Every June and November, with fanfare lacking only in actual drum rolls and trumpet blasts, a new list of the world's fastest supercomputers is revealed. Vendors brag, and the media reach for analogies such as "It would take a patient person with a handheld calculator x number of years (think millennia) to do what this hunk of hardware can spit out in one second."
The latest Top500 list, released in June, was seen as especially noteworthy because it marked the scaling of computing's then-current Mount Everest -- the petaflops barrier. Dubbed "Roadrunner" by its users, a computer built by IBM for Los Alamos National Laboratory topped the list of the 500 fastest computers, burning up the bytes at 1.026 petaflops, or more than 1,000 trillion arithmetic operations per second.
A computer to die for if you are a supercomputer user for whom no machine ever seems fast enough? Maybe not.
Richard Loft, director of supercomputing research at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, says he doubts Roadrunner would operate at more than 2 percent of its peak rated power on NCAR's ocean and climate models. That would bring it in at 20 to 30 teraflops -- no slouch, to be sure, but so far short of that petaflops goal as to seem more worthy of the nickname "Roadwalker."
"The Top500 list is only useful in telling you the absolute upper bound of the capabilities of the computers," Loft says. "It's not useful in terms of telling you their utility in real scientific calculations."
The problem, he says, is that placement on the Top500 list is determined by performance on a decades-old benchmark called Linpack, which is Fortran code that measures the speed of processors on floating-point math operations -- for example, multiplying two long decimal numbers. It's not meant to rate the overall performance of an application, especially one that does a lot of interprocessor communication or memory access.
Moreover, users and vendors seeking fame high on the list go to elaborate pains to tweak their systems to run Linpack as fast as possible -- a tactic permitted by the list's compilers.
The computer models at NCAR simulate the flow of fluids over time by dividing a big space -- the Pacific Ocean, say -- into huge grids and assigning each cell or group of cells in the grid to a specific processor in a supercomputer.
It's nice to have that processor run very fast, of course, but getting to the end of a 100-year climate simulation requires an enormous number of memory accesses by a processor, something that typically happens much more slowly. In addition, some applications require passing many messages from one processor to another, which can also be relatively slow.
So, for many applications, the bandwidth of the communications network inside the box is far more important than the floating-point performance of its processors. That's even more true for business applications, such as online search or transaction processing.
Latest on Supercomputers & HPC
- Sandia tests supercomputer virtualization
- US Air Force taps PlayStation 3 for research
- Al Gore: Supercomputers can reverse climate change
- Georgia Tech supercomputer powered by graphics processors
- 3D Web will save high-performance computing industry, Intel CTO says
- HP unveils new scale-out servers
- Japan may put brakes on fastest-supercomputer project
- Two rival supercomputers duke it out for top spot
- HPC vendor pitches tools to build 'private cloud'
- Asustek teams with Nvidia on 1.1 Teraflop supercomputer
Hardware Essentials
- Slideshow -- Tech of Yesteryear: Where Old Computers Find Their Final Resting Place
- Chip shipments could face slow growth
- Gartner to slash 2009 chip forecast by $25 billion
- Researchers find state of matter that may extend Moore's Law
- Forgotten history: the true origins of the PC
- Researchers develop bug-blocking chip monitor
- Intel, AMD multicore chip sales may be slowed by software
- Asustek turns to Celerons amid Atom shortage
- Strong Intel sales push global PC chip market to record Q2
- Via pushing into laptop, desktop markets with 5 new chips
- Business Analyst- Leading International Banking Organisation9/02/2010
Financial Services
I.T. & T
Business Critical Project - Visual C++ Software Engineer9/02/2010
Telecommunications
I.T. & T
Visual C++ Software Engineer - Fast Paced Environment - Agile - High Transactional Systems - Senior Test Analyst - Investment Banking / Equities9/02/2010
Financial Services
I.T. & T
Senior Test Analyst - Investment Banking / Equities - 6 month contract - Blue Chip Employer - VB/.NET Developer - Warrants Business - Contract or Perm - Sydney CBD9/02/2010
Other
I.T. & T
VB/.NET Developer - Warrants Business - Contract or Perm - Sydney CBD - $ WANTED $ - Software Deployment Engineer9/02/2010
Other
I.T. & T
$ WANTED $ - Software Deployment Engineer
TechWorld Blogs
Recent blog posts
- Talk about mobile computing
- iPad arrives: can Apple crack the tablet?
- Linux.conf.au 2010 kicks off in New Zealand
- VMware jumps further into SaaS with Zimbra
- Amarok 2.2.2 released – rock on!
- Happy Nexus Year
- So long 2009, and thanks for another decade in tech
- KDE 4.4 enters beta, bring on mainstream computing
- Chromium OS source released: another way of thinking
- Dell goes Android for mobile market entrance
Recent comments
- Touch Phone Accessories
1 sec ago - ayou
49 min 43 sec ago - joo joo
51 min 26 sec ago - Thanks!
20 hours 24 min ago - Transcription mistake
1 day 21 hours ago - Freeway is hardly Australian
1 day 23 hours ago - Great Business Initiative
2 days 18 hours ago - www.mintfly.com
2 days 22 hours ago - also creating unemployment
3 days 15 hours ago - How to save in one page???
4 days 17 hours ago - Well it's 2010 now...
5 days 2 hours ago - Man, catch up. You're being
6 days 3 hours ago - Rhapsody in Australia
6 days 3 hours ago - ipad reaction
6 days 18 hours ago - Capacity Bollenecks
1 week 8 hours ago - not only for "young folks"
1 week 1 day ago - Take action now
1 week 1 day ago - u guys are a idiots. i have
1 week 1 day ago - David Southern
1 week 2 days ago - Firefox's biggest weakness: rendering
1 week 3 days ago







Comments
More's Law is still working
More's Law is still working pretty well, but we still don't have computer fast enough to modulate a human brain. I think the future is about quantum computing technology.
The problem, he says, is that
The problem, he says, is that placement on the Top500 list is determined by performance on a decades-old benchmark called Linpack, which is Fortran code that measures the speed of processors on floating-point math operations -- for example, multiplying two long decimal numbers. It's not meant to rate the overall performance of an application, especially one that does a lot of interprocessor communication or memory access.
I like it quite a lot. Thanks folks
Mike - Best vacuums
Post new comment