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For Vondrashek

I think we need a few of these supercomputers to decipher what the hell Vondrashek is saying.

Then again, maybe that won't be enough.

posted by : ronch, 27 June 2009 Complain about this comment
@Looselycoupled

vondrashek is a pretty lousy bot so don't expect his posts to have any sense.
I think is time for the INQ IT guys to change their "state of art" Captcha and make it a little better or just plug it out.

Also, what about to start using the poll thing.

posted by : omigots, 25 June 2009 Complain about this comment
MR

Steve,
"There must be first world countries who only have a couple (if that), and they're still first world. So whatever they are doing, it can't be that crucial to existence. Certainly not as crucial as the amount of juice they are sucking up!"

Some of us like to play Crysis full detail!

posted by : Chris L, 25 June 2009 Complain about this comment
@Steve

Most scientific progress and projects are the result of war or preparation for it anyway. In modern times that would include the air travel, space program, the Internet, supercomputing, etc. all the result of war.

So whatever these facilities are for, you can bet it's for war, and to that end we still benefit as we always have.

posted by : BB, 25 June 2009 Complain about this comment
So what...

What exactly are the 291 US machines actually doing?
A few for weather forecasting, a few more for modelling the design for a nuke blast the exact shape of North Korea, and a few for helping NASA with their metric/imperial measurement conversions so they can actually land on a planet/moon and not just make a new crater on it...

Well in my book that leave about 200...

There must be first world countries who only have a couple (if that), and they're still first world. So whatever they are doing, it can't be that crucial to existence. Certainly not as crucial as the amount of juice they are sucking up!

posted by : Steve, 25 June 2009 Complain about this comment
Where is AMD?

It's nice to see some a new 2P Nehalem machine in the mix, though obviously it is not running many processors with it attaining "only" 275 Tflops. I'm sure when the 8-core, quad-channel Beckton is integrated into a new supercomputer it will blow away everything else.

But what I don't understand is why so many of the HPC machines are running Intel. Until recently with Nehalem, AMD's Opteron was a far better performer with high-bandwidth HPC workloads because of the integrated memory controller and Hypertransport. So why are there only 43 Opteron machines on the list?

@vondrashek
Your post is almost completely unintelligible.

I have no what "i7 is Playstation 3 Processor For GODS Sake." means.
The CELL BE processors used in IBM's roadrunner are variants of the Cell in Sony's PS3. And I assume by "I7", you mean "Core I7" which is intel's Bloomfield Nehalem CPU. I'm not sure what you are trying to say though.

posted by : looselycoupled, 24 June 2009 Complain about this comment
I guess...

it goes to show that something is afoot since AMD has PWNED the HPC space since Opteron.

If they are in the number one and two systems, they should be in many more than 43.

posted by : Some Guy, 24 June 2009 Complain about this comment
Your tax dollars at work

Notice it's up to public (government) institutions to push the envelope.

posted by : MarkusR, 24 June 2009 Complain about this comment

Roadrunner stays the fastest

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