Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: IBM Blue ..........even faster?

Author: Terry Presgrove

Date: 10:53:29 02/02/99


Is this the next generation IBM Blue?


 Tuesday February 2 11:04 AM ET


IBM unveils fastest supercomputer
SOMERS, N.Y. -- IBM Corp. Monday unveiled a more powerful supercomputer that is
part of IBM's plan to extend the use of what it calls "Deep Computing" by
business users.
The new supercomputer is an example of IBM's (NYSE=IBM) effort to commercialize
Deep Computing, which is the capacity to tie together unprecedented computer
processing power and advanced software and algorithms to solve complex problems
and derive meaning from vast mountains of data.

"The Internet revolution is creating unprecedented quantities of data. The SP
excels at helping people turn that data into valuable information," said Rodney
Adkins, general manager, RS/6000.

"The lines between technical and commercial computing are blurring as both
researchers and businesses routinely analyze vast amounts of data," he said.


Next-generation 'Deep Blue'
IBM's next-generation RS/6000 SP supercomputer system contains the POWER3
microprocessor, the direct successor to the POWER2 Super Chip inside "Deep
Blue," known for its chess victory over world chess champion Garry Kasparov in
1997.

IBM said the POWER3 microprocessor can perform up to two billion operations per
second and is more than twice as powerful as IBM's preceding RS/6000 machine.

The POWER3 chip is aimed at applications such as computer analysis and
simulation programs used by aerospace, automobile and drug manufacturers, the
company said.


Nodes work together
The SP is a scalable system made up of building blocks called nodes, which can
function alone or work with hundreds of other nodes. The system allows
researchers to throw massive amounts of data-processing capacity at single
tasks, or divide the processing power to handle a range of less intensive work.

The next generation RS/6000 chip has a retail price of $56,160 for a two-way
node, according to an IBM spokesman.

As of this month, IBM has shipped more than 5,500 SP systems, with more than
55,000 nodes included, in the five-and-a-half years since the SP first was
introduced.

while the processor may can handle 2billion calculations per second it doesn't
say if there is an available computer that is operational achieving that? Does
it?








This page took 0.01 seconds to execute

Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700

Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.