.4GHz processors. On a normal desktop PC their tomography tasks would take several weeks but on this NVIDIA-based supercomputer it only takes a couple of hours. The NVIDIA graphics cards do the job very efficiently and consume a lot less power than a supercomputer cluster."
Too bad this isn't really news. I guess it is news if you consider that someone else has had their application accelerated by NVIDIA GPUs. I guess the only other reason that this could be news is by virtue of having 8 GPU cores.
Unfortunately, this setup won't work ideally for a lot of other CUDA based applications. For the past 6 months, I had a system with 6 GPUs (actual physical GPUs). This is the system that I showed at CES. We are easily able to do 8 physical GPUs, and now I've been solely focused on utilizing Tesla.
Given that NVIDIA released the GX2 series, I was not surprised that someone would announce an 8GPU system. I'm surprised it took this long for someone to do it, and almost equally surprised that slashdot took this long to publish any news that is decent in the realm of GPU super computing. I've been cranking out close to 228 billion atom evals. per second in VMD for months now, versus about 4 billion on dual quad core 3.0GHz Xeons.