lightwave Posted June 19, 2005 Posted June 19, 2005 Would you like one of these on your desktop ? Earlier this week, IBM (NYSE: IBM - News) unveiled its latest and greatest supercomputer. The 91-teraflop monster, dubbed "Watson Blue Gene," is capable of cranking out a mind-blowing 91 trillion calculations per second. This ultra-powerful -- yet remarkably affordable, practical, and accessible -- computing tool is likely to give IBM a significant competitive advantage over competitors such as Affymetrix (Nasdaq: AFFX - News), Intel (Nasdaq: INTC - News), and General Electric (NYSE: GE - News) in the life sciences, information technology, and material sciences sectors. IBM officials are confident that they'll be able to develop a successor capable of a 1 petaflop performance level by the end of the decade. That's 1 quadrillion calculations per second -- 10 times as powerful as Watson Blue Gene. http://news.yahoo.com/s/fool/20050617/bs_fool_fool/111903931827;_ylt=AtgSlcORRLSVEnePChhelZojtBAF;_ylu=X3oDMTBiMW04NW9mBHNlYwMlJVRPUCUl The word 'tera' originates from the Greek word teras meaning 'monster'.
insane_alien Posted June 20, 2005 Posted June 20, 2005 1.7billion(short scale) per second thats 1.7*10^9 per second or 1700000000 calculations per second
AzurePhoenix Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 Big deal. Me? I swear by my great-grandfather's abacus, and to this day, it works like new. Let's see how this super computer runs after eighty years
Kygron Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 1.7billion(short scale) per second thats 1.7*10^9 per second or 1700000000 calculations per second You're using two different scales to relate them. 1 flop = 1 floating point operation per second, like 4.4365264E-63 * 2.54626256E31. 1 hz = one clock pulse per second. You can do different ammounts of calculation in a clock pulse depending on the size/complexity of the computer. This is why most companies don't use the hz numbers any more. I seriously doubt the gene machine is any more than 5ghz or so. But aside from that I don't know how they relate, you'll have to look it up
calbiterol Posted June 21, 2005 Posted June 21, 2005 Kygron, your signature is bloody confusing. That said, 91 teraflops?! Wow. With a petaflop on the way? I'm floored.
JohnB Posted June 22, 2005 Posted June 22, 2005 Makes perfect sense to me. But then, I can stand in the shadow of a corkscrew.
Martin Posted June 22, 2005 Posted June 22, 2005 Kyrgon signature: Some people have gone beyond correct, even becoming helpfull; I'd love to be helpfull, but sometimes can't make it to correct; Is there a way to be helpfull, while at the same time asking for help? Makes perfect sense to me. me too, It reminds me of the style of responding that the volunteer experts had on a different science board a few years back---that really threw me off when I first encountered it. some newbie would ask a question showing basic confusion and would get back a precise, brief response that was correct but didn't connect to the guy's confusion the response would be correct, strictly speaking, but completely unhelpful because the questioner wouldnt have any handle on it, so it would mostly just shut him up. Now that i think of it that's not always a bad idea. Kygron sig speaks to that. Personally I wouldnt use those words to say it, but the meaning comes across clearly.
Kygron Posted June 23, 2005 Posted June 23, 2005 I wrote it as a personal reminder of the style of writing I need to be using on this forum. I'm good at understanding, but have little precise technical knowledge. When I state someting as fact someone will tell me I'm wrong and I'll be frustrated. When I try and point someone in the right direction someone always comes by with a different perspective and sees me pointing backwards. My only solution was to ask a question, that when answered, leads to a realization about the original problem. Then I sit back and let someone else get frustrated for example: You're using two different scales to relate them. 1 flop = 1 floating point operation per second' date=' like 4.4365264E-63 * 2.54626256E31. 1 hz = one clock pulse per second. You can do different ammounts of calculation in a clock pulse depending on the size/complexity of the computer. This is why most companies don't use the hz numbers any more. I seriously doubt the gene machine is any more than 5ghz or so.[/quote'] SHOULD have been written: So why did they say teraflop when it's easier to say ghz? Unfortunatly I never see my sig until AFTER I post, so I have alot of trouble following through on my decided style.
Molotov Posted June 23, 2005 Posted June 23, 2005 I seriously doubt the gene machine is any more than 5ghz or so. More than likely its just a bunch of relatively low hz processors running in parallel.
Etacude Posted June 23, 2005 Posted June 23, 2005 Kygron' date=' your signature is bloody confusing. That said, 91 teraflops?! Wow. With a petaflop on the way? I'm floored.[/quote'] That said, the speed may sound astounding to many people. However, based on the existing computational software and techniques, the real bottle neck to do serious and useful calculations are the computational speed of computers. For instance, it is still impractical to do certain complex molecular biological processes even with the use of Blue Gene, although these IBM machines were designed specifically to target these problems.
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