GCN Home > 12/15/03 issue
Feds look at the big computer picture
By Patricia Daukantas, GCN Staff
Federal R&D policy-makers are trying to revitalize big iron amid concerns that a Japanese supercomputer has held the title of worlds fastest by a wide margin for a year and a half, despite U.S. domination of the top 500 systems.

In one interagency effort, a task force is building a five-year road map for federal spending on high-end computers.

About 60 employees from 10 agencies, including the Office of Management and Budget, are participating in the High-End Computing Revitalization Task Force, said John Grosh, associate director for advanced computing in the Office of the Deputy Undersecretary of Defense for Science and Technology.

Speaking at a November meeting sponsored by IBM Corp.s Center for the Business of Government, Grosh said he expects some sort of sanitized report will be released publicly within a few months.

There is a growing gap between high-end computational resources and the demands users are making on them, Grosh said. The task force has been studying the capacity problem as well as underlying technology and procurement issues.

The interagency task force was one of several federal responses to Japans Earth Simulator supercomputer, which performs faster and more efficiently than any U.S. system. Built by NEC Corp. with 5,120 vector processors, the Earth Simulator clocked nearly 36 trillion floating-point operations per second on a standard benchmark.

In contrast, the worlds second-fastest computer, the classified ASCI Q system at Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, performed 13.9 TFLOPS on the benchmark.

The federal government owns or funds eight of the top 10 supercomputers on the most recent list, at www.Top500.org, and 14 of the top 20.

Among them are systems at five Energy Department laboratories, the Naval Oceanographic Office, and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administrations Forecast Systems Laboratory.

Of the 14 government computers in the top 20, Hewlett-Packard Co. built three and IBM four. Linux Networx Inc. of Bluffdale, Utah, and Cray Inc. of Seattle each built two.

A home-grown cluster of Apple G5 computers at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in Blacksburg made its debut in the No. 3 slot, at 10.3 TFLOPS, and a Dell Inc. Linux cluster at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications in Illinois held the fourth spot with 9.8 TFLOPS.

High-Performance Technologies Inc. of Reston, Va., built the NOAA labs 3.16-TFLOPS Linux cluster.

Energys large-scale plans

In one of the largest single-agency blueprints for scaled-up systems, a new, unclassified supercomputing proposal ranks second out of 28 research programs that Energy has prioritized for the next two decades.
