IBM Retakes Fastest Supercomputer Title 275
dshaw858 writes "BBC News reports that IBM has unveiled its new Blue Gene/L machine. The Blue Gene project already has two of the top ten supercomputers in the world. Big news for IBM! I wonder what great things they can calculate in just seconds now... maybe I should get a stronger PGP key."
Don't worry (Score:5, Interesting)
So no PGP key cracking. At least officially.
I wonder how the Fold@Home total CPU power compare to this in terms of percentage?
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Informative)
You really need something more than just a really fast/powerful computer to do PGP cracking. You're going to need something that can help you get your fingernails under the problem, because even this machine couldn't brute force PGP keys. There has been some papers written on theoretical weaknesses in RSA that, given a custom built machine, could be exploited. This is not a custom built RSA cracker. It may have enough raw power to make up for that of course, and that means you might manage 1024 bit RSA cracking if you are determined. Unfortunately any sane PGP/GPG users are using Diffie-Hellman/El-Gamal rather than RSA as their public key system, and for now there aren't any similar attacks for the discrete log problem as there are for factoring.
Your paranoia is misplaced. You should be worried that the NSA has come up with a serious break in RSA and Diffie-Hellman schemes that let them be cracked by a nice ordinary supercomputer, rather than worried about computer power overtaking key size. Most key sizes are chosen to have a fairly long lifespan even with massive increases in computing power. You aren't going to brute force 128bit symmetric systems any time soon, no matter how much computing power you stack up against it. No, the fear is in breaks to the encryption scheme.
Jedidiah.
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Interesting)
What would you do - sink a few hundred million in building a supercomputer to crack some guy's PGP key, or kidnap him, hold a gun to his head and ask for the passphrase?
You'd build the computer if it was imperative that the guy not know you'd cracked his encryption, or if you wanted to do it on a large scale. If it's just one or two guys, and secrecy isn't necessarily an issue, there are other ways...
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Funny)
Well, I thought it was funny!
Re:Don't worry (Score:2)
Nitpick: Factoring primes eh?
The technical term for one such method is rubber-hose cryptanalysis [wikipedia.org]..
I was a bit relieved to find out that, according to a book (Ross Anderson's Security Engineering I think) I've read, the implied method is slapping a rubber hose against the subject's feet.. I was worried about more awful forms of rubber hose application to the human body.
I suppose t
Re:Don't worry (Score:2)
If somebody actually gained access to one of these machines for that specific purpose, I'd just hand them the key and say "You win!"
Re:Don't worry (Score:2)
But when do you think distributed.net will have a BlueGene/L port?
Re:Don't worry (Score:2, Interesting)
You're gibbering, sir. You say one thing and then the opposite.
No-one "brute forces" PGP keys, that's not how you crack them. Exactly how you crack them depends on what the underlying algorithm is, it's either GNFS factoring or discrete logarithm, but _neither_ is brute force. So your first point is wrong.
With current algorithms, 1024
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Informative)
Diffie-Hellman is just key exchange, El-Gamal is effectively using Diffie-Hellman style operations for encryption. The important thing to remember is that PGP/GPG only uses the public key aspect for key exchange. The message itself in encrypted with a symmetric cipher scheme, and the public key is simply used to exchange the one time key for the symmetric cipher for that particular message.
Jedidiah.
Re:Quantum cracking algorithms? (Score:2, Interesting)
Indeed. Not so long ago I heard that a team had succesfully factorized 12 (into 4*3) using a quantum computer. (It was a 7 qubit 'puter) :)
Quantum computer has a way to go, even by paranoid standards.
Re:Does Moore principle apply to quantum computing (Score:2, Interesting)
Currently, it isn't even a chip (or at least, last I heard). It was (a lot of) molekyles with 7 "mutable" spots (I think it was rotation). The state was read using NMR spectroscopy).
It is about as close to a chip as a printing press to a photocopier ;-)
Re:Does Moore principle apply to quantum computing (Score:2)
Just remember (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Just remember (Score:2)
Re:Just remember (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Just remember (Score:2)
Re:Don't worry (Score:5, Interesting)
There's a lot of patterns, and a hell lot of data processing to be do.
However, that said, financial data modelling is not something which I think can be cracked using brute-force power. Although there has been a lot of fundamental progress in terms of using OR and GT algorithms and the like, it hasn't really had that "big breakthrough" to fundamentally determine the basis of financial data and market behaviour, and perhaps we never will.
Ofcourse, as always hope springs eternal - but that would also make markets a whole lot deterministic and bring about some serious differences in the way business is done.
Guessing vs Gut feeling (Score:3, Insightful)
Financial Data Modelling is a fine idea, but the whole thing boils down to human psyche - and unless someone comes up with a perfect AI - one that is one step ahead in psycho term than human, - be it GT or OR or whatever else, market trend is very much based on butterfly effect + herd instinct + stochastic resonance with a whole lot of chaos effects thrown in.
That is why it's so dynamic !
Re:Guessing vs Gut feeling (Score:3, Insightful)
That's why a lot of these systems use such things as socio-cultural influences, press and media data and the like.
Unfortunately, the stock market is an area that is an ecosystem of its own -- preys and victims -- and therefore, predicting that is almost as hard as predicting human behaviour.
And ofcourse, the only reason the economies _thrive_ is because of the chaos - everyone would like to believe that they can leverage it to make a profit for themselves.
And the best part is, everyone ca
Re:Guessing vs Gut feeling (Score:2, Insightful)
how can everyone be making money? you already said there are preys & victims, and people have to be making that money from somewhere
Re:Guessing vs Gut feeling (Score:2)
Re:Guessing vs Gut feeling (Score:2)
Not to say that there aren't a lot of thieves on wall street but they generally are not the ones creating the wealth, just pooling money for others to create wealth with.
Re:Guessing vs Gut feeling (Score:2)
Suddenly, a bunch of monkeys find work...
Re:Don't worry (Score:2)
But hey, that'd immediately change the markets, so you'd probably need a new model.
I don't believe that predicting the markets on the big scale is ever possible, simply because the predictions affect the system. You would have to predict how your predictions affect the system, and if that was public, then how the predictions on effects
Re:Don't worry (Score:3, Insightful)
Folding@home has almost 3x the FLOPS, but we're all on the same side here. Slightly different problems can be tackled when you have local bandwidth.
Also keep in mind that Folding@home is not one project, but dozens of projects sharing the same CPU pool.
Years to go before we figure out how folding really happens...
Bah (Score:5, Funny)
If their supercomputers really were that fast, they would have taken the title back earlier.
Re:Bah (Score:2)
Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
They played one illicit mp3 at 70 teraflops.
An RIAA spokesperson said "Playing a song at those astronomical speeds is highly illegal, it almost burnt our accountants fingers just counting the zeros!"
Re:Uh oh (Score:4, Funny)
Knowing the RIAA's history [slashdot.org], they'd probably claim that it was equivalent to playing millions of MP3s at consumer PC speeds.
The future of patent law has just struck me (Score:5, Funny)
"has two of the top ten supercomputers" (Score:5, Funny)
Must be those 2 guys I always see playing Quake with 1ms pings.
Re:"has two of the top ten supercomputers" (Score:2)
...who are also very close to the server. The speed of light is only 300,000km/s, so if you want a 1ms ping, you can only be 150km from the server, at the very most.
What about SGI? (Score:5, Interesting)
Does this mean that IBM leapfrogged SGI or does this mean that the SGI machine (to be built for NASA) wasn't all that exciting?
http://www.sgi.com/features/2004/oct/columbia/
Re:What about SGI? (Score:2, Informative)
Regards,
steve
Re:What about SGI? (Score:3, Interesting)
The rankings used in supercomputing measure very specific benchmarks and have very specific deadlines.
In this case, SGI has a computer reportedly faster than Blue Gene/L, but it is neither 1) in production by the deadline nor 2) independently verified results.
Sure, they might do this, but by then the next supercomputer will shame SGI's new baby. Like I said, leapfrog.
Rankings are all about a fairly arbit
Re:What about SGI? (Score:2, Insightful)
Need proof? Here's one way you could go about getting it:
(you) Hi IBM, I'm thinking of buying a BlueGene system for my lab, but I'm wondering - what operating system can I install on it?
(IBM) It runs Linux!
(you) But I looked
Re:What about SGI? (Score:2)
(you) Oh okay, no problem. Where can I get the source?
(IBM) When you purchase (and take delivery of) the system, we'll be happy to give you the source upon request. Of course, there's nothing in the GPL that requires that we give source to everyone! Only to those who purchase and take delivery of our binaries.
Re:What about SGI? (Score:2)
That depends: Are we talking today or yesterday?
How 'bout (Score:2, Interesting)
How 'bout this? 1,000,000! It tatkes pretty long on my P3.
1000000! in hex (Score:3, Interesting)
I did it in hex because it was easier to write an efficient algorithm.
And then I decided to write a program which would convert that huge resulting hex number to decimal.
Only, that is when I realized that it would take more computational power to convert that number to decimal from hex, than to start from scratch and do it in decimal "natively".
Re:1000000! in hex (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.cpu-collector.com/menu/searchresults
Anyways I posted this just in case you thought he was jokeing. I
Re:How 'bout (Score:2)
Chaos Theory... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2, Insightful)
100%. Given that we exist on this planet (which is of course a necessary fact in order for there to be a 'we' in the equation), proteins must exist on our planet. The probability of any given planet having proteins evolve is irrelevant as we do not live on just 'any given planet', we must (as a condition of our existence) live on a planet on which life did evolve.
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2)
-Our universe as part of a pool of goop on a planet which exists on a size-scale millions of times greater than our own.
-Humans as the worker-bees trying to create the puzzle pieces of the amino-acids/protiens that are developing in this pool of goop.
-Or maybe a pool of goop inside of some alien uterus or maybe
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2)
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2)
I know my ideas are nothing more than a few of the billions of infinite possibilities of existence. Can you say the same of yours?
Is it dangerous to aspire to such great heights? I think it could be, but I'm still learning (you've helped). There is a balance. I know this much. I intend to position myself just to the left of center because I've found the surface in the middle is a tad slippery.
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2)
Or maybe life evolved somewhere else and arrived here sometime before now. You want to consider that? Or does that just complicate things to much for you, and you'd rather not make pesky distinctions like that between necessary and sufficient?
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2)
And it is certainly not a sufficient condition. Anyone with half a brain knows that just because amino acids were able to come into existence in no way means that intelligent life, much less us in particular, would also come into existence on
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:4, Insightful)
Ah, Chaos Theory possibly the most widely popularised, yet least widely understood areas of mathematics ever. Exactly how is Chaos Theory going to help in counting extrasolar planets, or calculating probabilities? You need to actually have some understanding of the system before you can hope to actually apply any dynamical system theory to it at all. Presently, I don't think we do understand exactly how random chemicals manage to form proteins, and self replicating chemicals. I don't see how a fast computer and a fueld of math largely irrelevant to the subject at hand is going to help.
Jedidiah.
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:5, Funny)
No you don't. Put down the joint before you hurt someone.
Re:Chaos Theory... (Score:2)
Yeah. (Score:2, Funny)
I defeated your girlfriend's firewall... (Score:2, Funny)
"...I can't wait to throw out my girlfriend 1.0 once they finally come up with one that doesn't put up a inpenetrable firewall in bed...."
I defeated your girlfriend's firewall: I used her built-in back door.
Re:Yeah. (Score:2)
That reminds me of that old joke:
"The only thing that a hacker can't get past is a pair of panties"
Re:Yeah. (Score:2)
Impenetrable firewall, or are her available sessions in use?
Re:Yeah. (Score:2)
A few reasons do do an emerge -C girlfriend [nomarriage.com]
Appliccations (Score:5, Funny)
In an apparent first for /. [slashdot.org] today, mo mention of robots, either.
This is OT, but I never noticed it before - the following HTML works here:
Re:Appliccations (Score:5, Informative)
That html works anywhere, its an absolute path on the current server (slashdot.org) the path is
Re:Appliccations (Score:2)
No key cracking (Score:5, Interesting)
And before anyone asks about symmetric/secret-key cryptosystems and hash functions, recall that these are also based on integer operations, so they're safe from the BlueGene as well.
Re:No key cracking (Score:2, Informative)
Logical operations, yup, they're out of scope, but addition and multiplication, which are the heart of all the arithmetic algorithms you mention, can all be hived off to the FPU.
Phil
Re:No key cracking (Score:2)
However, I don't think we can easily do sieving, for instance, using the FPU. That would rule out the most powerful factoring algorithms like NFS and MPQS.
Also, GIMPS is completely different from your ordinary key cracking workload. They're doing huge FFTs on really huge numbers. You can't really compare it to a factoring program working on hundred-digits integers.
Re:No key cracking (Score:2)
Actually, I think it makes sense to keep a intmultiply unit in there for calculating table addresses, it is silly to drop that, hardware is likely to do this faster than
Re:No key cracking (Score:2)
Oh sure (Score:2, Funny)
Penguin Power. (Score:2, Funny)
Their sales of Linux.
Re:Penguin Power. (Score:2)
Error: Division by 0.
If you were to RFTA before submitting... (Score:2, Offtopic)
It is quite clear what these computers are doing. They are designed to compute the folding patterns of protein molecules, a task which requires immense computational power.
Re:If you were to RFTA before submitting... (Score:2)
I read a power point sales presentation and the plan seemed to be secure the top spot on the super computer list and then sell little versions to all sorts of folks.
Anyway I read several interesting
Re:If you were to RFTA before submitting... (Score:2)
Speed of the computer? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Speed of the computer? (Score:4, Informative)
http://www.top500.org/lists/linpack.php [top500.org]
Re:Speed of the computer? (Score:2)
I think you answered your own question. Notice your use of the phrase 'benchmark' is singular? These aren't general purpose machines. I'll put it another way: If you bought a PC for the sole purpose of playing Quake 3, then the Quake 3 demo would be the definitive and ONLY benchma
Just Imagine... (Score:2, Funny)
"A Beowulf Cluster [beowulf.org] of these!!!"
What? No one has posted that already?
that we know of...... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:that we know of...... (Score:2)
I'm surprised somebody didn't make a stale joke about any machine running Windows being the 'fatest' computer. Come to think of it, where are the Beowulf, Longhorn, or Doom 3 jokes?
Yes but does it run Linux like the SGI? (Score:2)
This is a pretty useful thing I think.
Re:Yes but does it run Linux like the SGI? (Score:4, Informative)
The Linux-based host nodes manage user interaction functions, while the Linux-based service nodes provide control and monitoring capabilities.
Linux is also used in I/O nodes, which provide a gigabit Ethernet connection to the outside world for each group of 64 compute nodes, or every 128 processors. Thus, the full BlueGene/L system will have 1024 I/O nodes, which essentially form a Linux cluster.
The actual compute nodes -- the 128,000 processors -- do not run Linux, but instead run a very simple operating system written from scratch by the Project's scientists.
Bluegen at over 70TF (Score:2)
Hats off to IBM for doing an outstanding job. And to the others in the race better luck next year.
Also this runs ppc chips what else do you want an Itanium/Opteron what you want radiation burns.....
PS I posted this on thursday night but the moronic slashdot editor threw it out. This is old news... Anyway... C'est la vie.
Is it needed? (Score:2, Interesting)
Could someone explain to me why this task requires such a monster of a machine? And how can one address (as in write code for) the numerous unknowable factors that seems to be included in the problem that is to be solved? The definition just seems to be too abstract to be an actual solvable problem, and if it is solvable
Too late (Score:2, Funny)
" maybe I should get a stronger PGP key."
We've already calculated your next 250 pgp keys, and divined your future. Hint: avoid badgers.
applications (Score:3, Informative)
Climate modeling (Score:3, Interesting)
Perhaps this could bury the arguments on Slashdot that there is no hard data or serious research about global warming.
Re:Climate modeling (Score:3, Insightful)
Just because people are running a bunch of simulations on climate change doesn't mean the results are useful. If people were running a bunch of simulations on the existence of dragons and fairies, I would hardly expect reasoning people to use that as evidence that they're real.
Re:Climate modeling (Score:2, Informative)
In truth, we don't have enough data, from our past, to understand whether our climatic changes are just brief glitches or undeniable trends.
Re:Again? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Again? (Score:2, Insightful)
They probably did this because NASA/SGI's Columbia machine did over 40 teraflops a few weeks ago and the Top 500 list is coming out this Monday. They wanted to be on top, I think.
Yes, again. But... (Score:4, Informative)
...this time, it's from NASA. http://www.space.com/businesstechnology/nasa_super computer_040809.html [space.com]
There's been a lot of turnover recently. For those of you keeping track at home, it's now:
IBM BlueGene/L (70.7 teraflops, up from36 in your article)
(?) NEC SX-8 (Not yet installed anywhere; estimated 58.5)
NASA/SGI Columbia (42.7)
NEC Earth Simulator (35.9)
Re:Yes, again. But... (Score:2)
Notice how the BlueGene/L folks released a benchmark just barely enough to beat the reigning Earth Simulator. Then, when NASA released its monster, they added nodes in earnest, retaking the "title".
Re:Again? (Score:2)
I agree. On another note, it really bugs me when they hold the Olympics every four years when the record was set a long time ago. Old news.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Hm (Score:2)
Re:Hm (Score:2)
Re:This begs the question: (Score:2)
Get over chess fetish already. It's not what humans are best for.
Re:This begs the question: (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:More Power to the People (Score:3)
That and it's really low power... somwhere in the powerpoint presentations they have a graphic showing the Blue Gene/L uses a little less power than the same volume of IBM thinkpads.
Oh.. and given the costs involved I think idle time will wind up being sort of l