The Hindu News Update Service

Sci. & Tech.
Scientists unveil new supercomputer

By Bobbie Johnson in London

Guardian News Service: Scientists on Tuesday, unveiled a new generation of 
supercomputers, including a GBP30m machine with the memory of 200,000 home 
computers
and a hard disk hefty enough to hold the entire Google index of the internet.

The huge devices, each costing tens of millions of pounds, will compete against 
each other this year for the title of the planet's biggest electronic brains.

The first contender, Constellation, has been built by Sun Microsystems at a 
cost of $59m and boasts a 1.7 petabytes hard disk. It was unveiled yesterday
at the International Supercomputer conference in Dresden, Germany.

The machine - which will go live later this year - can operate at speeds of 421 
teraflops, or 421 trillion calculations a second. This will outstrip IBM's
280 Teraflop Blue Gene/L, currently ranked as the world's fastest computer, by 
some distance. But operating at such levels will be a significant power
drain, requiring the same amount of power to run as a high-speed intercity 
train.

Despite the immense cost, officials said that high powered computers were now 
more powerful and less expensive than ever before. "We have reached 
unprecedented
cost performance for scientific computing," said Andreas Bechtolsheim, chief 
architect and co-founder of Sun.

The first Constellation computer, called Ranger, will be installed at the 
University of Texas in order to assist scientists and engineers with running 
incredibly
complex calculations. Half of the cost will go directly on the hardware, while 
the rest is being spent on research and staff.

But although Constellation will put Sun back at the top table of hi-tech 
computing along with names such as Cray and IBM, its reign as the most powerful
machine on the planet is likely to be short-lived.

IBM also took the stage in Dresden to announce its forthcoming plan to build 
the latest Blue Gene computer, dubbed "P". Blue Gene/P is expected to be almost
three times more powerful than its predecessor, and will run continuously at 
speeds of around 1 petaflop - one quadrillion calculations a second. It is
also claimed to be more energy efficient than its rivals

The first P machine will start being put into operation by the US department of 
energy by the end of 2007, and will be followed by research institutes in
Germany.


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