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NASA Ranks Dell’s Server Among World's Supercomputers

15:33:28 - 10 November 2004

A recently deployed Dell (www.dell.com) high-performance computing cluster (HPCC) at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California is ranked as one of the 50 fastest supercomputers according to the "Top 500 Supercomputing List," The ranking (www.top500.org) was announced Monday at the SC2004 conference on high-performance computing, networking and storage.

JPL, managed for NASA by the California Institute of Technology, has used "big iron" supercomputers for its research and engineering projects since the late 1980s.

However, Dr. Chris Catherasoo, supervisor of JPL's Supercomputing and Virtualization Facility, and his colleagues noticed that clusters of standards-based server systems increasingly ranked among the top supercomputing sites.

"More and more of the top 500 supercomputers are cluster-based," Catherasoo said. "As 'big iron' isn't as cost-effective as standards-based clusters, we decided it was time to move to a solution with better price for performance."

The Dell cluster, to be used for earth and space science research, as well as space craft engineering and design, is comprised of 512 Dell PowerEdgeTM  1750 servers with dual 3.2 GHz Intel®  Xeon processors. The cluster, running Red Hat Linux, has performed up to 4.3 trillion floating-point operations per second (TFLOPS) on the High-Performance Linpack (HPL benchmark).

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