Just curious about this, it seems pretty neat. But will it really boost the economy in Tulsa?
http://www.news9.com/story/18859691/...economic-boost
Just curious about this, it seems pretty neat. But will it really boost the economy in Tulsa?
http://www.news9.com/story/18859691/...economic-boost
It will create a some jobs directly and possibly gets some thinking about starting small business but calling it a boost to there economy is a bit of a stretch, you have been able to rent time on supercomputers you only have access to through the internet for some time. So if you wanted to be in Tulsa and needed cycles on a supercomputer, one being in the city should not have been holding you back. The universities having classes and access for supercomputering is more of a key than the hardware itself.
horrible reporting... the article says it will be one of the largest, but gives no idea of scale... are we talking Petaflops? or to be less technical are we talking largest as in top 10 in the nation? top 50? top 100?
As of June 2012 the fastest computer is in the US, so it should have a good shot at being top ten when finished since even if you are aiming at number one that list does have a fair amount of turnover. The current best is 16324751 Rmax (GFlop/s), 20132659.2 Rpeak (GFlop/s)
Actually, the article says that it will be "THE largest in the nation...". One has reason to be skeptical.
Other articles say it will be among the top 25 "academic supercomputers in the nation".
I don't think you get even close to the nation's top supercomputers with a $6.7 million budget.
One wonders if the Tulsa supercomputer will even be the largest in the state.
I bet HP's site near Tulsa International is larger anyway. Much larger.
The NSAs new site in Utah will be the world's most powerful computing center. All the better to keep tabs on us.
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/201...nsadatacenter/
I talked with the guys at OU's supercomputer this morning (they office down the hall from me). and they said that it is the largest community-owned supercomputer (multiple institutions in a metro owning it together).
and that at the low end of the estimate they give, it will only be half as fast as OU's current supercomputer and at the high end, twice as fast. so in reality, it will probably end up close to around the same speed at OU's current supercomputer which is scheduled to be replaced within the next couple of years.
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