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Feds Take Two Routes To Supercomputer Power

When it comes to supercomputing, one size apparently doesn't fit all. As part of its efforts to solve advanced, mathematically intense problems such as weather modeling, NASA last week said it would deploy a supercomputer consisting of 20 Silicon Graphics Inc. servers containing hundreds of Intel processors. At the same time, the Navy is turning to a system that incorporates hundreds of IBM servers, each with just eight processors, for its own high-end computing needs.

The Navy's system, dubbed Kraken after a mythic sea monster that sinks ships, will run at 20 teraflops--about three times faster than any system in use by the Department of Defense. Theoretically, NASA's system could run at 60 teraflops, which, if it hits that mark, would make it the fastest computer on earth.

IBM is building Kraken for the Navy's Major Shared Resource Center at the Naval Oceanographic Office at Stennis Space Center in Mississippi. It features 368 IBM p655 eServers--each containing eight Power 4+ processors--connected so they operate as a single unit. The system, which uses IBM's AIX Unix operating system, is to begin operating by September.

Steve Adamec, director of the resource center at Stennis, says he believes the IBM architecture of a large, parallel, clustered environment is best suited for the types of problems the Navy needs to solve. Defense scientists will use the system to, among other things, create finely detailed models of ocean surfaces. "The people who ride in the gray-hulled ships above and below the water will benefit from this," Adamec says.

Kraken will provide the biggest stress test yet for IBM's new pSeries High Performance Switch interconnect fabric, which lets processors communicate across multiple systems. "Our hope is that it's going to significantly reduce latency," Adamec says. Kraken will cost Defense "less than $100 million," he says, declining to be more specific.

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