After Math: Goodbye, Grumpy Cat, whoa oh oh

Terrible news, everyone! The internet's favorite maladjusted kitteh has gone to the Great Cat Tree in the sky after succumbing to a urinary tract infection earlier this week. She -- yes, Grumpy Cat was a girl -- will be missed. Likewise, Cray Superco...

AMD and Cray are building the ‘world’s most powerful supercomputer’

The US may be set to hang onto the crown of having the world's most powerful supercomputer for some time. Cray Computing and AMD are building an exascale machine with the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. The system is set to debut in 2021, the same yea...

Intel and Cray make Aurora Supercomputer


Today Intel announced the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne Leadership Computing Facility ordered two new supercomputers from Intel Federal LLC, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Intel Corporation...

Cray Reports Big 2013 Revenue Gains


Supercomputer company Cray, Inc. announced it made huge revenue gains in 2013, according to its 4th quarter filing. It didn’t take long for investors to process this information either, since as of...

Cray Launched New XC30-AC Super Computer


Cray Inc. has introduced a new supercomputer XC30-AC today in Napa Valley meeting. It is an extension to existing XC30 series of supercomputing machines. New Cray series includes all the features of...
    


University of Illinois’ Blue Waters supercomputer now running around the clock

University of Illinois' Blue Waters supercomputer now running around the clock

Things got a tad hairy for the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's Blue Waters supercomputer when IBM halted work on it in 2011, but with funding from the National Science Foundation, the one-petaflop system is now crunching numbers 24/7. The behemoth resides within the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and is composed of 237 Cray XE6 cabinets and 32 of the XK7 variety. NVIDIA GK110 Kepler GPU accelerators line the inside of the machine and are flanked by 22,640 compute nodes, which each pack two AMD 6276 Interlagos processors clocked at 2.3 GHz or higher. At its peak performance, the rig can churn out 11.61 quadrillion calculations per second. According to the NCSA, all that horsepower earns Blue Waters the title of the most powerful supercomputer on a university campus. Now that it's cranking away around-the-clock, it'll be used in projects investigating everything from how viruses infect cells to weather predictions.

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Source: National Center for Supercomputing Applications

University of Illinois’ Blue Waters supercomputer now running around the clock

University of Illinois' Blue Waters supercomputer now running around the clock

Things got a tad hairy for the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign's Blue Waters supercomputer when IBM halted work on it in 2011, but with funding from the National Science Foundation, the one-petaflop system is now crunching numbers 24/7. The behemoth resides within the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and is composed of 237 Cray XE6 cabinets and 32 of the XK7 variety. NVIDIA GK110 Kepler GPU accelerators line the inside of the machine and are flanked by 22,640 compute nodes, which each pack two AMD 6276 Interlagos processors clocked at 2.3 GHz or higher. At its peak performance, the rig can churn out 11.61 quadrillion calculations per second. According to the NCSA, all that horsepower earns Blue Waters the title of the most powerful supercomputer on a university campus. Now that it's cranking away around-the-clock, it'll be used in projects investigating everything from how viruses infect cells to weather predictions.

Filed under: ,

Comments

Source: National Center for Supercomputing Applications