Six Companies Awarded $258 Million From US Government To Build Exascale Supercomputers (digitaltrends.com) 40
The U.S. Department of Energy will be investing $258 million to help six leading technology firms -- AMD, Cray Inc., Hewlett Packard Enterprise, IBM, Intel, and Nvidia -- research and build exascale supercomputers. Digital Trends reports: The funding will be allocated to them over the course of a three-year period, with each company providing 40 percent of the overall project cost, contributing to an overall investment of $430 million in the project. "Continued U.S. leadership in high performance computing is essential to our security, prosperity, and economic competitiveness as a nation," U.S. Secretary of Energy Rick Perry said. "These awards will enable leading U.S. technology firms to marshal their formidable skills, expertise, and resources in the global race for the next stage in supercomputing -- exascale-capable systems." The funding will finance research and development in three key areas; hardware technology, software technology, and application development. There are hopes that one of the companies involved in the initiative will be able to deliver an exascale-capable supercomputer by 2021.
In the era of Quantum computers ... (Score:1)
Socialism, right? (Score:1)
These people don't make enough money? Please! It's just another handout.
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When the USA does this its essential to "security, prosperity, and economic competitiveness"
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but do we get something for that money compared to the return on say giving a bunch of inner city savages money?
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No, that only applies to the universities. This stuff will be locked down, if not by copyright/patents, then by being classified. Anyway China is doing it [sciencealert.com], so why not us, right? Another fine example of state run capitalism, or is it capitalist run state?
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No it doesn't. Who says government backed research will be public domain and not patented? Such a naive idiot.
Who says it has to be public domain to be a benefit to the public? I use many products whose IP are not in the public domain, and they still provide me more utility than the money I spend on them (or else I wouldn't buy them).
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we won't get ANYTHING out of the US being a leader in developing the largest, most powerful computers in the world.
You become a leader by properly funding and staffing the educational system, not by giving handouts to your multi-billion dollar buddies in the business. Besides most of that money will end being spent on lobbying for more money.
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New nuclear weapons testing can be simulated?
Re:Socialism, right? (Score:4, Funny)
These people don't make enough money? Please! It's just another handout.
You're kidding, right?
Defense spending is supposed [youtube.com] to be a handout to tech industry.
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better than spending billions on weapons systems that the pentagon doesn't even want
Imagine a Beowulf cluster of these ! (Score:1)
obligatory Beowulf reference
Ready for overruns (Score:2)
> with each company providing 40 percent of the overall project cost
So, the six companies are going to contribute 240% of the project's cost? I guess they're already expecting overruns.
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no they give the 60% of the project cost of each company and the company pays 40%. that's the individual projects.
combined they are that 430 something million.
so sounds like they have multiple projects and each company runs their own project of which they pay 40%.
or rather.. come on.. it goes like this. the company gets the 60% from goverment and then uses that 60% to run the project as their own funds and pockets the 20% difference as profit.
Exascale supercomputers (Score:2)
Just trying to keep up with the Chinese, I see ...
Flash player (Score:2)
Does this mean that firefox will finally be able to run flash without coming to a complete standstill?
Is it actually useful? (Score:2)
Sure, there are problems that need some serious computation, but could they also be done with smaller (large) computers working longer? Super computers are generally a shared resource anyway.
One wonders whether this is a real investment in progress, or just a keep up with the Chinese project. Or like the international space station, nothing to do with science.
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Sure, there are problems that need some serious computation, but could they also be done with smaller (large) computers working longer? Super computers are generally a shared resource anyway.
The Department of Energy likes to use supercomputers to run exceedingly detailed simulations of nuclear weapons, in all sorts of states, from exploding to moldering away inside of ballistic missile submarines. For the exploding part, they do it because the US has signed treaties agreeing not to detonate real ones as tests anymore. For the moldering part, they're trying to verify that they'll still explode properly if needed, again without actually dragging one out of a submarine and trying it out. Being
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You do not answer the question, probably do not know the answer.
To restate the question, is this a good use of research funding? Is computation a serious limitation. Obviously we all want faster computers so that we can write slower software, but that does not actually advance anything. Is it like the atom smashers, were every extra bit of energy adds a bit more knowledge? Or is it polishing a round ball, with much better uses for the funding, like AI research for example.
You would not be in a position
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It's down to picojoules (Score:4, Insightful)
I remember an article a couple of years back on this subject, and it explained that exascale computing is not feasible unless the energy cost of moving a single bit around goes down from the picojoules range into the femtojoules.
The closest reference I can find now is:
http://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-... [ieee.org]
The relevant part is:
"Data needs to move on interconnects and they found that even using some really cool emerging technology it still cost 1-3 picojoules for a bit to go through just one interconnect level"
Why do we need this? (Score:1)
I thought Trump knew everything! Why don't they just ask him what he believes that answer should be. If the research comes to a different conclusion, they'll just ignore the faulty research anyway.