NASA taps SGI, Intel for supercomputer

NASA has picked computer maker Silicon Graphics and chipmaker Intel to develop a major supercomputer based on Linux to simulate space exploration and conduct other research, SGI announced Tuesday in the US.

SGI said the National Aeronautics and Space Administration plans to integrate 20 512-processor SGI Altix systems using Intel's Itanium 2 processors. With an eventual 10,240 processors, the Space Exploration Simulator will be among the world's largest supercomputers based on the Linux operating system, the company said.

The machine, to be housed at the Ames Research Center in California's Silicon Valley, will likely be one of the most powerful supercomputers. It will have twice as many processors as the machine from NEC now ranked No. 1 on a list of the 500 fastest supercomputers.

The new supercomputer is part of a NASA collaboration with SGI and Intel called "Project Columbia," which is intended to lead to breakthroughs in space exploration, global-warming research and aerospace engineering, SGI said.

"The exploration of the universe remains one of man's greatest challenges," Intel CEO Craig Barrett said in a statement. "The 'Project Columbia' supercomputer, designed by NASA, SGI and Intel, will enable the world's brightest designers and scientists to look a little deeper and reach a little farther in their understanding of, and achievements in, space."

Officials from NASA said the new machine will increase the agency's supercomputing capacity about 10-fold. NASA will spend about US$45 million on computer gear for the project over three years, the officials said.

The deal represents a victory not only for SGI and Intel but for the Linux operating system. Historically, supercomputers have been monolithic machines based on proprietary technology from companies such as Cray and IBM. But a number of companies have been assembling powerful computers by linking machines that use chips from Intel and the Linux open-source operating system.

Until now, SGI's largest-announced Linux cluster had been a 1,024-processor system being built for the National Center for Supercomputing Applications.

The NASA agreement also further cements the role of Itanium 2 processors in the high-performance computing market. A supercomputer at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory based on 4,096 of the processors holds the second-place spot on the so-called Top500 list.

In the new supercomputer, each 512-processor system will run its own copy of Linux and connect to the others with an InfiniBand switch from Voltaire.

SGI historically built computers using its MIPS processor and Irix version of the Unix operating system, but it's been making a gradual transition to Itanium and Linux. Although it continues to supply MIPS-Irix systems to existing customers, most of the company's growth and attention is tied to the Itanium-Linux products, SGI spokeswoman Ginny Babbitt said.

SGI said it has already delivered the first three of the new Altix systems to NASA's Ames Center, with the entire supercomputing array to be completed in the next several months.

Stephen Shankland contributed to this report.

Talkback 5 comments

    Linux. Now _that's_ scalabilit ...Anonymous -- 28/07/04

    Linux. Now _that's_ scalability...

    Count them: 10,240 processors programmable as a single Linux image.

    Windows Datacenter Edition, 2003? Can it scale past 32? And more importantly, does anyone actually buy it?

    And Microsoft calls Windows an 'enterprise' platform.

    sheesh.

    It's blindingly obvious from a ...Anonymous -- 28/07/04

    It's blindingly obvious from all of your previous fanboy posts, socrates, that you're a Microsoft hater. As such, you will never provide an objective opinion on related subjects. I suggest you do us all a favour, and just keep your cheerleader comments to yourself.

    Jason Green crawls out of the ...Anonymous -- 28/07/04

    Jason Green crawls out of the woodwork!

    What's the matter Jason? You hate it when yet again, your pappa-bear (Microsoft) is shown up for the vacuous phony of an enterprise player that it is?

    It's obvious from all your posts on here, that you love Microsoft. And since Microsoft are on the long slippery slope to obsolescence.

    I suggest you get with the program and start using Linux ;-)

    Have a nice day.

    Well actually, Socrates, I use ...Anonymous -- 29/07/04

    Well actually, Socrates, I use both Linux and Windows in my company, roughly split 70% Windows and 30% Linux machines. I hold no bias towards either OS, and benefit from the strengths of both OS's. As a professional in my industry, I make a concerted effort to maintain an objective view of technology and its use, which is more than anybody could claim of you... Just as i'll agree that Linux is far from being on its way out, I think most intelligent people, regardless of their view of Microsoft, would agree that Windows is far from being on the slippery slope of obsolescence. Don't let hatred and immaturity cloud your judgement, or you are only proving my point that you have no ability to maintain on objective view.

    Jason, it's good to hear that ...Anonymous -- 29/07/04

    Jason, it's good to hear that you're an IT professional! (Whatever that means...)

    If you don't feel threatened by the constant growth of Linux in the IT industry, then why do you pop your head up and decry whenever various posters on this forum make pro-Linux comments?

    What? You don't believe in their rights to make such statements?

    If you can find flaws in their arguments, attack the flaws. I don't think I've seen anyone on here attack the opponent rather than their argument, as much as you do.

    Grow up, dude.

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