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Subject: DOE and SGI Unveil 'Blue Mountain' -- New World's Fastest Computer

Author: Ernst A. Heinz

Date: 12:19:47 11/10/98


Hi all you super-computer "freaks",

There is a new baby to adore ... :-)

=Ernst=

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http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/981110/ca_sgi_sup_1.html

Company Press Release

SOURCE: Silicon Graphics, Inc.

Energy Department, Silicon Graphics Unveil
Record-Breaking Supercomputer

Blue Mountain is World's Fastest Computer and Advanced Graphics
System

MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., Nov. 10 /PRNewswire/ -- The U.S. Department of Energy
(DOE)
and Silicon Graphics, Inc. (SGI) today unveiled the world's fastest computer,
with the world's
most powerful advanced graphics system. The machine, code named Blue Mountain,
is located at
the Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory. Blue Mountain is the
latest
advancement in the Energy Department's stockpile stewardship program which uses
science-based methods to assess and certify the safety, security and reliability
of nuclear
weapons without underground nuclear testing.

Blue Mountain ran Linpack, one of the computer industry's standard speed tests
for big
computers, at a fast 1.6 trillion operations per second (teraOps), giving it a
claim to the coveted top
spot on the TOP500 list, the supercomputer equivalent of the Indianapolis 500.

``Blue Mountain, and its record-breaking run, are great achievements and I
congratulate our Los
Alamos and Silicon Graphics team. This is significant progress in our effort to
move stewardship
of our nation's nuclear weapons from its 50-year foundation in nuclear testing
to one based in
science and simulation,'' said Secretary of Energy Bill Richardson. ``These
high-speed computing
tools are necessary to ensure the safety, security and reliability of the
stockpile without
underground nuclear testing and help support the U.S. commitment to the
Comprehensive Test
Ban Treaty. Additionally, high-speed computing and simulation will lead to
advances in medicine,
manufacturing, automobile safety, and a greater understanding of weather
patterns and global
climate change.''

``We are extremely proud to work with the Department of Energy and Los Alamos to
develop the
world's fastest supercomputer and advanced visualization system,'' said Silicon
Graphics' Chief
Executive Officer Richard Belluzzo. ``By working with government on the world's
most complex
problems, Silicon Graphics is translating that experience into other
applications that benefit all of
humanity.''

``SGI's Blue Mountain is the world's fastest computer and can generate
fantastically large
amounts of information,'' said Steve Younger, Associate Lab Director for Nuclear
Weapons at the
Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory. ``But once you have
trillions of bits of
information, you also need the world's most powerful visualization engines to
extract knowledge
from that data and see it in three dimensions.''

Silicon Graphics has coupled into Blue Mountain the most advance graphics system
in the world,
with technology similar to that of the SGI computers used to create the animated
scenes in Antz
and other motion pictures. With this visualization system, answers to complex
scientific problems
that would have taken weeks or more to display can now be displayed in minutes.

The Blue Mountain computer will give weapons scientists improved scientific
tools to analyze the
safety and reliability of the nuclear stockpile. During 1999, Blue Mountain is
expected to execute
80 million trillion operations over the course of thousands of simulations
relating to the nuclear
stockpile. This is roughly 10 times more computing than all the calculations
executed in support of
the U.S. stockpile from the development of the first atomic weapon under the
Manhattan Project
through 1992, the last year of underground testing.

The Department of Energy is developing five generations of high-performance
computers as a
part of its stockpile stewardship program with a goal of reaching 100 teraOps by
2004. Blue
Mountain is the second of two DOE computers built with a peak speed of at least
3 teraOps. The
first, Pacific Blue -- developed by IBM and located at DOE's Lawrence Livermore
National
Laboratory -- has not yet been tested on Linpack. The Silicon Graphics Blue
Mountain and the
IBM-designed Pacific Blue systems use different computer architecture/system
designs to reach
these high speeds. Both computers were completed ahead of schedule and on
budget.

At the heart of Blue Mountain are 48 commercially available Silicon Graphics
Cray Origin2000
servers containing a total of 6,144 processors. Blue Mountain is organized into
48, 128-processor
shared memory multi-processors, or SMPs. The system is designed so the cluster
of 48 SMPs --
all commercially available servers -- behave like a single computer. These 48
SMPs can
communicate with each other at world-record sustained speeds in excess of 650
gigabits a
second. Blue Mountain's 128-processor, 16-pipe Onyx2 InfiniteReality
visualization capability is
especially valuable because it is an integral part of Blue Mountain, not a
separate unit. This
visualization capability is twice that of the former record-holding
visualization supercomputer,
another system developed by Silicon Graphics.

SOURCE: Silicon Graphics, Inc.



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