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The Duke of URL

06/01/04 11:51 AM

#11863 RE: alan81 #11861

Press Release Source: Silicon Graphics


SGI Altix Crushes Previous Records in SPEC OMP Tests
Tuesday June 1, 9:00 am ET


MOUNTAIN VIEW, Calif., June 1 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Maintaining its unparalleled performance edge in the HPC market, Silicon Graphics (NYSE: SGI - News) today announced that its award-winning SGI® Altix® server easily dominates competitors, including proprietary UNIX® systems, with stunning new world records in SPEComp® L2001 tests for 64-processor and 128-processor systems. Geared to evaluate systems used in demanding science and engineering environments, SPEComp L2001 measures the performance of shared-memory multiprocessor systems using applications based on OpenMP(TM) API.
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Based on the latest available results published on www.spec.org, a 128- processor SGI Altix system running standard Linux® operating system achieved a record SPECompLbase2001 result of 536,169 using the latest Intel® compilers. This is the fastest such result reported by SPEC. Even at 64 processors, SGI Altix (with a score of 344099) easily outperformed a 128- processor Fujitsu® PRIMEPOWER® HPC2500 (scoring 262140), and blew by all other competing systems on record, including a 64-processor HP Integrity SuperDome (289967) and a 72-processor Sun Microsystems Sun Fire(TM) 15K (240622)(1). Many of these competing systems are also based on the same standard Intel® Itanium® 2 processor, showing the tremendous difference in real-world performance capable with SGI® NUMAflex(TM) architecture.

"These results are a testament to the powerful and scalable shared-memory system architecture that only Altix brings to the Linux market," said Jason Chang, Altix 3000 Product Line Manager. "No competing system can touch the Altix system's ability to deliver leading performance, exceptional price/performance, and production-ready reliability in a scalable 64-bit Linux environment."

SGI Altix Family Scales Up and Out

The SGI Altix system architecture handles large data sets with ease, helping to enable customers to achieve groundbreaking improvements in life sciences, manufacturing, oil and gas exploration, homeland security, earth and environmental sciences research. The Altix system has consistently set numerous records for sheer performance, and for its ability to efficiently run manufacturing, engineering and scientific applications across hundreds of processors in a Linux operating environment.

The Altix family offers unparalleled options for scaling up and scaling out to meet the needs of HPC users. SGI® Altix® 3000 is the first Linux OS-based system to commercially scale to up to 256 Intel Itanium 2 processors in a single node using the powerful SGI NUMAflex global shared-memory architecture. Altix 3000 also offers the unique ability to scale memory, CPUs and I/O bandwidth independently of one another, so Altix systems can be configured to meet any challenge. Each node in a system can contain 4 to 256 processors, 4 gigabytes to 8 terabytes of global shared memory, and 48 PCI-X buses; and delivers over 3 gigabytes per second of sustained I/O bandwidth.

With best in class price, performance, and price/performance, the mid- range SGI® Altix® 350 system scales from one to 16 Itanium 2 processors and up to 192GB of memory per node. Hundreds of nodes can be clustered together over both standard Gigabit Ethernet or SGI's new 10 Gigabit Ethernet option, or via the leading price-performance interconnect, InfiniBand.

Availability

Scalable SGI Altix 350 systems are available today in server configurations of 4 to 16 processors per node, and extended into cluster configurations using industry standard interconnects. Altix 3000 systems are available today in server and supercomputer configurations of 4 to 256 processors, and supercluster configurations of 4 to 512 processors. For customers demanding even larger Altix systems, SGI plans to support supercluster configurations of 1,024 processors and larger, and single-system image configurations of 512 processors over time. Additional Altix system technical and availability information is posted on www.sgi.com/servers/altix

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chipguy

06/01/04 1:10 PM

#11867 RE: alan81 #11861

I have not seen any announcement of the mobile prescott products that are listed here either.

538= 3.2Ghz mobile prescott
532= 3.06Ghz mobile prescott
518= 2.8Ghz mobile prescott


I am not sure Intel really wants to divert attention from
Dothan to these 90 nm monsters that have a 88 W
TDP and suck 40 Amps even in sleep mode.


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smooth2o

06/01/04 3:12 PM

#11873 RE: alan81 #11861

Yes, and still only guesses as to what happens when they run out of numbers.

Smooth