A Private Home For Retired Supercomputers 164
Steve writes "Every geek has wanted to play with a Cray supercomputer. Hexus.net had the rare opportunity to meet up with a man who has something of a fetish for collecting them! They got a look at some of the amazing kit Armari - a systems integration company - have in their possession. Ever wanted to see inside a Cray T3D MPP, or maybe the gargantuan machine that is the T90? Now is your chance!"
Cray (fish) (Score:2, Funny)
YMP... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:YMP... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a lot like comparing a luxury yacht to an aircraft carrier. Sure, the carrier is pretty damn cool, has lots of capacity, and lots of features. Unfortunately, the carrier is probably not going to move an inch without a full crew and military grade servicing. All of those great things you thought you would get from buying an old carrier [fleetairarmarchive.net], you find would have been better served with a new yacht.
Re:YMP... (Score:2)
You make military grade service sound like a good thing. Silly civilians...
Re:YMP... (Score:2, Funny)
1inuk5 ROXORS!!!
M$$$$$F7 SUXORS!!!
Dude, I'm so 31337!!!
Can you imaging a beowulf cluster of these?
I for one, welcome our new Super-Computer overlords.
???, Profit!!!
7H47'5 7H3 5P0K3!
Hot grits
Natalie Portman
See? Content. I'll bet I'll get modded down for it though. Slashdotters NEVER appreciate any real content.
Re:YMP... (Score:3, Informative)
Most forms of user-interactive programs or branch-heavy logic. You see, many supercomputers used EXTREMELY long memory pipelines that placed the processor 100+ clocks behind the memory being fetched. A single branching instruction usually resulted in a task switch to the next queued process, thus keeping processor usage high.
The end result is that these machines
A 'Me Too' post... (Score:1)
Amazing how fast a cluster of Cray YMPs can execute "Hello world"!
Re:YMP... (Score:2)
The operational cost of keeping them powered is often pretty high, and if you get too old of a unit, then they are easily outpowered by a desktop computer. Then you have the special purpose vs. general purpose machine, as vector machines don't do so well in many mundane tasks.
Re:YMP... (Score:1)
Users loaded data into a VMS process which piped it to the Cray, the Cray ate it, and piped the answer back.
(Hey I was 18!)
Re:YMP... (Score:1)
BTW...real men ran COS on their Cray, not fruity Unicos.
The Y/MP-48 that I used at the Pittsburgh Supercomputing Center was tricked out the same way.
Now is pretty short... (Score:4, Funny)
Yeah, cause in 10 minutes it'll be slashdotted...
Re:Now is pretty short... (Score:3, Interesting)
OS wise
Re:Now is pretty short... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Now is pretty short... (Score:1)
Re:Now is pretty short... (Score:3, Interesting)
I recall studying an early (Nazi Germany era) jet engine. It had all kinds of very sophisticate systems (e.g. liquid cooled turbine blades) to get around metalurgical limitations. Some of the features actually went from nearly 50 years before they were implemented again when materials technologies were a limitation and exotic work-arounds were required.
Yes, history may have passed t
Re:Now is pretty short... (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not about the machine, as much as the man and the philosophy behind the machine.
Seymour Cray was one of the first true legends of computing. His mixture of sheer architectural intelligence and interesting personality quirks made him one of computing's first media stars (for small niche values of media). His architectural philosophy was to do one thing and do it well. For example,
Re:Now is pretty short... (Score:3, Informative)
I haven't actually RTFA but the two models listed in the submission aren't actually Seymour's designs. The T90 is Seymour inspired but I don't think he was anywhere near where it was built. I don't think the T3E has anything to with him, and am not sure he would have liked it much since its kind of a commodity CMOS(DEC Alpha) based MPP and nothing like anything Seymour would have designed. Thats one of the problems with Cray's deity status, his name has been tacked on so many companies and computers at th
Re:Now is pretty short... (Score:1)
Slashdotted Already?? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Slashdotted Already?? (Score:2, Insightful)
Not trying to be an ass here, but why do people always say this. Isn't the site most likley to be slashdotted when the story is new. Or should the server some how manage very heavy load and then get tired? I don't get the logic behind the "Slashdotted Already".
Re:Slashdotted Already?? (Score:2)
Re:Slashdotted Already?? (Score:2)
Re:Slashdotted Already?? (Score:2)
Of course, you'd need a little extra hardware to digitize the signals in the first place...
just think (Score:2, Interesting)
yeah, sure (Score:5, Funny)
You mean now as in tomorrow when the slashdotting is over.
mirror. (Score:2, Informative)
t3d_2_big.jpg [abellaracing.com]
td3_psus_big.jpg [abellaracing.com]
t3d_wiring_big.jpg [abellaracing.com]
t90_2_big.jpg [abellaracing.com]
t90_system_board_big.jpg [abellaracing.com]
Re:mirror. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:mirror. (Score:1)
Mirror Slashdotted... My Turn To Mirror (Score:4, Informative)
Mirror of Mirror slowing down already - my turn! (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.whitepost.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/mirror/t 3d_psus_big.jpg [blueyonder.co.uk]
http://www.whitepost.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/mirror/t 90_2_big.jpg [blueyonder.co.uk]
http://www.whitepost.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/mirror/t 3d_wiring_big.jpg [blueyonder.co.uk]
http://www.whitepost.pwp.blueyonder.co.uk/mirror/t 90_system_board_big.jpg [blueyonder.co.uk]
Re:Mirror of Mirror slowing down already - my turn (Score:1)
Nice design on the T3D enclosure (Score:2)
Wonder where he got them? Maybe the codebreakers are using Beowulf clusters now...
Re:mirror. (Score:5, Funny)
> t3d_2_big.jpg
> td3_psus_big.jpg
> t3d_wiring_big.jpg
> t90_2_big.jpg
> t90_system_board_big.jpg
Slashdot.
Porn for Nerds. JPGs that matter.
Mummies of the digital age (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Mummies of the digital age (Score:1, Funny)
Bender: That's right, we want some money! Wait what's this about Fry.
Leela: He's a nice guy, but we think it's about time he got his own place.
Professor: Oh Fuff, he's not causing any trouble. Now if you don't mind I'm rather busy, I seem to have mislaid my alien mummy. This sarcophagus should contain the remains of emperor Nimballa who ruled Zooban5 over 29 million years ago.
Fry: Hey Professor, Mmmm great jerky.
Professor: My God, this is an outrage. I
Coral (Score:2, Informative)
Ive always wanted... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Ive always wanted... (Score:2)
Re:Ive always wanted... (Score:1)
Re:Ive always wanted... (Score:1)
Old Macs (Score:1)
makes me nostaligic (Score:2, Interesting)
this makes me miss punch cards and the fear you had of getting them out of order.
it makes me miss...ti calculators where if you held down three of the corner keys, the thing would bypass the on button.
sigh...i miss the old days.
Re:makes me nostaligic (Score:1)
that old sunday school teacher that i had for an english teacher used to get so mad at me for doing math in her class...but discussing the significance of the shadow of a tree in the third act of some play written in olde english just wasn't that appealing to me.
Ah.. memories (Score:5, Funny)
(years of beer have killed a few neurons, so memory's a bit fuzzy... :-) )
Re:Ah.. memories (Score:4, Interesting)
The biggest machine was a huge Cray T3E [leeds.ac.uk] - I don't recall any blinkenlights on it, but it didn't need them! I recently heard that turing.mcc.ac.uk has since been dismantled, presumably because it was no longer cost-effective for its mere few hundred Gflops. I've no idea what was done with it and its parts, or what (if anything) it has been replaced with, but it's what I thought of when I saw this article.
Re:Ah.. memories (Score:2)
The biggest machine was a huge Cray T3E - I don't recall any blinkenlights on it, but it didn't need them! I recently heard that turing.mcc.ac.uk has since been dismantled, presumably because it was no longer cost-effective for its mere few hundred Gflops. I've no idea what was done with it and its parts, or what (if anything) it has been replaced with, but it's what I thought of when I saw this article.
Yeah I saw a T3E once too, at the local supercomputer center. Quite impressive. When they upgrade
Re:Ah.. memories (Score:1)
Wishful thinking, I guess
Re:Ah.. memories (Score:1)
You can tell the university wasn't the richest because it didn't replace the old machine with one of comparable size.
A couple years later someone got an 8-processor SGI machine that was the size of the fridge. I looked inside. The processors too
Re:Ah.. memories (Score:2)
Re:Ah.. memories (Score:1)
Mirror (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Mirror (Score:2, Informative)
Price tag (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Price tag (Score:1)
And £99'999.999,00 shipping and handling!
Re:Price tag (Score:1)
Re:Price tag (Score:2)
Computer History Museum (Score:4, Informative)
Computer History Museum website [computerhistory.org]
Re:Computer History Museum (Score:2)
Original Cray Museum? (Score:2)
Re:Original Cray Museum? (Score:2)
So how fast are they exactly? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So how fast are they exactly? (Score:3, Informative)
The T90 had 32 x 450mhz CPUs that could do 4 ops per cycle, which comes out to 1.8GFlops per chip and 57.6Gflops for the whole shebang.
The real differnce however is not raw cpu horsepower, but memory bandwidth, latency, and scaling. I don't know nearly enough about supercomputers to be able to explain that in detail.
-Dan
Overheard in the rest home. (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, but... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Yes, but... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
Oh, was that not the Gibson [williamgibsonbooks.com]you were reffering to?
The Vic 20? (Score:2)
Re:The Vic 20? (Score:2)
Yeah. Those of us with other computers wondered why anyone would buy a Vic 20.
Re:The Vic 20? (Score:1)
Put together a decent workstation too... (Score:2, Informative)
Back in the day (c. 1999) I needed a new workstation. Armari set me up with Dual PIII-400's, LVD-SCSI HD, lots of RAM. Man that was a dream machine in it's day. Set me back of the (then) equivalent of $5,000 but it cut through my compliations like a knife through butter.
Still running. Man it's a crap machine now though!
bah, small fish (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.digibarn.com/friends/jamescurry/index.
It has to be the most comprehensive collection of Cray systems in the world (including Cray's facility in Chippawa falls?).
(Please do not post it on the front page of slashdot without digibarns permission). Those pictures are quite a bit outdated, as he no longer lives in that state and has added more systems since then.
I believe he had over 11 before. He donated a few to someone, I forget who.
IBM System/360 (Score:3, Interesting)
S/360 is interesting because it was one of the first standardized architectures created by a computer company. Before that, each seperate machine had its own instruction set and architecture, and they were incompatible with each other.
A mid-sized functional IBM System/360 is quite a sight. Multiple cabinets of core memory, CPU cabinets, tape systems, consoles with thousands of blinkenlights... A real fun system to watch in operation.
Hopefully someone out there still operates one for fun. It's expensive, but we have rich geeks right? }:)
-Z
Re:IBM System/360 (Score:1)
Re:IBM System/360 (Score:1)
Seymour Cray (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Seymour Cray (Score:1)
A couple of technically oriented videos were made by these folks describing the system. (http://www.bibl.ita
T90 not an MPP (Score:5, Informative)
The T90, on the other hand, is a pure SMP. The processors all sit on a shared bus (actually 256 parallel shared buses). Each CPU was really fast (for the time) and had really big pipes to memory, and really expensive.
Sorry, just picking nits.
Cray vs. CDC/Cyber (Score:2)
In the early (?) days the Cray XMP got the most attention, but CDC continued to make supercomputers. The Cyber-205 was it's main competitor. Funny, I can't find a web page dedicated to it. I wonder if anyone collects them.
A few places (such as Purdue) even had one of each.
Re:Cray vs. CDC/Cyber (Score:1)
Mirror (Score:2)
Mirror #1 [dhs.org]
Mirror #2 [earlham.edu]
Cray 1 Sofa (Score:1)
Pictures of it (Score:3, Interesting)
Dans machine wasn't quite (apparently) 'the first off the production line - Edinburgh uni (where this T3D came from) wanted one that could be upgraded without a lot of hassle. Cray could only offer them this one, which was their testbed unit, wired for a full complement of processors, but not fully populated. That's why it's innards are absolutely stuffed full of wires. Each wire is also a specific length, to ensure that the length of time it takes for electricity to flow down the wire is accurately accounted for in terms of clock ticks.
The power switch that the author wished he'd taken a picture of is here [glasgownet.com]
I loved Dans demo of the differing weight of cooling liquids. He had a milk bottle full of water, weighing a kilo or so, and then an identical bottle weighing about 3 kilos. The plumbing for the liquid cooling was done by a bottling plant systems manufacturer in Daytona if memory serves, and the metal braided hoses that are used in it are of the same type used in Formula One and Nascar cars. Wicked stuff
Head in a cray (Score:1)
site: http://my.execpc.com/~cfmit/
It is a great fieldtrip.
Cray Museums (Score:2, Informative)
Site: my.execpc.com/~cfmit/
Museum of Industry and Technology
21 East Grand Avenue
Chippewa Falls, WI 54729
715.720.9206 tel
The University of Minnesota also has a Virtual Cray Museum. http://www.cbi.umn.edu/exhibits/cray/index.html
You can own it, but you can't run it! (Score:1)
Re:You can own it, but you can't run it! (Score:3, Funny)
Brings back memories! (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, being the very first system, 6001's barrier channel had a bunch of issues to resolve. Armed with just a prom-emulator (each cpu used a serial prom to load it's initial bootcode) and a T
best quote... (Score:2)
Must been some machine to see...
Idea (Score:1)
Bragging rights... (Score:2)
Red.
Re:How bored do you have to be (Score:3, Insightful)
Steam Traction Engines
Brunnels Suspension Bridge
Model T Ford
Stutz Bearcat
AC Cobra 427
GT 40
Jaguar D Type
All of these could be seen as scrap metal but to some people they become important. It's the same with old computers, what I would give to run a some jobs on a B4955, nostalgia has great value.
Given the current malaise of the computing industry looking forward and back to better times is a way of get over the crap we currently have to deal with.
Re:yeah but... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:yeah but... (Score:2)
don't ask me whose longhorn tho hehe
Yeah it will.. (Score:2)
before it's finished startup.
But then, it's a supercomputer! So it will then pop-up a message apologizing for the mess and asking for one chance to correct itself. When you click ok, it will close the pop-ups, clean the viruses, get rid of Outlook and then download and install Firefox and Thunderbird
Re:Yeah it will.. (Score:2)
You're not IBM-compatible, HAL [bgu.ac.il]
Re:Retired? (Score:2)
Re:Retired? (Score:1)
Shouldn't that be:
In Soviet Russia, retarded Beowulf cluster imagines you!
Re:Retired? (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Retired? (Score:2)
Re:Should I be impressed? (Score:2)
I sold two J932se's a while ago, and have a 3rd one for sale in the works. Keeping #4.