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India hosts world's fourth fastest supercomputer

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India hosts world's fourth fastest supercomputer
13 Nov 2007, 2143 hrs IST,Chidanand Rajghatta,TNN

SMS NEWS to 58888 for latest updates
WASHINGTON: India has surprisingly broken into the Top Ten in a much-fancied twice-yearly list of the fastest supercomputers in the world, marking a giant leap in its push towards becoming a global IT power.

A cluster platform at Pune's Computational Research Laboratories (CRL), a Tata subsidiary, has been ranked fourth in the widely anticipated TOP500 list released at an international conference on high performance computing in Reno, Nevada.

It is the first time that India has figured in the Top100 let alone Top Ten of the supercomputing list.
The list, which is usually dominated by the United States, is also notable this time because it has five new entrants in the Top Ten, with supercomputers in Germany and Sweden up there with the one in India.

The fourth-ranking Tata supercomputer, named EKA after the Sanskrit term for one, is a Hewlett-Packard Cluster Platform 3000 BL460c system. CRL has integrated this system with its own innovative routing technology and to achieve a 117.9 Teraflop or trillions of calculations per second.

The No. 1 position was again claimed by the BlueGene/L System, a joint development of IBM and the US Department of Energy's (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and installed at DOE's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.

Although BlueGene/L has occupied the No. 1 position since November 2004, the current system is much faster at 478.2 TFop/s compared to 280.6 TFlop/s six months ago before its upgrade.

At No 2 is a BlueGene/P system installed in Germany at the Forschungszentrum Juelich (FZJ) and it achieved performance of 167.3 TFlop/s. The No. 3 system at the New Mexico Computing Applications Center (NMCAC) in Rio Rancho, N.M posted a speed of 126.9 TFlop/s.

Ashwin Nanda, who heads the CRL, told the conference that its supercomputer had been built with HP servers using Intel chips with a total of 14,240 processor cores. The system went operational last month and achieved a performance of 117.9 teraflops.

The system is slated for use in government scientific research and product development for Tata, as well as to provide services to US customers, Nanda said.

In a statement in India, the Tata Group said "EKA marks a milestone in the Tata group's effort to build an indigenous high performance computing solution."

CRL, it disclosed, built the supercomputer facility using dense data centre layout and novel network routing and parallel processing library technologies developed by its scientists.

While the US is clearly the leading consumer of high power computing systems with 284 of the 500 systems, Europe follows with 149 systems and Asia has 58 systems. In Asia, Japan leads with 20 systems, Taiwan has 11, China 10 and India 9.

The second ranked supercomputer in India, rated 58th in the Top500 list is at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore. Others are ranked 152, 158, 179, 336, 339,340 and 371.

Horst Simon, associate laboratory director, computing sciences, at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, and one of the Top500 list authors, told Computerworld that it was exciting to see India's entrance into the Top 10 and because the country has "huge potential" as a supercomputing nation.

"India is very well known for having great software engineers and great mathematicians, and having a (HPC) center there is a catalyst for doing more in the high performance computing field," Simon told the industry publication, adding that it brings "a whole new set of players into the supercomputing world."

India has made steady progress in the field of supercomputing from the time it first bought two from the US pioneer Cray Research in 1988, at a time of a tough technology control regime. US strictures on the scope of its use and demand for intrusive monitoring and compliance led India to devise its own supercomputers using clusters of multiprocessors.

Supercomputers are typically used for highly calculation problem solving in quantum mechanical physics, molecular modeling, weather forecasting and climate research, and physical simulation including that of nuclear tests.

The term supercomputer is quite relative. It was first used in 1929 to refer to large custom-built tabulators IBM made for Columbia University. The supercomputers of the 1970s are today's desktops.

chidanand.rajghatta@timesgroup.com
 
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http://www.eetimes.com/news/latest/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=202804907

SAN JOSE, Calif. — India debuts for the first time as home to one of the world's most powerful systems in the latest ranking of the Top 500 supercomputers. The list released at the Supercomputing 2007 conference in Reno Monday (Nov. 12) also notes a continuing rise of clustered systems built around off-the shelf x86 processors.
The Computational Research Laboratories--a subsidiary of Tata Sons Ltd. in Pune, India--currently maintains the world's fourth most powerful system, according to the latest ranking. It marks the first time India has had a system in the top 10.

It is based on a cluster of Hewlett-Packard 3000 BL460c systems that delivers 117.9 TFlops/second. The systems are linked by a novel five-stage, 20 Gbit/s Infiniband network using switches from Mellanox Technologies and Voltaire Ltd.

The system is one of 354 or 64.4 percent of those on the list that use Intel processors. That is Intel's largest share to date, up from 289 systems or 57.8 percent of the list using Intel chips in the previous list released six months ago.

Multicore processors dominate the list, and Intel's recently released quad-core Clovertown was the fastest growing chip in the ranking. In six months, Clovertown rose from appearing in 19 to 102 systems.
 
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Mods,
Please close or delete this thread,as there is an existing one in Science and Tech section.
 
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India hosts world's fourth fastest supercomputer
13 Nov 2007, 2143 hrs IST,Chidanand Rajghatta,TNN

SMS NEWS to 58888 for latest updates
WASHINGTON: India has surprisingly broken into the Top Ten in a much-fancied twice-yearly list of the fastest supercomputers in the world, marking a giant leap in its push towards becoming a global IT power.

A cluster platform at Pune's Computational Research Laboratories (CRL), a Tata subsidiary, has been ranked fourth in the widely anticipated TOP500 list released at an international conference on high performance computing in Reno, Nevada.

It is the first time that India has figured in the Top100 let alone Top Ten of the supercomputing list.
The list, which is usually dominated by the United States, is also notable this time because it has five new entrants in the Top Ten, with supercomputers in Germany and Sweden up there with the one in India.

The fourth-ranking Tata supercomputer, named EKA after the Sanskrit term for one, is a Hewlett-Packard Cluster Platform 3000 BL460c system. CRL has integrated this system with its own innovative routing technology and to achieve a 117.9 Teraflop or trillions of calculations per second.

The No. 1 position was again claimed by the BlueGene/L System, a joint development of IBM and the US Department of Energy's (DOE) National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) and installed at DOE's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California.

Although BlueGene/L has occupied the No. 1 position since November 2004, the current system is much faster at 478.2 TFop/s compared to 280.6 TFlop/s six months ago before its upgrade.

At No 2 is a BlueGene/P system installed in Germany at the Forschungszentrum Juelich (FZJ) and it achieved performance of 167.3 TFlop/s. The No. 3 system at the New Mexico Computing Applications Center (NMCAC) in Rio Rancho, N.M posted a speed of 126.9 TFlop/s.

Ashwin Nanda, who heads the CRL, told the conference that its supercomputer had been built with HP servers using Intel chips with a total of 14,240 processor cores. The system went operational last month and achieved a performance of 117.9 teraflops.

The system is slated for use in government scientific research and product development for Tata, as well as to provide services to US customers, Nanda said.

In a statement in India, the Tata Group said "EKA marks a milestone in the Tata group's effort to build an indigenous high performance computing solution."

CRL, it disclosed, built the supercomputer facility using dense data centre layout and novel network routing and parallel processing library technologies developed by its scientists.

While the US is clearly the leading consumer of high power computing systems with 284 of the 500 systems, Europe follows with 149 systems and Asia has 58 systems. In Asia, Japan leads with 20 systems, Taiwan has 11, China 10 and India 9.

The second ranked supercomputer in India, rated 58th in the Top500 list is at the Indian Institute of Science in Bangalore. Others are ranked 152, 158, 179, 336, 339,340 and 371.

Horst Simon, associate laboratory director, computing sciences, at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in Berkeley, and one of the Top500 list authors, told Computerworld that it was exciting to see India's entrance into the Top 10 and because the country has "huge potential" as a supercomputing nation.

"India is very well known for having great software engineers and great mathematicians, and having a (HPC) center there is a catalyst for doing more in the high performance computing field," Simon told the industry publication, adding that it brings "a whole new set of players into the supercomputing world."

India has made steady progress in the field of supercomputing from the time it first bought two from the US pioneer Cray Research in 1988, at a time of a tough technology control regime. US strictures on the scope of its use and demand for intrusive monitoring and compliance led India to devise its own supercomputers using clusters of multiprocessors.

Supercomputers are typically used for highly calculation problem solving in quantum mechanical physics, molecular modeling, weather forecasting and climate research, and physical simulation including that of nuclear tests.

The term supercomputer is quite relative. It was first used in 1929 to refer to large custom-built tabulators IBM made for Columbia University. The supercomputers of the 1970s are today's desktops.

chidanand.rajghatta@timesgroup.com

Congrats to india, and especially to Tata for hosting the supercomputer.

However, i'm surprised that Taiwan has the most supercomputers in Asia after japan. You have to give those guys respect. They maybe small, but they arent weak
 
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Congrats to india, and especially to Tata for hosting the supercomputer.

However, i'm surprised that Taiwan has the most supercomputers in Asia after japan. You have to give those guys respect. They maybe small, but they arent weak

I'm not at all surprised. Taiwan is a major high-tech hub. Those guys have some serious brainpower.
 
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India breaks into supercomputing elite
Tata, the tea-to-cars conglomerate comes in at number four in the super league as America's dominance fades

Rhys Blakely
Times Online, UK
November 13, 2007

India has broken into the top tier of supercomputing after a new machine built by Tata, the country’s largest industrial conglomerate, was listed as the fourth fastest in the world.

Based in Pune, EKA, the Tata system, is the most powerful computer in Asia, according to Top 500, the organisation that compiles what is regarded as the definitive list of the world’s most powerful systems.

The machine was constructed from $30 million worth of off-the-shelf components from Hewlett Packard in an architectural framework designed by Tata engineers. It will work on problems ranging from oil exploration expediations and research on new drugs to animation and video gaming software.

India’s entry into the top flight of high-speed computing comes amid a significant reshuffle among the sector’s elite installations with America’s dominance over the sector coming under challenge.

The latest Top 500 list shows three new entrants in the top five: a new German-based entry in second place, built by IBM; Tata’s EKA; and a new machine built for the Swedish Government by Hewlett Packard at No 5.

The churn coincides with burgeoning competition in "mass market" supercomputers, a sector estimated to be worth more than $30 billion a year. Analysts put growth at about 20 per cent a year, as researchers harness levels of performance available at prices undreamt of a decade ago.

A new supercomputer recently built for University College London (UCL) by Dell, for instance, will work on projects ranging from searches for new bespoke cures for cancer, based on individual patients’ DNA, to research on the origins of the universe.

Meanwhile, the task of writing code that exploits the full capacity of the latest generation of ultra-high performance computers is expected to have knock-on effects for computer-driven trading models used in the City.

EKA, developed by Computational Research Laboratories (CRT), a wholly owned subsidiary of Tata Sons, was developed using scientists from across the Tata group, a vast conglomerate that spans operations ranging from IT consultancy to tea farming.

CRT plans to provide a “one-stop-shop” for supercomputing, supplying applications and software and sourcing hardware from partners.

Ratan Tata, the billionaire chairman of the Tata group said: “High performance computing solutions have an ever-increasing role in the scientific and new technological space the world over … I am sure this supercomputer and its successor systems will make a major contribution to India’s ongoing scientific and technological initiatives.”

Tata’s focus on supercomputing will cement India’s reputation as a burgeoning centre for IT excellence and comes as the country’s leading IT players seeks to move up the industry’s value chain – to move away from commoditised outsourcing services to more lucrative research work.

But American manufacturers still dominate the Top500 league table.

IBM’s Blue Gene/L remains the world’s most powerful – the forth consecutive year it has held the top spot. Blue Gene/L, based at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California is now nearly three times faster than its nearest rival.

Livermore’s Blue Gene/L was expanded this summer to deliver a sustained performance of 478 trillion calculations per second (478 “teraflops”). The No.2 computer in the world – Europe’s fastest – is Blue Gene/P, a sister machine to Blue Gene/L located at the research consortium Julich in Germany. Blue Gene/P clocks in at 167 teraflops.

EKA achieved a sustained performance of 117.9 teraflops.

However, the holy grail for the engineers behind supercomputers remains the “petaflop” milestone – the ability to process 1,000 trillion calculations every second. Petaflop computers promise exponential breakthroughs in science and engineering by providing predictive and highly detailed simulations, according to analysts.

“Earthquake simulations, for example, could show building-by-building movements of entire regions along the San Andreas fault, improving future designs of earthquake-resistant structures,” an IBM spokesman said.

The fastest system in the UK is HECToR, based in Edinburgh University. Launched last month, the system cost £113 million, is expected to have a lifespan of seven years and is ranked the seventeenth most powerful machine in the world.

HECToR (High End Computing Terascale Resources) is working on projects including forecasting climate change, simulating ocean currents, projecting the spread of epidemic diseases and developing new drugs.

A supercomputer built for the Atomic Weapons Establishment in Aldermaston, comes in at number 35. Like Hector, it was built by Cray, the Nasdaq-listed supercomputer specialist.
 
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Let's network them all and play games.

I have the opportunity to buy and configure some Blade servers for my company.

Gonne be putting together 16 servers together in Blade configuration, Each 2.6Ghz, Quad core Intel Xeons.

Getting to Super computing speeds is not as much of a feat as it used to be. You can just keep on putting more and more and more processors into the mix. I can see India too used HP. HP's servers are so easy to set up. You can literally insert new servers like you are inserting stuff into slots. Put it in and voila.
 
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