did businessweek just confirm the 970?
today, businessweek has an article on the state of supercomputers in the U.S. after having the top honor stolen by NEC, the article states that IBM is striking back with a new design that will blow the old benchmark away. i was half asleep until i read this:
"The IBM machines that will be delivered to Lawrence Livermore by 2005 will use some of the same parts that go into a PC. The first supercomputer, ASCI Purple, will comprise 12,544 microprocessors using chip technology that IBM supplies to Apple Computer (APPL ) for the Macintosh. When these chips are lassoed together, the machine will do a top speed of 100 teraflops"
for those with better math skills....1 teraflop is 10 to the 12th power FLOPS or 1 trillop floating point operations per second. divide this by 12,544 and you should get the performance of a single processor (which i'm betting is either the 970 or the power5)
any ideas??
"The IBM machines that will be delivered to Lawrence Livermore by 2005 will use some of the same parts that go into a PC. The first supercomputer, ASCI Purple, will comprise 12,544 microprocessors using chip technology that IBM supplies to Apple Computer (APPL ) for the Macintosh. When these chips are lassoed together, the machine will do a top speed of 100 teraflops"
for those with better math skills....1 teraflop is 10 to the 12th power FLOPS or 1 trillop floating point operations per second. divide this by 12,544 and you should get the performance of a single processor (which i'm betting is either the 970 or the power5)
any ideas??
Comments
<img src="graemlins/lol.gif" border="0" alt="[Laughing]" />
Seriously though, does IBM supply any chips that have to do with MP, rather than processing itself, to Apple?
and there is also a picture of the <a href="http://www.llnl.gov/llnl/06news/Images/comp2women.jpg" target="_blank">Prototype Power5 System</a>
dammit.
the technology that they are referingto is the PowerPC chip family, which the Power chips are related to, so they are talking in borad terms. You could cay the same thing about any company that uses embeded PowerPC chips, and it would be correct.
<strong>They're using <a href="http://www-916.ibm.com/press/prnews.nsf/jan/E04B02CEA65993A785256C7700030952" target="_blank">Power5 Processors</a>.
and there is also a picture of the <a href="http://www.llnl.gov/llnl/06news/Images/comp2women.jpg" target="_blank">Prototype Power5 System</a></strong><hr></blockquote>
OH wow that supercomputer looks so unreal, futureistic like. <img src="graemlins/smokin.gif" border="0" alt="[Chilling]" />
<strong>
OH wow that supercomputer looks so unreal, futureistic like. <img src="graemlins/smokin.gif" border="0" alt="[Chilling]" /> </strong><hr></blockquote>
Yep, none of that big video screen stuff that just confuses everything.
<strong>How fast does it print to tape? And how many punch cards can it process in a minute? 1000? 1500? Sweet!</strong><hr></blockquote>
How many cards in a box and remember the readers eat about two cards per box, what a pain to figure out which ones
Yeah, Apple's ticker isn't APPL..
[[[ASCI Purple will consist of a cluster of IBM's POWER chip-based eServer systems and storage systems. ]]]
And this:
[[[Boasting 50 terabytes of memory and two petabytes of storage, ASCI Purple will be powered by 12,544 of IBM's forthcoming POWER5 microprocessors, which features more than 10GB per second memory bandwidth\t]]]
<a href="http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/1503211" target="_blank">http://www.internetnews.com/ent-news/article.php/1503211</a>
[[[The 100 teraflop ASCI Purple system will be powered by 12,544 POWER5 microprocessors, IBM’s next generation microprocessor. These processors will be contained in 196 individual computers with a total memory bandwidth of 156,000 GBs, the equivalent of 31,200 DVD movies every second. All of the computers are interconnected via a super-fast data highway with a total interconnect bandwidth of 12,500 GB. ASCI Purple will run IBM's AIX 5L operating system.\t]]]
<a href="http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/eserver/pseries/news/pressreleases/2002/nov/asci_purple.html" target="_blank">http://www-1.ibm.com/servers/eserver/pseries/news/pressreleases/2002/nov/asci_purple.html</a>
[[[ASCI Purple will be built using 12,544 IBM Power5 microprocessors, the same chips that are used in Apple PCs and Nintendo games systems. ]]]
At this URL:
<a href="http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-485578,00.html" target="_blank">http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-485578,00.html</a>
I wonder what's really going on between Apple and IBM...
--
Ed M.
<strong>...
[[[ASCI Purple will be built using 12,544 IBM Power5 microprocessors, the same chips that are used in Apple PCs and Nintendo games systems. ]]] ...
I wonder what's really going on between Apple and IBM...
--
Ed M.</strong><hr></blockquote>
They are speaking in general terms in reference to the Power/PowerPC family, not a specific chip. Nintendoes chips that IBM makes is a custom chip that is not sold to anyone else. At present Apple only uses 1 IBM chip, the G3. The Power5 is still in development, with a ship date after the 970's, as far as I know.
What this story says to me, and it strenghtens the move that IBM made with Nintendo when they got them to put IBM's name on the product, is that IBM is interested in making the PowerPC linage a product with brand recognition the way the Intel did with the Pentium family of chips. I would not be suprised if IBM begins a seriouse move to make the PowerPC into a competator with Intel/Windows computers when they release the 970, and or a revised G3.