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To: Dorine Essey who wrote (4624)2/1/1999 10:20:00 PM
From: porcupine --''''>  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 8218
 
IBM's new commercial supercomputer doubles speed

SOMERS, N.Y., Feb 1 (Reuters) - International Business
Machines Corp. on Monday unveiled a more powerful
supercomputer that is part of IBM's plan to extend the use of
what it calls "Deep Computing" by business users.
The new supercomputer is an example of IBM's effort to
commercialize Deep Computing, which is the capacity to tie
together unprecented computer processing power and advanced
software and algorithms to solve complex problems and derive
meaning from vast mountains of data.
"The Internet revolution is creating unprecedented
quantities of data. The SP excels at helping people turn that
data into valuable information," said Rodney Adkins, general
manager, RS/6000.
"The lines between technical and commercial computing are
blurring as both researchers and businesses routinely analyze
vast amounts of data," he said.
IBM's next-generation RS/6000 SP supercomputer system
contains the POWER3 microprocessor, the direct successor to the
POWER2 Super Chip inside "Deep Blue," known for its chess
victory over world chess champion Garry Kasparov in 1997.
IBM said the POWER3 microprocessor can perform up to two
billion operations per second and is more than twice as
powerful as IBM's preceeding RS/6000 machine.
The POWER3 chip is aimed at applications such as computer
analysis and simulation programs used by aerospace, automobile
and drug manufacturers, the company said.
The SP is a scalable system made up of building blocks
called nodes, which can function alone or work with hundreds of
other nodes. The system allows researchers to throw massive
amounts of data-processing capacity at single tasks, or divide
the processing power to handle a range of less intensive work.
The next generation RS/6000 chip has a retail price of
$56,160 for a two-way node, according to an IBM spokesman.
As of this month, IBM has shipped more than 5,500 SP
systems, with more than 55,000 nodes included, in the
five-and-a-half years since the SP first was introduced.
((-- Eric Auchard, New York Newsdesk, 212-859-1840 ))