FASTRA II Puts 13 GPUs In a Desktop Supercomputer
An anonymous reader writes "Last year tomography researchers of the ASTRA group at the University of Antwerp developed a desktop supercomputer with four NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GX2 graphics cards. The performance of the FASTRA GPGPU system was amazing; it was slightly faster than the university's 512-core supercomputer and cost less than 4000EUR. Today the researchers announce FASTRA II, a new 6000EUR GPGPU computing beast with six dual-GPU NVIDIA GeForce GTX 295 graphics cards and one GeForce GTX 275. The development of the new system was more complicated and there are still some stability issues, but tests reveal the 13 GPUs deliver 3.75x more performance than the old system. For the tomography reconstruction calculations these researchers need to do, the compact FASTRA II is four times faster than the university's supercomputer cluster, while being roughly 300 times more energy efficient."
That was always true of supercomputers. In fact the stuff that runs well on CUDA now is almost precisely the same stuff that ran well on Cray vector machines - the classic stereotype of "Supercomputer"! Thus I do not see your point. The best computer for any particular task will always be one specialized for that task, and thus compromised for other tasks.
BTW, newer GPUs support double precision.
Can we please just officially define "n times less" as "1/n" and not feel bad about it anymore?