Showing posts with label clusters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clusters. Show all posts

Sunday, December 2, 2007

PS3s replacing supercomputers

Suffering from its exorbitant price point and a dearth of titles, Sony's PlayStation 3 isn't exactly the most popular gaming platform on the block. But while the console flounders in the commercial space, the PS3 may be finding a new calling in the realm of science and research.

Right now, a cluster of eight interlinked PS3s is busy solving a celestial mystery involving gravitational waves and what happens when a super-massive black hole, about a million times the mass of our own sun, swallows up a star.


Read more...

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Build your own desktop-supercomputer

In January 2007, two of us (professor Joel Adams and student Tim Brom) decided to build a personal, portable Beowulf cluster. Like a personal computer, the cost had to be low -- our budget was $2500 -- and its size had to be small enough to sit on a person's desk. Joel and Tim named their system Microwulf, which has broken the $100/GFLOP barrier for double precision, and is remarkably efficient by several measures. You may also want to take a look at the Value Cluster project for more information on $2500 clusters.

As of August 2007, the price to construct the cluster with the same hardware would be $1,255.80

Check out the full article... It really tempts me...:P

Microwulf web site

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