| By PR Newswire | Article Rating: |
|
| November 19, 2009 05:13 PM EST | Reads: |
174 |
ARMONK, N.Y., Nov. 19 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- IBM (NYSE: IBM) supercomputers are the most energy efficient in the world, according to the latest Supercomputing 'Green500 List' announced today by Green500.org.
(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20090416/IBMLOGO )
The list shows that 18 of the Top 20 most energy efficient supercomputers in the world are built on IBM high-performance computing technology. The list includes supercomputers from Saudi Arabia to Germany and the United States that are being used for a variety of applications such as astronomy, climate prediction and pharmaceutical research. IBM also holds 69 of the Top 100 positions on this list.
Energy efficiency -- including performance per watt for the most computationally demanding workloads -- is a core design principle in developing IBM systems. IBM offers the broadest range of generally applicable supercomputers represented on the Green500 List including Blue Gene, Power servers, iDataPlex, BladeCenter and hybrid clusters.
The number one most energy efficient system in the world -- a supercomputer built at the Julich supercomputing center in Germany as part of a collaboration between IBM and an academic consortium of universities and research centers -- produces more than 723 Mflops (millions of floating point operations per second) per watt of energy.
The IBM supercomputer at Los Alamos National Laboratories -- which first broke through the petaflop barrier and was second on the recently announced Top500 list of the world's most powerful supercomputers -- is ranked the sixth most energy-efficient supercomputer in the world, capable of over 444 Mflops per watt of energy. A non-IBM supercomputer that topped the Top500 list placed 44 on the Green500 List, producing only 253 Mflops per watt.
"Supercomputers can no longer focus only on raw performance. The era of simply adding more processors is coming to a close," said David Turek, vice president, deep computing, IBM. "Clients need to be able to run supercomputers anywhere, not only places that have cheap power. As the Green500 proves, IBM has focused on this issue for some time and is well positioned to usher in performance breakthroughs along with efficiency gains."
The Green500 list is published by Green500.org. It provides a ranking of the most energy-efficient supercomputers in the world and serves as a complementary view to the TOP500 list of worldwide supercomputers announced this week by Top500.org.
More information about the Green500 List is available at http://www.green500.org
More information about the TOP500 List is available at http://www.top500.org
More information about IBM and HPC Solutions: www.ibm.com/deepcomputing
Contact:
Joanna Brewer
IBM
415-971-2777
jmbrewer@us.ibm.com
SOURCE IBM
Published November 19, 2009 Reads 174
Copyright © 2009 SYS-CON Media, Inc. — All Rights Reserved.
Syndicated stories and blog feeds, all rights reserved by the author.
More Stories By PR Newswire
Copyright © 2007 PR Newswire. All rights reserved. Republication or redistribution of PRNewswire content is expressly prohibited without the prior written consent of PRNewswire. PRNewswire shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for any actions taken in reliance thereon.
- Building Private and Hybrid Clouds with Ubuntu 9.04
- Reality Check at the Cloud Expo
- Virtualization Expo New York Call for Papers to Expire January 15, 2010
- Forget Defining Cloud Computing
- What is Enterprise Cloud Computing?
- Current Trends in the Data Management Market
- TIBCO Goes to IBM Before the End of March 2010 -Prediction
- Java vs C++? Really?
- Economy Drives Adoption of Virtual Lab Technology
- How PowerBuilder Got Its Groove Back
- Adaptivity “Platinum Plus Sponsor” of Cloud Expo
- Cloud Computing Defined
- Building Private and Hybrid Clouds with Ubuntu 9.04
- Reality Check at the Cloud Expo
- Virtualization Expo New York Call for Papers to Expire January 15, 2010
- The End of IT 1.0 As We Know It Has Begun
- Forget Defining Cloud Computing
- What is Enterprise Cloud Computing?
- IBM Could "Reinvent" Java: Mills
- Why SOA Needs Cloud Computing - Part 1
- The Transition to Cloud Computing: What Does It Mean For You?
- Reflections on Java Command Line Options
- Current Trends in the Data Management Market
- A Security Analysis of Cloud Computing
- Java vs C++ "Shootout" Revisited
- Where Are RIA Technologies Headed in 2008?
- WebSphere Application Server Java Dumps
- Breaking News: New Internal IBM Report Says "Another Flawed Study"
- Last Exclusive JDJ Interview With "IBM's" John A. Swainson, Now CA's Newly Appointed CEO
- How To Deploy Scalable WebSphere Applications Using "Maven" Build Tool
- The Top 250 Players in the Cloud Computing Ecosystem
- Developing Java and Web Services Applications on Rational Application Developer V6
- Your Guide to Portal Clustering in WebSphere Portal Server 5.1
- Automated Deployment of Enterprise Application Updates
- Profiles for WebSphere Application Server 6.0
- Putting IBM's WAS On Unix - WebSphere Application Server


























