Skip to main content

Nvidia Gets into SuperComputer Biz

Nvidia Gets into SuperComputer Biz

Graphics developer Nvidia has been talking for years about harnessing the processing power of its GPU designs for purposes other than splattering alien entrails across gamers’ screens, and the company has finally unveiled its plans at the SuperCompute 2008 with the GPU-based Tesla Personal Supercomputer, which claims to deliver 250 times the processing power of a typical PC workstation…yet still maintain the workstation price tag. Although these systems aren’t going to suddenly find their way into gamers’ lairs, anybody who does serious work with massively parallel computing might give the Tesla design serious consideration—and Nvidia has already lined up Dell, Velocity Micro, Colfaz, AMAX, Penguin, Microway, Boxx, Western Scientific, and other partners to produce systems.

“We’ve all heard ‘desktop supercomputer’ claims in the past, but this time it’s for real,” said Microsoft Technical Fellow Burton Smith, in a release. “Nvidia and its partners will be delivering outstanding performance and broad applicability to the mainstream marketplace. Heterogeneous computing, where GPUs work in tandem with CPUs, is what makes such a breakthrough possible.”

The systems are built off Nvidia’s CUDA parallel computing architecture. The Tesla systems run either WIndows XP or Red Hat or SUSE Linux (64-bit recommended!), and feature 3 or 4 Tesla C1060 processors, each with 4 GB of memory and 240 scalar processor cores. The system CPU’s are either quad-core AMD Phenom or Opteron chips or quad-core Intel Core 2 or Xeon processors and push up to 102GB/s peak bandwidth per GPU. The systems’ offer an overall performance rating of 933 GFlops single precision and 78 GFlops double precision.

Units are available now at prices under $10,000.

Topics
Geoff Duncan
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Geoff Duncan writes, programs, edits, plays music, and delights in making software misbehave. He's probably the only member…
AMD, Nvidia, and Intel all get rumored next-gen release dates
Nvidia and AMD's CEOs side-by-side.

The next few months are undoubtedly going to be an exciting time in the PC hardware arena. With three of the market's biggest brands -- Intel, AMD, and Nvidia -- all set to release the next generations of graphics cards and processors, we're about to witness a real battle of the titans.

The rumor mill has already been buzzing with speculation about the upcoming AMD Ryzen 7000, AMD RDNA 3, Intel Raptor Lake, and Nvidia RTX 40-series. Now, new leaks give us a bit of a clue as to the release dates and some of the prices of these products.

Read more
Nvidia’s upcoming RTX 4000 cards get new specs, and it’s not all good news
An Nvidia GeForce RTX graphics card seen from the side.

Nvidia's upcoming Ada Lovelace graphics cards just received a new set of rumored specifications, and this time around, it's a bit of a mixed bag.

While the news is good for one of the GPUs, the RTX 4070 actually received a cut when it comes to its specs -- but the leaker says this won't translate to a cheaper price.

Read more
Chromebook gaming could get serious with rumored Nvidia GPUs on the way
Chromebook2 on table.

Serious gaming on ChromeOS could soon be a bigger reality and get a huge boost to leverage the power of Steam.

According to a report from Chrome Unboxed, a Chromebook with some kind of Nvidia GPU could soon be on the way. Nothing has been officially confirmed and the report is based on pure speculation, but listings in the Chromium Gerrit are fueling the latest rumors. Those listings make mention of "Agah" which Chrome Unboxed believes is some kind of Chromebook with an Intel Alder Lake CPU, and Nvidia GPU.

Read more