| | |
40 cores on your desktop
Although it sounds like some kind of fantasy computing game, and in a way that sums it up pretty nicely, a 40 core supercomputer for your desktop will be a reality from January 2007 thanks to TyanPSC.
The next generation personal supercomputer from Tyan Computer Corporation was launched today, with general availability expected by January. The Typhoon 600 series uses Intel Xeon 5300 Clovertown processors (up to 40 CPU cores in total) to provide a 256 gigaflops performance on a turnkey system for your office or home, and it can be powered up from a standard electricity socket as well.
"We're leaving the performance compromise of personal supercomputing behind us by delivering a system into office environments that pumps out one quarter of a Teraflop without the mess and difficulty of the back room data centre model." Mark Burnett, European product manager of TyanPSC told me this afternoon.
The hidden beauty, when you get past the incredible performance, is the fact that this is a supercomputer that has been purpose-built to be deployed and used just like an ordinary PC by removing the complexity and management issues that are usually associated with the breed. OK, maybe not any ordinary PC as I am hard pressed to think of another than costs in the region of $20,000 as a starting price!
You can take a look for yourself if you happen to be in the Tampa, Florida area this week as Tyan is demonstrating it at the Supercomputing 2006 conference there.
In case you can’t make it, here are those specs in full:
The next generation personal supercomputer from Tyan Computer Corporation was launched today, with general availability expected by January. The Typhoon 600 series uses Intel Xeon 5300 Clovertown processors (up to 40 CPU cores in total) to provide a 256 gigaflops performance on a turnkey system for your office or home, and it can be powered up from a standard electricity socket as well.
"We're leaving the performance compromise of personal supercomputing behind us by delivering a system into office environments that pumps out one quarter of a Teraflop without the mess and difficulty of the back room data centre model." Mark Burnett, European product manager of TyanPSC told me this afternoon.
The hidden beauty, when you get past the incredible performance, is the fact that this is a supercomputer that has been purpose-built to be deployed and used just like an ordinary PC by removing the complexity and management issues that are usually associated with the breed. OK, maybe not any ordinary PC as I am hard pressed to think of another than costs in the region of $20,000 as a starting price!
You can take a look for yourself if you happen to be in the Tampa, Florida area this week as Tyan is demonstrating it at the Supercomputing 2006 conference there.
In case you can’t make it, here are those specs in full:
- 256 gigaflops peak performance
- 1400 Watts max, plugs into standard wall outlet
- Small form factor, portable
- Low-noise, whisper quiet operation… less than 52dB.
- Easy to use Personal Supercomputer using Microsoft Windows Computer Cluster Server 2003
- Up to 40 CPU cores per system
0
•
•
•
•
Well that puts my brand new Dell that took me away from DaniWeb for over a month to shame!
0
•
•
•
•
That thing puts ALL the computers to shame. Sorry AlienWare, but I think I'll pick this thing up.
0
•
•
•
•
But you would be hard pressed to bump up the price of that Dell or Alienware machine to anything approaching the $20,000 cost of the base TyanPSC 600 let alone the 40 core monster.
As with all these things, it sounds great but if you do a proper value assessment then for 99.9% of folk it is going to offer a very poor return on investment when compared to a machine costing a tenth of the money.
All that power, none of it ever really utilised
As with all these things, it sounds great but if you do a proper value assessment then for 99.9% of folk it is going to offer a very poor return on investment when compared to a machine costing a tenth of the money.
All that power, none of it ever really utilised

Similar Threads
- Multiple cores (Motherboards, CPUs and RAM)
- Using multiple cores - API wanted (C++)
- does the 9800GTX actually have 2 GPU Cores? (Monitors, Displays and Video Cards)
- Motherboard FSBs', CPU terms, DDR RAM and CPU cores. (Motherboards, CPUs and RAM)
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
advertising age amd android apple asus avatar battery bluegene camera chips chipset computer computers console consoles data database dell development dos economy energy enterprise environment explosion free gadget gadgets games gaming google graphics hardware hp ibm ibm.news intel intelibm iphone ipod laptop law leopard linux lithium-ion mac medicine memory microsoft mobile music netbook news nintendo nokia openoffice opensource os osx patents pc pcworld peripherals playstation printer processor ps3 quadcore recall recession redhat repair review russia satnav science security software solar sony storage sun supercomputer supercomputing technology tiger trends ubuntu uk unix usb vista warranty wii windows working x86 xbox xbox360




