When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Build your own supercomputer, the HP way

How to build your own supercomputer: Take a few off-the-shelf, stripped-down PCs, add some network switches, a maze of Ethernet cabling and some homegrown Linux software, and you'll be well on your way.

Hewlett-Packard, together with a national laboratory in France, tried this recipe out. To the great surprise of many scientists, it worked. What they ended up with is the "I-Cluster," a Mandrake Linux-powered cluster of 225 simplified PCs from HP that has benchmarked its way into the list of the top 500 most powerful computers in the world.

At a technical session last summer, scientists from HP's own labs in Grenoble, France started talking to experts at the local INRIA Rhone-Alps (part of France's National Institute for Research in Computer Science) about the possibility of doing "something a little unusual": building a supercomputer out of standard hardware components such as might be found in a typical enterprise. They started with 100 of HP's e-PCs--simplified PCs with reduced expandability--and finally worked up to the present configuration of 225 nodes, which is near the cluster's physical limit.

News source: ZDnet UK

Report a problem with article
Next Article

Biometric technology to screen for hijackers?

Previous Article

Tech giants push MPEG-4 standard