Slashdot Mirror


The Top 10 Supercomputers, Illustrated

1sockchuck writes "The twice-a-year list of the Top 500 supercomputers documents the most powerful systems on the planet. Many of these supercomputers are striking not just for their processing power, but for their design and appearance as well. Here's a visual guide to the top finishers in the latest Top 500 list, which was released this week at the SC11 conference."

2 of 68 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Every supercomputer should look nice . . . by sydsavage · · Score: 4, Informative

    Way back in '03, Virginia Tech built a cluster of 1,100 Mac G5's. It came in at #3 on the Top 500 list that year, and at $5.2M, it was a fraction of the cost of the next cheapest supercomputer in the top ten. And it was assembled by students in 3 weeks, using stock G5 towers fitted with InfiniBand cards.

    It was later upgraded to G5 xServe boxes, and as of 2008, was still ranked 281 on the Top 500 list.

    Here's a short promo film that VT produced: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vLujLtgBJC0

  2. Good question by symbolset · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Tegra 3 chip that's showing up in phones this spring and Transformer Prime tablet now is about 7.2 GFLOPs. That's more than enough to be top 10 in 1993. Current ARM architectures might go all the way up to fast enough to take that number one spot in reference sample designs now but they consume too much power to go in your pocket on retail shelves as yet. Maybe in a year or two.

    Mali T658 and PowerVR are two to watch here. Mali is supposed to go up to 350 GFLOPs. It still amazes me that in 1993 that machine cost about $70 million in today's money and you can almost match it today for under $500.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.