search technology reviews, news, features, group tests
Popular Searches:   video , dell , dvd
 |  Register
 |  Newsletters  | 
Sitemap  |  RSS
RSS
Tuesday November 24, 2009 12:58 AM AEST
Skip Navigation LinksPC Authority > News > Supercomputing now dominated by X86 architecture
Supercomputing now dominated by X86 architecture
»
NEWS

Supercomputing now dominated by X86 architecture

by Nebojsa Novakovic  on Sep 26, 2008
High performance computing (HPC) may be the pinnacle of the computer speed pyramid, but not its profit pyramid.
Some of the landmark deals in this business have been said to be a marketing expense.

Instead of putting millions into a yearly Wall Street Journal ad campaign, a similar expenditure on an IBM BlueGene or HP c-Blade supercomputer could have done a better marketing job plus the account presence.

IDC have specialised expert conferences and seminars on the topic all over the world, and held its first event here in Singapore this week.

This market, worth a total of US$10 billion and with a 10 percent growth rate, is worth keeping track of, especially since the power of these machines today will reflect what our personal computers could be doing a decade from now.

IDC segmented the market into true supercomputers (half a million US bucks or more per unit), divisional (quarter to half million), departmental (US$50K to 250K) and workgroup (below US$50K down to compute workstations).

This may vary; there are researchers with machines costing way above hundred US grand sitting by their desks, and large multi-teraflop machines on sale for not much above that.

The departmental segment -- usually small-to-medium clusters -- is the dominant one with a third of the total market value. Why? Well, with so many cores per compute node -- a typical dual-socket Xeon 5400, Xeon 5500 or AMD Shanghai machine gives you eight cores, so sixteen of such boxes in a single rack provide 128 cores altogether, plus the added management and storage node processors on top.
theinquirer.net (c) 2009 Incisive Media
»
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

Telstra confirm 30Mbit national network plan - but don't mention the NBN
Telstra has completed the 100Mbit upgrade to their Melbourne cable network and are next planning to get 30Mbit speeds into the rest of the country; but first they'll need to dispel those endless NBN comparisons
 
Red Hat updates with Fedora 12
Red Hat has released the latest version of its Fedora open source operating system and has added new video, virtualisation and networking support..
 
Picking the perfect home entertainment box: Movie downloads come to the Xbox 360
Unmetered download agreements are next the battleground as games consoles follow the Apple TV's lead to support movie download services.
 


 
Intel
 
 
LogMeIn
 
 
Amazing Dell Coupons now available
 
Discover Apple