[1st-mile-nm] NM Supercomputer

Richard Lowenberg rl at radlab.com
Tue Nov 6 14:36:55 PST 2007


>From Saturday's Alb. Journal, more news on the State's Supercomputer
project.   As a 'free' resource for NM users, it will rely on LambdaRail
connections to educational and other sites.   I'm especially interested in
how this will be accomplished, given the current difficulties in getting
LambdaRail connection to Santa Fe and other cities.
rl
--------

(Albuquerque Journal (NM) (KRT) Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) Nov. 3

On Order: $11 Million Supercomputer: N.M. communities, businesses and
schools will use system

New Mexico is about to enter the era of tera.

For a cool $11 million, the state will soon get a supercomputer that will
provide serious number-crunching capability to high-tech businesses,
schools and communities.

It will, for a short time at least, be among the top five most powerful
supercomputers in the world.

The system will be capable of 172 trillion calculations per second -- 172
teraflops in computer-speak. About 30,000 times more powerful than a
common personal laptop, it will be the centerpiece of the New Mexico
Computing Applications Center.

Officials say the new center could help clients engineer new products,
model environmental patterns or solve problems like energy shortfalls.

"This will be the largest nonfederally funded, high-performance computing
platform in the nation," said Stephen Wheat, director of High Performance
Computing for Intel Corp., which will house the state's system in vacant
space at its Rio Rancho plant.

In-state businesses, schools or communities will not be charged to send
problems or projects to the center. Out-ofstate users will be charged,
said Tom Bowles, a former chief science officer at Los Alamos National
Laboratory who is on loan as a science adviser to Richardson. State
officials will seek agreements with those entities to move some of their
work here, Bowles said.

Sunnyvale, Calif.-based computer firm SGI has an $11 million contract to
build and install the supercomputer, expected to be operational by next
summer. Using existing high-speed data connections, like LambdaRail, it
will connect to local communities through "gateways" at local colleges.

It will be managed by the state's Department of Information Technology and
have its own staff, which will interact with users from science, business
and educational realms.

"Our supercomputing center will be a world-class research facility," Gov.
Bill Richardson said in a news release. "We will recruit companies to
partner with us and move their research, development and manufacturing
operations to the state, creating more highwage jobs for New Mexicans."

When complete, the SGI Altix ICE system will be powered by about 3,500
quad-core Intel Xeon chips, and have 28 terabytes of memory -- equivalent
to about 28,000 typical desktop computers.

SGI CEO Bo Ewald, in a statement, said the supercomputer would make the
state "a region of unbridled innovation and opportunity."

Bowles, who helped spearhead the project, said businesses are using
computer modeling to get products to market earlier.

"With the power of supercomputing, they can model and test on a computer
in a short time what would have taken months or years to build and test in
real life," he said.

The government has used supercomputers since the 1960s to test the effects
of simulated nuclear bomb blasts and other research, and New Mexico's
federal labs have played host over the years to some of the world's most
powerful computers.

Bowles said the state decided to get its own supercomputer because
impending federal budget cuts could end some of those government programs.

"This provides a means to retain these talented people as they're pushed
out of federal programs," he said.

Furthermore, unlike federally funded supercomputers at labs, a state-owned
system will be open to anyone.

The cost is covered by $14 million in capital outlay passed during the
2007 Legislature. Of that money, $11 million went to SGI, which will work
with Intel to install the system, beginning next month. The rest will be
used to begin designs for a planned central office for the project and to
buy equipment for the gateways on college campuses.

Temporary staff is on loan from the University of New Mexico, New Mexico
Tech, New Mexico State University, and Sandia and Los Alamos National
Laboratories.

Bowles said backers plan to ask the Legislature for $11 million more in
2008 to fund the creation of a permanent office, build more college
gateways, and hire staff.

Though Intel will house the roughly 600-square-foot computer, the center's
office will be at an as-yet undecided location and will access the
computer remotely.

The group expects to seek a total of $42 million in state funding before
the project is sustained by member companies and government agencies and
royalties from intellectual property developed at the center.

Intel's Wheat, who was the architect for the recently decommissioned ASCII
Red supercomputer at Sandia National Laboratories, said such a machine
would have a useful life of about eight years.

N.M.'s own supercomputer

WHAT: A state-funded $11 million supercomputer that can assist businesses,
schools and others.

WHEN: Fully operational by summer.

INITIAL COST: $11 million for computer plus $3 million for staff and
"gateways."

TOTAL COST: $42 million for staff, offices, etc., before the program is
expected to support itself.


------------------------------------------------
Richard Lowenberg
P.O.Box 8001, Santa Fe, NM 87504
505-989-9110,  505-603-5200 cell

New Mexico Broadband Initiative
www.1st-mile.com/newmexico
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