12.21.10 Post
by Sherry Pell with Advanced Cloud Platforms and Solutions, Ltd North Hall City, Nebraska
As usual nowadays, China is blasting ahead of the rest
of the world in supercomputing.
Last week,
The New York Times reported that the National University of Defense Technology in Tianjin has developed a superfast
machine, the Tianhe-1A, that easily beats out the current, American leader — thus "giving
China bragging rights as a technology superpower." Is this a serious and scary moment for the rest of the world, or mostly
just talk and B.S?
Well, how fast is China's new machine?
The National University of Defense
Technology's supercomputer outdoes all its competitors, performing equations at a breathtakingly fast rate. The Tianhe-1A
"can reach 2.5 petaflops," which is "a measure of calculating speed ordinarily translated into a thousand trillion
operations per second." That's 1.4 times faster than the previous, record-holder, which is housed at Oak Ridge National
Laboratory in Tennessee.
How did they
build it?
"Modern
supercomputers are built by combining thousands of small computer servers and using software to turn them into a single entity,"
says The Times. The Chinese accomplished this by using American-made chips from Intel and Nvidia,
then building a high-speed "interconnect" system that enables data to flow back and forth between networks.
The Chinese also moved away from the usual supercomputer
formula by combining GMUs (graphics processing units) and CPUs
(central processing units), which speed up computing.
Well, what will it actually do?
Supercomputers like the Tianhe-1A can be used to solve complex
mathematical equations and perform many other tasks, "including simulating commercial products like new drugs as well
as defense-related applications such as weapons design and breaking codes."
Is this just a lot of empty talk?
Unlike Japan, which created a world wide scare (and
helped stir U.S. development) by creating a supercomputer that briefly held the world's top spot in 2002, China seems devoted
to making ever-faster machines. The developments in Tianjin are "part of a multi-year strategy by China to develop a
range of machines to create a dominant position in both military and commercial applications."
Well, should the U.S. be worried?
Jack Dongarra, who helps
oversee the supercomputer in Tennessee, says we should. "This is a wake-up call," he says. "We need to realize
that other countries are capable of doing this. We're losing an advantage."
But Boston University computer science professor Azer Bestavros questions "whether the emphasis on the 'fastest' supercomputer should be all that important,"
and wonders whether "the performance of a single machine is a bit misleading," especially because "we are increasingly
moving towards more distributed forms of computing, including the use of grid and cloud computing infrastructures."