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GCG News and Views
Can the Cloud Hold Off Data Deluge? PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 14 June 2010 00:00

An article in CIO Magazine takes a look at a 2007 report from IDC (sponsored by EMC) estimating that the size of all digital data will grow by something like 1.2 million petabytes from 2009 to 2010, and will grow an astounding 44x by 2020; the number of individual files will increase by 67x. Even though the report is sponsored by a major storage vendor, the methodology looks pretty solid, and it’s hard to argue against their results. And 44x growth is a lot of growth – even though a significant percentage of that will be multiple copies of my Outlook.pst file scattered across various systems.

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Can Larrabee Lazarus Stunt NVIDIA’s Tesla? PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 03 June 2010 00:00

Our pal TPM writes here about how Intel is re-targeting their Larrabee (or a Larrabee-like) processor from being a graphics card replacement to providing HPC processing power in a tidy package. It would act as a co-processor ala NVIDIA’s Tesla or AMD’s GPUs or even FPGAs.

The key difference between Larrabee and these other solutions is that Larrabee uses the ubiquitous x86 architecture and instruction set, and the others don’t. This has been the biggest hurdle to GPU adoption, in fact, because developers and users need to do some custom coding in order to get their apps to take advantage of the much speedier number-crunching provided by GPU accelerators.

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HPC Might Rises in the Far East PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 02 June 2010 00:00

As spring turns into summer, we get - like clockwork - a new Top500 list. While there’s plenty of analysis yet to be done, what’s getting lots of press (NYT story here, in-depth HPCwire story here) is how the Chinese National Supercomputing Center has captured the number two slot on the list with their 1.27 petaflop (sustained), 4,640 GPU monster box. This system is noteworthy not only from a performance standpoint, but also because it relies so heavily on NVIDIA GPUs, further confirming a trend toward hybrid CPU/GPU computing.

Much of the attention will be focused on the big move that China, Inc. has made on the list. There are two China-based systems in the top ten, and they own fully 24 systems in the Top500. In total performance, this puts China behind only the U.S. as a supercomputing powerhouse. There is speculation that by this time next year, China is going to be rolling out a new, all-China-designed supercomputer that might be the fastest in the world.

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Google: Future Hip Chipster? PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 04 May 2010 00:00

An interesting story a few days ago from our pals Cade and TPM at The Register put forward some interesting theories about how Google’s activities and acquisitions of companies and talent might add up to the searcher building its own server chip. (Their story is here.)

Plausible? Yeah, I think it might be. We’re not talking about a chip designed to compete with the highly sophisticated Xeon or Power processors. But doing their own customized ARM implementation? It could make a lot of sense, given Google’s scale and internal needs.

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Crunching the Numbers - Big Numbers PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 12 April 2010 00:00

IBM pushed out some more of their “Workload Optimized” offerings last week with the introduction of analytic packages based on their mainframe and x86 systems. These bundles join the previously announced Power system bundle that they rolled out late last spring. What they’re doing here is combining IBM hardware with a full slate of Cognos and InfoSphere Warehouse software into a pre-integrated bundle that will, assumedly, allow customers to cut deployment time and get cracking on some serious data crunching. Our pal Timothy Prickett Morgan wrote it all up here.

Looking at the bigger picture, I think a lot of action is going to be centered on the enterprise analytics space in the coming years. It’s not technology pushing it; it’s macroeconomics. It’s just getting harder and harder for businesses to profitably compete. Globalization and the instant communications afforded by the web have made the world a much smaller place, although I’d still hate to have to paint it.

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