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IBM and Los Alamos National Laboratory have built the world's first petaflop machine, a supercomputer named Roadrunner designed to ensure the safety and reliability of the nation's nuclear weapons stockpile, IBM said Monday.
Slideshow: Take a closer look at the world's fastest supercomputer
A petaflop is equal to one thousand trillion calculations per second, and was a highly sought-after goal in the world of supercomputing. Scheduled for installation at Los Alamos in August, IBM says Roadrunner represents a breakthrough in hybrid computing, combining AMD microprocessors found in standard laptops and servers with the IBM Cell Broadband Engine chips that power Sony's PS3 gaming console.
Roadrunner "will produce the largest supercomputer ever at 1.5 petaflops, three times faster than the current largest system," IBM chief engineer Donald Grice says in a video on Big Blue's Web site. "It's a hybrid architecture that will allow science at a scale that's never been allowed before."
The world's current fastest system, the IBM Blue Gene computer at Lawrence Livermore National Lab, will be left in the dust by Roadrunner. After being loaded onto 21 tractor trailer trucks and shipped from New York to Los Alamos in New Mexico, Roadrunner will perform at speeds equivalent to 100,000 laptops combined. If every person in the world was armed with a handheld calculator and performed one calculation per second, it would take us 46 years to do everything Roadrunner can do in one day, according to IBM.
"For the first time, Roadrunner will be large enough to run some multi-scale science simulations," says John Morrison, leader of Los Alamos's high performance computing division. "These have been talked about for a number of years in the high-performance computing industry, but with Roadrunner we will have a machine that will be able to do this."
Roadrunner's main function is to run "complex nuclear weapons calculations" that let scientists judge the safety and reliability of the U.S. nuclear weapons stockpile without doing live tests, IBM says. Such a computer could also be used by the pharmaceutical industry to simulate the effect of drugs on the human body, or by Wall Street to simulate the impact of events on the stock market.
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Comments (9)
But...By Anonymous on June 20, 2008, 3:05 pmWill it run Vista?
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I suspect it's going to mean 376 million calculations per secondBy Anonymous on June 19, 2008, 12:57 pmI suspect it's going to mean 376 million calculations per second per watt, which does make sense.
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DesktopsBy Anonymous on June 11, 2008, 9:05 pmWell I for one won't be buying a computer for a year or two. There is no telling what advancements in end-user hardware architecture will be eventually gleaned from...
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NopeBy Anonymous on June 11, 2008, 8:44 amWatts are not units of energy. This is why on your electric bill you get billed for kilowatt hours not kilowatts. -- Same Anonymous that asked the original question.
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Watts are not energy !By entropyfoe on June 10, 2008, 5:09 pmWatts are not energy, they are power. Power is energy (measured in Joules) per unit time. Specifically, a watt is a Joule per second. The confusion here is...
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