[math-fun] incredible computing machine from NVIDIA
Hello, The graphic card company NVIDIA just announced recently an incredible machine : The NVIDIA Tesla Personal Supercomputer. price ; 9995$ US or 7000 Euros. computing power ; 4 teraflops. I don't know if you realize this, it means that a relatively fortunate but still ordinary citizen can buy a machine which is big as an ordinary pc and which represent the computing power of the TOP500 computer list of 2001. In other words, if we were in 2001, that 'home' computer would be 2nd in the world! This is purely incredible. Well, here is the second announcement, it can also run mathematica, I want one like that. http://www.top500.org/list/2001/06/100 http://www.nvidia.com/object/personal_supercomputing.html http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/23/068234&from=rss in plain english, that machine can run programs up to at the least 100 times faster. Simon Plouffe
You may not even have to purchase a new computer -- just download the "CUDA" software package from nVidia & program your existing nVidia graphics processor. I believe that once you have the CUDA program, you can then run it on a faster version of the nVidia CUDA system such as the "Tesla". http://www.nvidia.com/object/cuda_home.html
From nVidia's CUDA web site re MacBook's:
"This beta release is for developers on version 10.5.2 Mac OS X on Intel-based MacBook Pro with 256MB GeForce 8600M GT (128MB MacBook Pro may work, but this is not a recommended configuration for CUDA). And Intel-based Mac Pro with either Quadro FX5600 or GeForce 8800 GT. These cards need to have the Apple EFI." "Install the Software Update to 10.5.2 and after the reboot, go through Software Update again to get the Leopard Graphics Update." "Then install the CUDA Toolkit and SDK for Mac OS from http://www.nvidia.com/cuda" At 01:04 PM 11/23/2008, Simon Plouffe wrote:
Hello,
The graphic card company NVIDIA just announced recently an incredible machine :
The NVIDIA Tesla Personal Supercomputer.
price ; 9995$ US or 7000 Euros. computing power ; 4 teraflops.
I don't know if you realize this, it means that a relatively fortunate but still ordinary citizen can buy a machine which is big as an ordinary pc and which represent the computing power of the TOP500 computer list of 2001.
In other words, if we were in 2001, that 'home' computer would be 2nd in the world!
This is purely incredible.
Well, here is the second announcement, it can also run mathematica, I want one like that.
http://www.top500.org/list/2001/06/100 http://www.nvidia.com/object/personal_supercomputing.html http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/23/068234&from=rss
in plain english, that machine can run programs up to at the least 100 times faster.
Simon Plouffe
this is, indeed, exciting news. but, a caveat and a question: 1. to see the advertised speedup, you need to implement highly parallel algorithms. 2. what's the word length of a variable on the graphics board? i did some work with graphics processing earlier this year, and there, a floating-point variable had only 18 bits of accuracy, not 23 that standard floats in C have (and even 23 is pretty borderline, if you ask me). bob baillie --- Simon Plouffe wrote:
Hello,
The graphic card company NVIDIA just announced recently an incredible machine :
The NVIDIA Tesla Personal Supercomputer.
price ; 9995$ US or 7000 Euros. computing power ; 4 teraflops.
I don't know if you realize this, it means that a relatively fortunate but still ordinary citizen can buy a machine which is big as an ordinary pc and which represent the computing power of the TOP500 computer list of 2001.
In other words, if we were in 2001, that 'home' computer would be 2nd in the world!
This is purely incredible.
Well, here is the second announcement, it can also run mathematica, I want one like that.
http://www.top500.org/list/2001/06/100 http://www.nvidia.com/object/personal_supercomputing.html http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/23/068234&from=rss
in plain english, that machine can run programs up to at the least 100 times faster.
Simon Plouffe
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Hello, according to the web page, the card can use single or double precision and it is at the level of the so called IEEE 754 single & double. Which I believe is quite enough, and they say that mathematica can run on these devices. http://www.nvidia.com/object/product_tesla_s1070_us.html there is a tab with technical specs. Simon Plouffe 2008/11/24 Robert Baillie <rjbaillie@frii.com>:
this is, indeed, exciting news. but, a caveat and a question:
1. to see the advertised speedup, you need to implement highly parallel algorithms.
2. what's the word length of a variable on the graphics board? i did some work with graphics processing earlier this year, and there, a floating-point variable had only 18 bits of accuracy, not 23 that standard floats in C have (and even 23 is pretty borderline, if you ask me).
bob baillie ---
Simon Plouffe wrote:
Hello,
The graphic card company NVIDIA just announced recently an incredible machine :
The NVIDIA Tesla Personal Supercomputer.
price ; 9995$ US or 7000 Euros. computing power ; 4 teraflops.
I don't know if you realize this, it means that a relatively fortunate but still ordinary citizen can buy a machine which is big as an ordinary pc and which represent the computing power of the TOP500 computer list of 2001.
In other words, if we were in 2001, that 'home' computer would be 2nd in the world!
This is purely incredible.
Well, here is the second announcement, it can also run mathematica, I want one like that.
http://www.top500.org/list/2001/06/100 http://www.nvidia.com/object/personal_supercomputing.html http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/11/23/068234&from=rss
in plain english, that machine can run programs up to at the least 100 times faster.
Simon Plouffe
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-- Simon Plouffe Château de Bois Briand 10 rue Bois Briand, 44300 NANTES 06 63 17 47 73 portable 0970 460 350 à la maison simon.plouffe@gmail.com Gestionnaire d'applications informatique Assistance à maîtrise d'ouvrage AEFE / 1 Allée Baco / BP 21509 / 44015 NANTES cedex 1 Téléphone: +33 (0)2 51 77 29 29 simon.plouffe@diplomatie.gouv.fr
participants (3)
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Simon Plouffe