ZDNet UK


Skip to Main Content

ZDNet.co.uk - Winner of Best Business Website 2007
  1. Home
  2. News
  3. Blogs
  4. Reviews
  5. Prices
  6. Resources
  7. Community
  8. My ZDNet

 

ZDNet UK RSS Feeds


IT Jobs

Industry watch Toolkit

US to build supercomputer grid

Stephen Shankland, CNET News.com CNet

Published: 10 Aug 2001 09:42 BST

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly
  • Post Comment

The US' National Science Foundation has awarded contracts worth $53m (£37m) to build a grid that connects supercomputer clusters across the country into a single large computing resource called the Distributed Terascale Facility.

The main part of the work will be handled by the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and the San Diego Supercomputer Center, said NCSA Director Dan Reed.

But a big winner will be IBM, which will build four Linux supercomputer clusters and take home tens of millions of dollars, said Mike Nelson, director of Internet technology and strategy at IBM. The NCSA's cluster will be able to perform 6.1 trillion calculations per second (teraflops), and SDSC's will handle 4 teraflops, Nelson said. Argonne National Laboratory will have a 1 teraflop machine and the California Institute of Technology a 0.4 teraflop machine.

The supercomputers will be made from Intel's "McKinley" CPU, the second generation model of the Itanium line, the National Science Foundation said in a statement. In addition, Qwest will link the computers with a high-speed network that can transfer data at 40 gigabits per second.

IBM has embarked on a project to improve grid computing -- which federates high-powered computers to give researchers access to supercomputer calculation facilities -- and to speed up access to large databases of information. Big Blue believes the technology, chiefly appealing to academics at present, will become useful to corporations as well.

"We're pulling the pieces together. We'll be providing a lot of hardware that uses the McKinley chip," Nelson said. "We think grid computing could be just as big as Linux."

The system, which Reed and SDSC Director Fran Berman called the Teragrid, will be used for work involving national and international collaborations, Reed said. Computing jobs will include work in the areas of astronomy, cosmology, earthquake simulation, genetics, protein research, drug design, brain research and high-energy physics, Berman and Reed said.

A national board will decide how the computing power is allocated, but using it should be made simpler through the choice of open-source grid software from an organisation called the Globus Project, he said.

Scientists won't have to worry about where exactly data is stored or what computers are churning through their calculations. "It's trying to take a distributed cluster and data architecture and build an easy-to-use interface on top of it," Reed said.

Ultimately, the grid will grow to include smaller research networks, link to other grids overseas and even incorporate countless sensors across the world, Reed said.

See the Hardware News Section for full coverage.

See the Linux Lounge for the latest GNU/Linux and open source headlines.

Have your say instantly, and see what others have said. Click on the TalkBack button and go to the Linux lounge forum

Let the editors know what you think in the Mailroom. And read other letters.

  • Email
  • Trackback
  • Clip Link
  • Print friendly Print with Kyocera

Did you find this article useful?
25 out of 69 people found this useful


Full Talkback thread

0 comments


Discussions

1000030281 1000030281

Facebook Bans Firefox 3

Sunday 20 July 2008, 2:33 AM

1 comment
roger andre roger andre

SP3 Under Suspicion Again

Saturday 19 July 2008, 9:29 PM

2 comments

Featured Talkback

When all is said, if Microsoft produce the best product people will buy it and thats a good thing. If people have to buy their product because no one else can produce an alternative, only because interoperability protocols are kept secret, then thats a bad thing.

By: pround

Read full story:
EU court crushes Microsoft's antitrust appeal