search technology reviews, news, features, group tests
Popular Searches:   windows , asus , free
 |  Register
 |  Newsletters  | 
Sitemap  |  RSS
RSS
Wednesday December 2, 2009 11:29 AM AEST
Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > News > Nvidia talks up GPU 'supercomputers'
NEWS

Nvidia talks up GPU 'supercomputers'

by Shaun Nichols  on Feb 26, 2008
Tags: Nvidia | talks | up | GPU | supercomputers
GPUs 'not just for gaming and movies'.
Nvidia has claimed that its graphics chips are not just for gaming and watching movies.

The company said at a press event in San Francisco that users are harnessing the power of its GPUs in other ways.

David Kirk, chief scientist at Nvidia, explained how scientists have been taking up a practice called 'general purpose computing on GPUs' to perform huge computing tasks.

The advantage of the GPU is its ability to perform multiple calculations, according to Kirk. Whereas a quad-core CPU is able to handle up to eight processing threads at once, a GPU can handle as many 12,000 threads.

This ability to multi-thread makes the GPU extremely well suited to computation-intensive tasks, such as physics modelling or crunching large amounts of statistical data for models and simulations.

Users were forced initially to perform general purpose GPU operations on top of graphics APIs in order to tap into the chips, a process Kirk likened to " using a screwdriver to open a can".

Nvidia introduced the Cuda development tool in June 2007 to allow scientists to tap into the GPU's power. More than 50,000 users have downloaded the software.

"GPUs are extremely powerful processors that have hundreds of times more processing power than CPUs," said Kirk.

"A lot of real-world scientific and consumer applications get hundreds of times better performance."

However, Kirk warned that GPUs will not replace CPUs in computers any time soon. "It does not replace the CPU," said Kirk.

"GPUs have a very hard time dealing with irregular data where there is a lot of decision making and not a lot of arithmetic."

Instead, Kirk sees the GPU taking over large parallel computing tasks traditionally relegated to supercomputer systems.

Kirk predicted that three of the five fastest supercomputers will use GPU chips by 2010.

"If you think about it, this is a massively parallel supercomputer on your desktop," he said. "It is truly the democratisation of supercomputing."

Copyright © 2009 v3.co.uk
Email a Friend Email this
Print Page Print this
Tweet This Tweet this
Feedback Send us your tips


Ads by Google

Comments

Be the first to comment on this article.
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Login or register to submit a comment.
 

Top Stories

Internode starts selling revamped TiVo bundle online
In addition to unmetered downloads, Internode will also sell a 320GB TiVo package for under $700 from its online store.
 
Half of Sony TVs could be 3D capable by 2012
Sony has said up to half of its TVs will be 3D capable by 2012, showing the company's confidence in adding an extra dimension to its products
 
Dutch court guts Mininova
File sharing site Mininova has been ordered by a Dutch court to remove all of its 'pirated' content.
 


 
Intel
 
 
Amazing Dell Coupons now available
 
Discover Apple