World's Fastest Supercomputer will use Cell.

SPM

Regular
IBM has put it's hardware where it's mouth is.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/5322704.stm

The world's fastest supercomputer being built for Los Alamos National Laboratory to use Cell.

The current world's fastest supercomputer Gene Blue uses 130,000 processors (PowerPC processors I believe) and runs on Linux.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4428190.stm

The new supercomputer is 4 times as powerful and uses only 16,000 standard processors working alongside 16,000 "cell" processors according to the article. I can't figure out whether the 16,000 standard PPC processors included for code compatibility with Los Alomos's earlier parrel processing supercomputers leaving the Cells to do the FP heavy lifting, or whether it is just 16,000 Cell chips and the journalist author is calling the PPE in each Cell a "standard processor" and has the SPE "Cell" patent concept mixed up with the Cell chip. Parrallel processing supercomputers use either Linux or a Unix variant. The new supercomputer will no doubt use Linux because Linux has Cell support built in.
 
It was posted before, but not here in the Console Tech section where everyone more or less expects Cell news to be posted for granted. :)

Here's the link to the existing thread:

http://www.beyond3d.com/forum/showthread.php?t=33410

I think it's pretty awesome/interesting news mind you, and Los Alamos signing on for this is going to help Cell be seen as something that's ok to look at in the HPC space for companies nervous the chip is just to 'out there.' (though I understand in media and imaging, Cell has continued to make inroads despite a lack of press releases to alert us to that fact)
 
It was posted before, but not here in the Console Tech section where everyone more or less expects Cell news to be posted for granted. :)
Odd that. Unless this supercomputer is a Sony Cell Server for games, it's got diddly-squat to do with consoles! But seeing as it was brought to my attention, and the respondant didn't link to where to was raised before (tut tut!) I thought it worth asking the question.
 
Isn't there talk of possible Cell server useage on the Sony Network? I always feel that solid information on that is just a little beyond our reach, but hopefully TGS will address any questions.

In other news, it looks like IBM has begun volume shipments of Cell servers to corporate customers:

Official Release - http://www.marketwatch.com/News/Sto...88A5-0DD1A745A502}&siteid=mktw&sid=2595&symb=

... Based on the Power Architecture, the Cell BE was originally developed by IBM, Sony and Toshiba for use in gaming consoles. Cell BE's breakthrough multi-core architecture and ultra high-speed communications capabilities deliver vastly improved, real-time response effectively delivering 'supercomputer-like performance' by incorporating IBM's advanced multi-processing technologies usually reserved for the company's most sophisticated servers.
Beta versions of the IBM BladeCenter QS20 are already in use at customer sites across the U.S., as well as in the United Kingdom, Spain, Germany, France, Japan and Korea.

Early deployments include the University of Manchester, the United Kingdom's largest single-site university, which boasts a research computing division that is among the world leaders -- with the goal to provide world class, leading high performance computational facilities to staff and students at the University. "We are early adopters of the IBM BladeCenter QS20 because it has the potential to give us significantly improved performance, take up less space, and consume less power," said W. T. Hewitt, Director of Research Computing, University of Manchester. "High performance computing systems built from blade systems based on the Cell Broadband Engine have the potential to change the economics associated with supercomputing, and thus we are looking at migrating the range of our scientific applications including bio-informatics, molecular modeling and engineering applications onto the systems to dramatically improve their performance, at the same time as reducing our costs."

Another early adopter is RapidMind, Inc., a Waterloo, Canada-based development platform company which enables software developers to quickly and effectively take advantage of a new generation of high performance processors. "The IBM BladeCenter QS20 offers our customers the opportunity to continue to use the simplicity of the RapidMind Development Platform while leveraging the performance of the Cell Broadband Engine," said Ray DePaul, President & CEO of RapidMind Inc. "Application vendors are eager to adopt new innovations that drive performance benefits and the new Cell-based system from IBM is proving to be extremely effective at workloads such as image processing."

Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Mathematics is a German-based research institution, specializing in providing high performance computing research results in mathematics, material research, and mechanical engineering to industries across the globe. "We are using IBM's new BladeCenter QS20 as an ideal platform to develop software for emerging multicore system, and dramatically improve our own in house visualization applications," said Dr. Franz-Josef Pfreundt, Head of the Competence Center for HPC and Visualization, Fraunhofer Institute for Industrial Mathematics. "The powerful development environment allows for our Institute to run mathematical, medical visualization and GraPA based in-house applications at lightning-fast speed, processing millions of pieces of data in just seconds -- allowing us to process, interpret and deliver research results faster."

The IBM BladeCenter QS20 system will rely on the Cell BE processor to accelerate computationally intense workloads associated other specific industry needs, such as 3D animation rendering, compression, and encryption, and seismic and medical imaging to help companies create and run highly visual, immersive, real-time applications.

Specific examples include:

-- Medical industry: The IBM BladeCenter QS20 can dramatically reduce the
time it takes for physicians to compare and map 3D medical images, which
typically are taken over months or years with different resolutions and
different devices. Running the medical image application on the QS20 can
enable physicians to map multiple images in seconds compared to minutes --
improving accuracy, reducing diagnosis time, and saving patient anxiety.

-- Aerospace & defense industry: Signal processing and radar results in
the aerospace industry are based on combining analysis, location and
terrain with speed and accuracy. Radar application and solutions running
on the IBM BladeCenter QS20 will result in a higher fidelity and higher
resolution of radar output, which means operators will be able to see
objects and information never previously captured through current radar
systems.

-- Oil and gas industry: New innovations in seismic imaging are allowing
energy companies to locate and drill for oil more accurately and in less
time -- which can dramatically improve the profitability of new drilling
operations. These compute intensive applications -- ideal for IBM
BladeCenter Q220 -- can also be used to reduce current deep sea drilling
"miss" rates, potentially saving millions in unnecessary costs for drilling
operations...

And some additional info from a CNet article today:

...An IBM representative refused to say how much the blades cost, but a customer announcement said they run $18,995 each. The systems, announced Tuesday, are expected to be available Sept. 29, with a $1,950 InfiniBand high-speed network option arriving Oct. 27, IBM said...
 
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