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NVIDIA's $10K Tesla GPU-Based Personal Supercomputer

gupg writes "NVIDIA announced a new category of supercomputers — the Tesla Personal Supercomputer — a 4 TeraFLOPS desktop for under $10,000. This desktop machine has 4 of the Tesla C1060 computing processors. These GPUs have no graphics out and are used only for computing. Each Tesla GPU has 240 cores and delivers about 1 TeraFLOPS single precision and about 80 GigaFLOPS double-precision floating point performance. The CPU + GPU is programmed using C with added keywords using a parallel programming model called CUDA. The CUDA C compiler/development toolchain is free to download. There are tons of applications ported to CUDA including Mathematica, LabView, ANSYS Mechanical, and tons of scientific codes from molecular dynamics, quantum chemistry, and electromagnetics; they're listed on CUDA Zone."

2 of 236 comments (clear)

  1. 4 TFLOPS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A single Radeon 4870x2 is 2.4 TFLOPS. Some supercomputer, that.

    Seriously, why is this even news? nVidia makes a product, which is OK, but nothing revolutionary. The devaluation of the "supercomputer" term is appalling.

    Also, how much of that 4 TFLOPS you can get on actual applications? How's FFT? Or LINPACK?

  2. Re:cold hard facts about cuda- unbalanced by anon+mouse-cow-aard · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People are always coming out of the wood work to claim supercomputer performance with such and such a solution, go back and look at GRAPE (which is really cool.) http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20061212-8408.html or a lot of other supercomputer clusters. When you want something flexible, you look for "balance" that means a good relationship between memory capacity, latency & bandwidth, as well as computer power. in terms of memory capacity, the number people talk about is: 1 byte/flop... that is 1 Tbyte of memory is about right to keep 1 TFLOP flexibly useful. this thing has 4 G of memory for 4 TF... in other words: 1 byte / 1000 flops. it's going to be hard to use in a general purpose way.