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| The global publication of record for High Performance Computing / September 12, 2003: Vol. 12, No. 36 | |
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Features:IDC REPORTS FASTEST COMPUTERS IN THE WORLDIDC reported the newest performance ratings of supercomputing and high- performance computing systems based on its enhanced metrics for the IDC Balanced Rating. IDC also predicted that the global high-performance computing market would average 6.1 percent annual growth to reach $6.3 billion in 2007. Supercomputers, or High-Performance Computers (HPC), are systems designed or configured to support scientific research, engineering design, and other computationally intense applications. In the rankings of 1,599 high-performance computers, Japan's 'Earth Simulator,' incorporating technology from NEC Corp., retained its lead as the top-ranked system based on the new rankings, which combine processor performance, memory performance, and system scalability measures. Multiple vendors exhibited performance leadership in specific segments of the market, according to Earl Joseph II, IDC Research Vice President, Worldwide Systems and Servers.
"High performance computers are vital for national defense, industrial competitiveness and scientific progress, but in recent years users have pressed for better tests to help guide purchasing decisions," Joseph said. "The IDC Balanced Rating, developed with extensive input from the HPC community, includes multiple standard industry metrics to provide a more balanced view than rankings based on any single number." Among the metrics included are: Linpack (Rmax); SPECfp_Rate (base 2000); SPECint_Rate (base 2000); and STREAM TRIAD. Joseph expects additional tests to be added over time. "On behalf of IDC, I want to thank the HPC community and the SPEC committee for their excellent ideas for improving our rating methodology," he said. Joseph invited additional suggestions to be forwarded to him at hpc@idc.com. "User organizations need a source of common system specification data and top- level tools for sorting through various aspects of the technologies to better understand and explain how different computer architectures match their requirements. The IDC Balanced Rating provides one such top-level analysis and ranking based on processor, memory and scaling characteristics," added Christopher Willard, IDC Research Vice President, Worldwide Systems and Servers. The IDC Balanced Rating focuses on three broad performance areas:
"Predicting the performance characteristics of a computer for your specific application codes is a very complex process and buyers often narrow the field of choices by first deciding on the basic computer architecture type, e.g., a single computer vs. a cluster, large nodes vs. small nodes, RISC vs. vectors, etc. Any broad ranking list like this one is often more useful in the acquisition of lower priced computers since you can't afford to spent a million dollars to evaluate buying a $200,000 system," said Willard. |
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