http://www.newsfactor.com/news/Japan-Bests-IBM-in-Supercomputer-Stakes/story.xhtml?story_id=1220059R0ADY

Japan Bests IBM in Supercomputer Stakes

Japan Bests IBM in Supercomputer Stakes July 26, 2006 8:27AM

One future hurdle is the silicon chip that is the brain of these machines. 
Already engineers are reaching the physical limits of how many circuits they 
can cram onto a slice of silicon, though chip makers are experimenting with new 
technologies and materials for the next generation of microprocessors.

In the supercomputer universe, bragging rights go to the machine packed with 
the most number-crunching speed. And a spirited competition has raged for 
several years now between the U.S. and Japan for leadership in high-performance 
computing. For the last two years, IBM's BlueGene/L at the Lawrence Livermore 
National Laboratory kept the U.S. in the lead over a meteorological modeling 
machine developed by NEC called the Earth Simulator.

For those of you keeping score out there, Japan is about to take back the world 
speed record for computing it held earlier in the decade. The MDGrape-3 at 
Riken (formerly known as the Institute of Physical & Chemical Research) in 
Yokohama was clocked at a mind-boggling one quadrillion calculations per 
second. In industry-speak, that's one "petaflop" of floating-point calculations 
per second.

After nearly four years in development and $9 million spent, the Riken machine 
is the first ever to accomplish the feat. It's nearly three times swifter than 
BlueGene/L, the official No. 1 in an industry ranking called the Top 500 
Supercomputer Sites. The MDGrape-3 wasn't ready in time to qualify for the list 
which was released on June 27. It could top the next one, but the machine may 
be ineligible because of its specialized hardware. Here we take a look at the 
Riken machine and the global supercomputer race.

Should the U.S. government or researchers be worried that a Japanese 
supercomputer will soon be crowned the world's fastest computer?

Not really. It is true that conceding the No. 1 spot in the supercomputer 
ranking would be a blow to the egos of U.S. scientists. But even if the U.S. 
loses the title, it still dominates the field, with 298 machines on the Top 500 
list -- more than any other nation. (Six of the top 10 supercomputers are U.S. 
machines.) Experts believe that the nation with the most machines near the top 
of the ranking generally has the most competitive economy. Trailing far behind 
the U.S. is Britain with 35 supercomputers, followed by Japan (29), China (28), 
and Germany (18).

What are the benefits of investing so heavily in supercomputing?

Supercomputers have a range of uses, from weapons development and scientific 
research to auto-safety testing and product design. Computer models can do the 
intense number-crunching needed for problems that can't be cracked with 
experiments or that are too time-consuming for humans.

Meteorologists use supercomputers to predict climate patterns decades into the 
future by analyzing huge databases of statistics. Astrophysicists rely on the 
machines to test theories about the fabric of the universe, while engineers use 
them for crash-simulation tests or aerodynamics modeling of new cars.

 What is the Riken supercomputer used for?

The MDGrape-3 will let scientists screen proteins that can potentially be used 
to make new drugs. The key is the machine's speed: It will only take seconds to 
assess each protein. That's a plus when you're a pharmaceutical company testing 
tens of thousands of new chemical compounds. Researchers already use computers 
to determine whether such chemical compounds will bind to proteins in the body.

It takes a high-octane machine like the MDGrape-3 to show how tightly the bonds 
form, and how the molecules will stack up in 3D. For instance, the MDGrape-3 
can show a researcher how a drug compound attaches to the HIV virus which 
causes AIDS. A subsidiary of pharmaceutical giant Merck (MRK) has already asked 
Riken for permission to try out the machine.

Building a supercomputer with just $9 million seems awfully cheap. How does 
that compare to the other high-speed machines?

No other supercomputer at the top of the rankings can muster so much 
calculating brawn on such a tiny budget. That's partly because MDGrape-3 relies 
on fewer chips and less circuitry than rivals. It's also because the chief 
scientist, Dr. Makoto Taiji, working with only two other researchers, had 
plenty of help from Hitachi, Intel, and NEC subsidiary SGI Japan.

Those companies supplied the hardware -- Hitachi made the central processing 
unit, or CPU -- and absorbed part of the cost of building the machine. One 
measure of the MDGrape-3's ultra-efficient computing muscle is its cost per 
gigaflop (1 billion floating-point calculations per second), which Riken puts 
at $15. By comparison, BlueGene/L's is $140 per gigaflop and the Earth 
Simulator's $8,000.

As a measure of how far these machines have come, consider this: In the early 
1990s, supercomputers cost about $1 million per gigaflop. To hold down costs, 
many computer scientists now use off-the-shelf chips and other parts. Even 
though MDGrape-3's CPU was custom-designed, its other chips come from Intel 
(Xeon dual-core processors) and SGI Japan provided lots of the hardware and 
wiring.

The MDGrape-3 is also energy-efficient. While other supercomputers are 
notorious space-hogs (Earth Simulator requires a hangar-sized room) that need 
huge amounts of electricity, Riken's machine occupies the space of a large 
walk-in closet and is an energy-sipper.

How long will it be before the Riken supercomputer's record is broken? 

 Taiji, the Riken researcher, says he expects his record to fall within a few 
years. These days, the field is advancing at light-speed. For instance, Japan's 
Earth Simulator, which hit the top of the charts in 2002, is now 10th and 
likely to be displaced from the top 10 by the end of this year.

Already several U.S. companies, including Cray (CRAY), IBM, and Sun 
Microsystems (SUNW) are preparing to create computers with petascale computing 
power.

Who keeps records of the world's fastest computers?

Since 1993, the industry's top computer scientists have tracked the world's 
fastest computers in a twice a year (June and November) ranking known as the 
Top 500Supercomputer Sites.

The June ranking is timed to coincide with the International Supercomputing 
Conference, an annual industry get together in Germany. To make the list, 
machines must run speed-gauging software called Linpack. But speed isn't the 
only goal, and the ranking's editors frown on researchers who build machines 
that are fast but have no practical use or are later dismantled.

How do experts rate the MDGrape-3?

Alan Gara, chief architect for BlueGene/L at IBM's T.J. Watson Research Center 
in Yorktown Heights, N.Y., had this to say: "It's an unusual architecture. In 
BlueGene/L all chips can communicate with each other. In our largest BlueGene 
we have 65,000 nodes, with 130,000 processors. They didn't need to do that. 
(MDGrape-3 has 4,808 chips.)

"They also built a processor that did only the type of calculations they need 
to do in astrophysics. So they built a specialized processor and a specialized 
network. It's a good example. It shows how cost- and power-efficient you can be 
if you build for a specific applications. We can learn from it. They've set a 
benchmark of power performance."

While Horst Simon, associate laboratory director for computing sciences at 
Berkeley Lab and editor of the Top500 Supercomputer Sites, weighed in with 
this: "When we say 1 petaflop, it's just a number. It's the same as if you were 
to run 100 meters in less than 10 seconds. But it does mean something because 
it's a barrier to break through. The fact is we've reached the petaflop 
threshold. Others will follow. In computing, a matter of three to four years 
can change things."

What's the fastest possible speed of supercomputers?

That's debatable. For now, it's a safe bet that supercomputers will continue to 
get faster. Scientists are grappling with how to develop software applications 
and hardware architecture to squeeze more speed out of computers using less 
energy.

 One future hurdle is the silicon chip that is the brain of these machines. 
Already engineers are reaching the physical limits of how many circuits they 
can cram onto a slice of silicon, though chip makers are experimenting with new 
technologies and materials for the next generation of microprocessors.

Did Riken receive government funding?

The $9-million budget of the MDGrape-3 came from Japanese government coffers. 
Riken developed the computer under a national project launched in 2002. Other 
countries have similar policies.

The U.S. Energy Dept.'s Office of Science spends about $230 million a year on 
supercomputer projects (though that's only a fraction of total spending in the 
U.S. by industry titans such as Cray, Intel, AMD, Dell, Hewlett-Packard, and 
others). France, Germany, and China also pour millions annually into 
supercomputer research.

-- 
Eugen* Leitl <a href="http://leitl.org";>leitl</a> http://leitl.org
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ICBM: 48.07100, 11.36820            http://www.ativel.com
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