Intel is finally shipping the 64-bit Itanium
Many of your questions may have already been answered in earlier discussions or in the FAQ. The search results page will indicate current discussions as well as past list serves, articles, and papers.
Bari Ari bari at onelabs.comSun May 27 11:47:30 PDT 2001
- Previous message: Intel is finally shipping the 64-bit Itanium
- Next message: Intel is finally shipping the 64-bit Itanium
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
Mark Hahn wrote: >> > I can't imagine Itanium being a mass-market item for years, if ever. > and I pledge allegiance to the Orthodox Church of Beowulf, which > holds that if it's not mass-market, it's not cluster-Kosher ;) > The AMD Sledge/Hammer series will also be nice for clusters whenever they finally make it to market. Hopefully there will be some nice chipset support to go along with them. For the time being Mips has the price performance edge since nobody has taken the ARM 10 to market yet and Intel yanked the FPU out of the XScale before they released it. It's great to see Beowulf clusters offering similar performance to traditional supercomputers for coarse grained applications and even some fine grained for a fraction of the cost, but X86 with OTS motherboards will also always be a kludge. X86 has 20 years of baggage for legacy support and also produce enormous amounts of heat as compared to RISC. Low cost RISC clusters will outperform any x86 mass-market OTS clusters. RISC offers lower cost, smaller footprint, far less heat along with higher fixed and floating point performance. Bari Ari
- Previous message: Intel is finally shipping the 64-bit Itanium
- Next message: Intel is finally shipping the 64-bit Itanium
- Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ]
More information about the Beowulf mailing list
