The i/E series is for consumers, G is for the professional and X is the
server line.
larry
At 04:59 PM 1/7/2004, you wrote:
>Well, that's going to be confusing. How are people supposed to know
>it's an Apple thing? iGrid would have been so much better.....
>
>heeheehee
>
>--benD
>
>Larry C. Lyons wrote:
>
> > Apple Puts a Name to Its Cluster Technology: Xgrid
> >
> >
> http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,4149,1427160,00.asp?kc=EWNWS010704DTX1K0000599
> > By <http://www.eweek.com/author_bio/0,3055,a=2280,00.asp>David Morgenstern
> > January 6, 2004
> >
> > SAN FRANCISCO�One new technology somewhat underplayed during CEO Steve
> > Jobs' Macworld Expo keynote address on Tuesday was
> > <http://www.apple.com/acg/xgrid/>Xgrid, Apple's new grid computing
> > environment. A product of the company's Advanced Computation Group, XGrid
> > Preview Edition Tuesday was
> > <ftp://ftp.apple.com/developer/Tool_Chest/Xgrid1.0.dmg.bin>offered for
> > download by the company.
> >
> > The keynote address featured a video describing the experience of the
> > Terascale Computing Facility at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State
> > University in Blacksburg, Va. In September, the group configured a cluster
> > supercomputer with 1,100 Apple Power Mac G5s.
> >
>
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