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SuperComputer Top 500 List

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Gunny Bunny

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Nov 17, 2003, 8:46:28 AM11/17/03
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22nd Edition of TOP500 List of World's Fastest Supercomputers Released

MANNHEIM, Germany; KNOXVILLE, Tenn.; & BERKELEY, Calif. - In what has become
a
much-anticipated event in the world of high-performance computing, the 22nd
edition of the "TOP500" list of the world's fastest supercomputers was
released
today (November 16, 2003).

The Earth Simulator supercomputer retains the number one position with its
Linpack benchmark performance of 35.86 Tflop/s ("teraflops" or trillions of
calculations per second). It was built by NEC and installed last year at the
Earth Simulator Center in Yokohama, Japan.

The list of cluster systems in the TOP10 has grown impressively to seven
systems. These systems are built with workstations or PCs as building blocks
and
often connected by special high-speed internal networks. The number of
clusters
in the full TOP500 grew also again strongly, now totaling 208 systems up
from
149 six months ago. This makes clustered systems the most common computer
architecture seen in the TOP500. The importance of this market can also be
seen
by the fact that most manufacturers are now active in this market segment.

The new TOP500 list, as well as the former lists, can be found on the Web at
http://www.top500.org/.

The number two position is again held by the ASCI Q system at the U.S.
Department of Energy's Los Alamos National Laboratory. ASCI Q was built by
Hewlett-Packard and is based on the AlphaServer SC computer system. With
13.88
Tflop/s, it was the second system ever to exceed the 10 Tflop/s mark.

The third system ever to exceed the 10 TFflop/s mark is Virgina Tech's X
Cluster
Institute measured at 10.28 TFlop/s. This cluster is built with the Apple G5
as
building blocks. It uses a Mellanox network based on the new Infinband
technology as interconnect.

The fourth system is also a cluster. The Tungsten cluster at NCSA is based
on
the Dell PowerEdge system with its Pentium4 Xeon processor and uses a
Myrinet
interconnect. It missed the 10 TFlop/s mark by only a tiny margin with a
measured 9.82 TFlop/s.

The list of clusters in the TOP10 continues with the upgraded Itanium2-based
Hewlett-Packard system, located at DOE's Pacific Northwest National
Laboratory,
which uses a Quadrics interconnect. The sixth largest system is the first
system
in the TOP500 based on AMD's Opteron chip. It was installed by Linux Networx
at
the Los Alamos National Laboratory and also uses a Myrinet interconnect.

The TOP10 finishes with the IBM SP systems at two other DOE national
laboratories (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the National Energy
Research Scientific Computing Center (NERSC) at Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory) ahead of another Pentium4 Xeon-based cluster also at the
Lawrence
Livermore National Laboratory. Gaining entry into the top 10 positions on
the
new list now requires achieving a Linpack performance of at least 6.6
Tflop/s.

Already, 131 systems report a Linpack performance exceeding 1 Tflop/s.
Performance levels at all positions of the TOP500 list keep growing
impressively, driven by Moore's Law. The total combined performance of all
500
computers on the list exceeded the level of half a "petaflop/s" (or
quadrillion
of calculations per second). It is now 528 TFlop/s, compared to 375 Tflop/s
just
six months ago. The "slowest" system on the newest listing is now 403.4
Gflop/s
("gigaflops" or billions of calculations per second), compared to 245.1
Gflop/s
six months ago.

The number of systems in the TOP500 list using Intel processors grew in the
last
six months from 119 to 189, signifying a major shift in this marketplace.
With
this increase, the Intel processor family is now the most dominant processor
used in HPC systems. It is followed by Hewlett-Packard's PA-RISC chips and
IBM's
Power architecture.

In terms of total performance of all the installed systems, the latest
TOP500
edition still shows IBM as the clear leader with 35.4 percent, ahead of HP
with
22.7 percent and NEC with 8.7 percent.

Hewlett-Packard was able to hold on to its lead in terms of the number of
systems on the list by a small margin. A total of 165 systems on the TOP500
list
were installed by Hewlett-Packard, compared to 159 systems by IBM. This time
SGI
is third in this category with 41 systems. No other company was able to gain
more than 6 percent in either of these two categories.

The Cray X1 also appears on the list with 10 systems listed. It is the only
computer system currently being built in the U.S. that uses vector
processors,
as the Earth simulator does. Therefore, the Cray X1 is sometimes seen as a
possible U.S. answer to the Earth Simulator. The highest ranked Cray X1
appears
on rank 19.

Nine of the TOP10 systems, 50 percent of all 500 systems, and 57 percent of
the
total performance are installed in the United States. Also, 90 percent of
all
500 systems are produced in the United States. These market shares
demonstrate
the continued and clear leadership of the U.S. in both the production and
use of
high performance computing.

The TOP500 list is compiled by Hans Meuer of the University of Mannheim,
Germany; Erich Strohmaier and Horst Simon of NERSC/Lawrence Berkeley
National
Laboratory; and Jack Dongarra of the University of Tennessee. The list was
released today and will be presented in detail at the SC2003 Conference in
Phoenix, AZ, which started Saturday, November 15, and continues through
Friday,
November 21.

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