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NASA supercomputer to get boost from Intel, SGI
"Pleiades" project aims to achieve 1 petaflop by 2009, 10 petaflops by 2012.
By Matthew Miller, Editor-in-Chief, EDN.com -- EDN, 5/8/2008
Intel, SGI, and NASA have announced a project that aims to produce a dramatic increase in the space agency's supercomputing capacity.
The "Pleiades" project, using SGI systems based on multicore Intel processors, will deliver a computational system with a capacity of 1 petaflops (1015 floating point operations per second) by 2009 and then increase that to 10 petaflops by 2012, according to NASA. That initial milestone would represent a 16× improvement over the agency's current top-dog supercomputer, Columbia (pictured). That 10,240-processor system, based on SGI Altix systems with Intel Itanium 2 processors, offers 88 teraflops of peak performance.
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"Achieving such a monumental increase in performance will help fulfill NASA's increasing need for additional computing capacity and will enable us to provide the computational performance and capacity needed for future missions," said S. Pete Worden, director of the NASA Ames Research Center.













