Teragrid: Massive Grid Computing 115
onyxcide writes: "Envision is running a quick article on a new national grid of computing resources called TeraGrid. Half a petabyte of disk storage, 40-gigabyte-per-second national optical backbone, and 13 teraflops of computing power will make up this monster. It will allow "lavish amounts of online data to be continually available for instantaneous analysis, data mining, and knowlege synthesis." There's another article in the same magazine here: Transforming Research with High-Performance Grid Computing" LighthouseJ adds some details: "C|Net's news.com has a story about a new Compaq supercomputer named Terascale. It uses 3,000 Alpha EV68 processors distributed over 750 servers using networking systems from Quadrics. They say it can perform as fast as 10,000 desktop PC's combined in one second. The massive computer will make it's official debut on Monday at the Supercomputing Center in Pittsburgh PA."
Re:It has to be said.... :) (Score:2)
Sorry, I had to say it. Actually, XP is kinda purty. Been playing with it the last couple days and haven't gotten it to crash... yet.
Whoes gunna pay and... (Score:1)
Re:Whoes gunna pay and... (Score:1)
Re:Whoes gunna pay and... (Score:1)
RC5 (Score:1)
They should be able to wrap it under 7 days, and 10K$ is always a good start 8)
Using it for cancer research (Score:1)
Re:Serious prediction question: (Score:1)
in 1.5 years = 375 pc's
in 3 years = 188 pc's
in 4.5 years = 94's
in 6 years = 47 pc's
in 7.5 years =24 pc's
in 9 years = 12 pc's
so ten years out nope but close enough for me.
-Onepoint
Wonder how long... (Score:1)
Moore's Law Holds True...Film at 11... (Score:1)
So?
Re:Moore's Law Holds True...Film at 11... (Score:3, Informative)
Moore's law refers to the number of transistors that will be packed onto an integrated circuit. Doesn't say anything about processing power let alone massive computer arrays.
Wow! (Score:3, Interesting)
The groundwork for a Matrix/Johnny Mnemonic-style cyberspace, anyone?
Re:Wow! (Score:1)
Dude, there goes virtual So-crates! Eeeexcelent! (play wailing air guitar riff)
Could you imagine... (Score:1, Funny)
Deja Vu (Score:1)
Re:not to be Grammar Police, but... (Score:1)
Re:not to be Grammar Police, but... (Score:1)
That's pretty fast ... (Score:2, Funny)
Still... (Score:1)
TeraGrid at SC2001 (Score:5, Informative)
If you're going to be in Denver the week of Nov 12, 2001, consider stopping by. If nothing else, the place will have free and open 802.11b!
Re:TeraGrid at SC2001 (Score:2)
As fast as...? (Score:1, Redundant)
I bet it can perform as fast as 10,000 desktop PC's combined in one year, too! (WHATEVER the hell that means!)
I presume the author meant it was "10,000 times faster than a desktop PC".
I wonder if Hammer will be faster than those Alphas per processor...I'd think so.
299,792,458 m/s...not just a good idea, its the law!
Re:As fast as...? (Score:5, Funny)
Well, the parachute pants might slow him down a bit.
Re:As fast as...? (Score:2)
Technology is not the problem ... (Score:2, Interesting)
My point is that it takes a while for *HUMAN* systems to adjust to new technology waves. I would point out that in the early 1900s, factories were driven by belt-pulleys and machines (lathes/drills/press/etc) were contained in small 3-story buildings. Once electric motors got small enough and eliminated the physical requirement of being mechanically linked to the power source, then we could suddenly build whole acres of assembly plants and skyscrapers.
I see a necessary transition for software
Currently TeraGrids are the beowulf of ASPs
LL
Wow (Score:1, Funny)
I bet Square's pissed they didn't come up with that until _after_ they'd spent all that time rendering the FF movie. 10 megs a frame or some silliness like that? Sheesh.
The TeraGrid and the TeraScale machine (Score:1, Insightful)
The money for the TeraScale machine was awarded last year, and it went to the Pittsburgh Supercomputer Center. The follow-on the the TeraScale machine was an award made two months ago, the Distributed TeraScale Facility, or the DTF. The DTF award went to NCSA in Illinois, SDSC in San Diego, Cal Tech, and Argonne National Lab. The winners decided to rename the DTF the TeraGrid. They've got a web page about the new system at www.teragrid.org [teragrid.org]
Heard a talk from a guy intimate with the grid (Score:3, Interesting)
Top 500 Supercomputers List (Score:4, Interesting)
FYI, this will be updated after supercomputing, but this [top500.org] is the list of the fastest computers in the world.
The Pittsburgh's super'puter will rank up there with LANL's new one (also a Compaq based one). Pittsburgh's will be the fastest SC for nonclassified work.
I'm not sure whether or not it'll dethrone LLNL's ASCI White or not. It does knock seaborg @ NERSC from the fastest unclassified SC spot though.
Heat? (Score:1)
Knowledge Synthesis (Score:2)
"Knowledge Synthesis"... doesn't that defeat the point of "knowledge"? whoa.
>/dev/null
I see a secondary market opening up for CPU cycles (Score:3, Interesting)
There would be plenty of room for speculation, and participants in the market would basically be betting on Moore's law, in addition to the other economic factors common to all derivatives markets.
The problems I forsee are to do with the standardization of the contracts. We would need to agree on an architecture, and a delivery method for the CPU cycles. All in all though, this could be a really lucrative business, especially with the demand for GHz from Hollywood movie studios set to explode in the near future due to actors being replaced with CGI animation.
Sometimes I feel like I am living in a Bruce Sterling or William Gibson novel, the pace of technology just seems to get faster and faster.
Re:I see a secondary market opening up for CPU cyc (Score:2)
At the same time, I'm working on some artificial intelligence research, and I could definitely benefit from having computers spread around doing my work. I'd probably even pay for it.
Re:I see a secondary market opening up for CPU cyc (Score:1)
gigabit / gigabyte (Score:3, Interesting)
God knows how the research people pay for this. Impoverished corporations like my employer still dick around with multiples of T1.
Avaki [avaki.com] were in peddling their grid [avaki.com] computing solution, and I had to say to the guy... "do you have any idea how little bandwidth we have?"
Grid computing will affect the rest of us when everyone can get high speed network connections.
Re:gigabit / gigabyte (Score:1)
Re:gigabit / gigabyte (Score:1)
"We will share a unified grid with more than half a petabyte of disk storage, a 40-gigabit-per-second national optical backbone"
You don't measure bandwidth in GBps you measure it in Gbps...
I thought they were still testing OC-768 ?
Re:gigabit / gigabyte (Score:1)
"40-gigabyte-per-second national optical backbone"
Then I saw 40 gbit in the story, hence was disappointed that there is no quality check on the headline...
Now where did you think to deduct I did not read the story, dear Watson?
Grid Business Case? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Grid Business Case? (Score:2)
That require more than extremely simple calculations. If you can't make a better game universe with this baby, then the problem is your game designers.
Re:Grid Business Case? (Score:1)
It is important to note that the GRID currently is not aiming to satisfy a "business case". Specifically, it is a research tool that is designed to aid scientists address problems that can not (easily) be solved using existing solutions. There are many good explanations of the GRID around the net, one of them is at the Globus site.
There are a few examples of where the GRID is being used or will soon be used in the research community:
- NEES [neesgrid.org]: National Earthquake Engineering Simulation GRID
- HENP [bnl.gov]: High Energy Nuclear Physics working group
- Internet2 [internet2.edu]: How the Internet2 infrastructure is being used in the development of various GRID projects.
Now, there are additional reasons as to why businesses might be interested in projects such as the GRID. I come from a FEA background and it would be useful to many organizations to be able to harness multiple systems to complete some of the CPU, data and time intensive tasks that the GRID proposes to address.
Further, the GRID's long term goal is to provide the ability to offer compute cycles and storage in a way that the current electrical power grid does. I am sure we can all imagine personal uses for this sort of power. Creating a viable business end for this is the question that I can not answer (and that you are asking). However, creating this system will help researchers. Once it is available, creating consumer level benefits should not be difficult.
Finally, you mention some of the policy issues, particularly concerning data storage. One of the key parts of the GRID work involves ACLs, distributed directory services, and the like. It is important to note that organizations in GRID projects (and corporations of the future who might use GRID like services) will have the ability to grant/deny access to their systems. There is a great deal of effort currently under way to make sure that the grid is not going to become a general purpose storage system for everyone's generic data. Some of the work on this type of middleware is available at the Internet2 [internet2.edu] middleware site.
Re:Grid Business Case? (Score:2)
I also wonder if the oft-cited electricity analogy breaks down. Consumers and businesses pay for having electricity on tap - and they don't have their own power generators onsite. However, many people (and certainly businesses) have computer resources on location - these will get more powerful, so by the time The Grid starts becoming more ubiquitious, why would they have any need to use it?
However, IBM seem to think it's the next biggest thing to happen to modern-day computing, so I'm obviously missing something here...!
Yeah but... (Score:1)
and.. (Score:1)
Stupid PR (Score:1)
I suggest them to get their facts straight.
All you can do is to hold stupid matrices and do y=s.axb. And _rather_ slowly.
seti@home reports 19.48 teraflops/sec (Score:1)
What will this network be like when all of the pcs in the world are linked together?
Trapper-Keeper......
Be afraid, be very afraid.
Re:seti@home reports 19.48 teraflops/sec (Score:1)
19.48 teraflops/sec is 19.48 FLoating-point Operations Per Second per second.
This is acceleration, probably not what you meant. (Unless it is a measure of how much new computer power people are giving them a second!)
</pedantic>
Re:seti@home reports 19.48 teraflops/sec (Score:1)
From there stats: 19.48 TeraFLOPs/sec
I think they mean the "s" in flops to mean the plural of operations. Trillion Floating Point OPerations per second.
Hrm (Score:1)
Policy, Migration and Books, OH MY! (Score:2)
But to answer some of the previous posts about the sharing of resources, one of the larger problems is to figure out and method of saying this:
Run program X at site Y under policy P providing access to Z under policy Q.
So, it's not like you'll just be able to tap in, there will be policies for program execution and data access. But it's coming faster than you think.
One of the coolest concepts is that of process migration which will probably be integrated into a ubiquitous computing grid. Whereby a process running on Processor A, Architecture X can migrate to Processor B, Architecture Y and preserve state. I've seen this work with some DEC's and Sparcs swapping processes and it's most impressive, but still needs some work.
I would suggest reading The Grid: Blueprint For a New Computing Infrastructure [amazon.com] if you'd like to get more about the general idea of the grid. It's light on technical details, but a good high point view.
Sorry. I have to do it. (Score:1)