High Prices and Chinese Manufacturing

lwien

Well-Known Member
Here's a bit more info for those interested in this kind of stuff"
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In October 2010, Tianhe-1A, a separate supercomputer, was unveiled at HPC 2010 China.[11] It is now equipped with 14,336 Xeon X5670 processors and 7,168 Nvidia Tesla M2050 general purpose GPUs. 2,048 NUDT FT1000 heterogeneous processors are also installed in the system, but their computing power was not counted into the machine's official Linpack statistics as of October 2010.[12] Tianhe-1A has a theoretical peak performance of 4.701 petaflops.[13] NVIDIA suggests that it would have taken "50,000 CPUs and twice as much floor space to deliver the same performance using CPUs alone." The current heterogeneous system consumes 4.04 megawatts compared to over 12 megawatts had it been built only with CPUs.[14]
The Tianhe-1A system is composed of 112 compute cabinets, 12 storage cabinets, 6 communications cabinets, and 8 I/O cabinets. Each compute cabinet is composed of four frames, with each frame containing eight blades, plus a 16-port switching board. Each blade is composed of two compute nodes, with each compute node containing two Xeon X5670 6-core processors and one Nvidia M2050 GPU processor.[15] The system has 3584 total blades containing 7168 GPUs, and 14,336 CPUs. The total disk storage of the systems is 2 Petabytes implemented as a Lustre clustered file system,[1] and the total memory size of the system is 262 Terabytes.[12]
Another significant reason for the increased performance of the upgraded Tianhe-1A system is the Chinese-designed NUDT custom designed proprietary high-speed interconnect called Arch that runs at 160 Gbps, twice the bandwidth of InfiniBand.[12]
The supercomputer is installed at the National Supercomputing Center, Tianjin, and is used to carry out computations for petroleum exploration and aircraft simulation.[8] It is an "open access" computer meaning it provides services for other countries.[16]
 
lwien,

stinkmeaner

Well-Known Member
With the chip brands being American, it makes you wonder if this would have been possible for them if we didn't send our electronics manufacturing there in the first place.
It seems silly if you ask me to send sensitive technology manufacturing to China considering they are a communist country and their Government probably has no problem getting specifications on anything manufactured within their country, even easier that way than reverse engineering.
 
stinkmeaner,
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