Top Stories
|
HP whips out d*** in a box13 Nov 2007 22:18 By d***, we mean clusterSC07 HP continues to celebrate the "Shorty" blade system in any way it can. At this week's Supercomputing show in Reno, HP unveiled a modified version of Shorty called the Cluster Platform Workgroup System that gives engineers and researchers direct access to a real workhorse. The new box holds up to 8 blade servers in the c3000 chassis and can be run as a type of deskside unit. HP claims the system shows close to 1 teraflop of horsepower. HP's approach here is a less sophisticated take on the personal cluster/desktop supercomputer trend that has started to gain momentum. Orion Multisystems pioneered the market back in 2005 with a 96-processor Transmeta-based box that could plug into a standard wall outlet. The start-up failed for a number of reasons, but now companies such as SiCortex and Scalable Servers have picked up on the idea. These types of units get our imagination bubbling. In a couple of years, regular users with about $10,000 or so to burn should be able to produce short Pixar-like films. And there are people talking here about using such robust computers in conjunction with in-house product modeling kits to let Average Joes design and even produce all types of objects in their garage. Fanciful? You bet. But one must dream. For the moment, HP will aim the mini-cluster at the usual high performance computing set - engineers doing computer-aided design, oil and gas exploration and bio-tech operations. Sure, the box runs pretty loud and isn't much to look at, but it's nice to see a Tier 1 trying this concept. The system runs Linux, of course, and, as you can see, Microsoft's cluster operating system.
Clusty Shorty Along with the "Shorty" tweak, HP announced the ProLiant DL160 G5 server, which is a thin, rack system that relies on Intel's latest quad-core chips. Again, this box should go to HPC users. You can buy the Cluster Platfrom Workgroup System today, while the new ProLiant ships in the first quarter of 2008. Customers will need to hit up this site to nab a quote on the cluster. Meanwhile, HP said it expects the ProLiant DL160 G5 to start under $1,500. ® BootnoteThose of you confused by the headline's genius may or may not want to click here. Register editor Ashlee Vance has just pumped out a new book that's a guide to Silicon Valley. The book starts with the electronics pioneers present in the Bay Area in the early 20th century and marches up to today's heavies. Want to know where Gordon Moore eats Chinese food, how unions affected the rise of microprocessors or how Fairchild Semiconductor got its start? This is the book for you - available at Amazon US here or in the UK here. 10 comments posted — Comment period finished Awesome title?Posted: 22:26 13th November 2007 Got a higher res version of the pic?Posted: 23:26 13th November 2007 In the future? $10,000?Posted: 00:33 14th November 2007 @t3hPosted: 02:26 14th November 2007 @ t3hPosted: 04:04 14th November 2007
Track this type of story as a custom Atom/RSS feed or by email. Related storiesAngry investor offers to buy Transmeta (1 February 2008)
|
Breaking Hardware News
Intel has been ordered to hand over secret employee interviews from an internal investigation looking into documents and e-mails that went missing during its antitrust trial with AMD.
Newsletter |