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Technology Stocks : Compaq -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PCSS who wrote (84317)8/18/2000 7:02:44 PM
From: Night Writer  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 97611
 
Michael,
What is making CPQ go are the big institutional buyers.

I started commenting on the TA about the time they started buying. Also after I finished reading a 500 page book on the topic and practiced some with no comments. It took me a while to get a limited handle on how this TA worked. It was a great coincident that my TA and CPQ took off at about the same time.

However, I thank you for the positive comments. I hope the TA continues to be positive.

I'm off to dinner now.
NW



To: PCSS who wrote (84317)8/18/2000 8:22:53 PM
From: Elwood P. Dowd  Respond to of 97611
 
Compaq expected to win supercomputer bid
By Stephen Shankland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
August 18, 2000, 4:55 p.m. PT

The Department of Energy is expected to announce next week that Compaq Computer has
won a bid for a nuclear weapons simulation supercomputer.

The contract, worth more than $150 million by industry estimates, will fund a computer with
thousands of Alpha processors that will be built in 2002 at Los Alamos National Laboratory
(LANL), sources familiar with the plan said. The machine, part of DOE's Accelerated Strategic
Computing Initiative (ASCI), is expected to be able to perform 30 trillion calculations per second,
or 30 teraflops.

Representatives of DOE, LANL and Compaq declined to
comment. "It's premature to comment on any potential future
contracts," said Compaq spokesman Jim Finlaw.

Compaq beat out competitors Sun Microsystems, which had
bid on the system as part of its new expansion into
supercomputers, and SGI, which had hoped its incumbent
status would help it win again. SGI built the 4-teraflop Blue
Mountain computer currently at LANL.

But the real competition in the future looks to be IBM,
according to Jesse Lipcon, vice president of Compaq's Alpha
technology group, while discussing Compaq's recent contract
for a $36 million, 2,728-processor academic supercomputer.

IBM has won bids for a 4-teraflop Blue Pacific machine and its
successor, the 10-teraflop ASCI White at LANL's sister lab,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

IBM also has plans for a 1,000-teraflop supercomputer called
Blue Gene to be used for biomolecular research.

IBM
didn't
bid for the LANL machine,
representatives have said.

Cray, acquired in March by Tera
Computer from SGI, has a long history of
supercomputing partnerships with LANL.

The new Compaq computer will take up the better part of a 43,500-square-foot room--more than
nine basketball courts in area. By contrast, ASCI White takes up a space the size of two courts. It
will fit inside a three-story building called the Strategic Computing Complex being build now at
LANL.

LANL has designed the building so it also can house the 100-teraflop machine, but it's not yet
clear where DOE will decide to build the later machine.

DOE is considering upgrading the 30-teraflop machine to 50-teraflop performance as an
intermediate step to the 100-teraflop machine, according to a DOE environmental assessment on
the LANL supercomputing facility.

The computer is a key part of DOE's plan to simulate nuclear weapons tests in the absence of
actual explosions. The more powerful computers are designed to model explosions in three
dimensions, a far more complex task than the two-dimensional models used in weapons design
years ago.

Aging of nuclear weapons materials such as plutonium spheres and high explosives causes
deformations that aren't conveniently regular, requiring the use of three-dimensional models,
LANL officials have said.

The United States conducted its last actual nuclear test in September 1992. In September 1996,
President Bill Clinton signed the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, but the treaty was rejected by
the Senate.









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• Compaq wins bids for academic supercomputer August 3, 2000
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