When you have a farm with 2500 cards in it 210 000$ is peanuts.
Double it.
That heat has to go somewhere.
Link? Hasn't Sandia Nat. Labs been on NVIDIA GPUs for awhile now? Either way, it's not surprising that a GPU has performance/watt than a CPU in some types of scientific calculation (look at F@H).Nvidia did a conversion with their current Tesla for I believe Sandia National Laboratory. The reduction in electricity and heat for the same performance was astronomical. In this case 2500 Tesla's would eliminate a lot of CPUs and with it electrical and heat.
Nvidia did a conversion with their current Tesla for I believe Sandia National Laboratory. The reduction in electricity and heat for the same performance was astronomical. In this case 2500 Tesla's would eliminate a lot of CPUs and with it electrical and heat.
Btw. for the HPC market this is a HUGE drawback.
Imagine the OAK RIDGE running 2'500 cards at 3d peak 23/7.
That's 3.5GW/year or $350'000 (.1$/kWh in TN).
2'500 5870s ≈ $210'000.
It's been all but confirmed the TDP is 250w, not 275w.
Well, there's supposedly only a 480 shader part available, instead of the full-fledged 512 shader part, so where was he wrong?One month ago he said the GTX 480 was both broken and unfixable with single figure yields which should mean we don't see it at all. Obviously he's right about that too.
It wasn't. NVIDIA had to wait for the 55nm refresh before the GTX295 was possible.I mean he said the same thing about the GTX 295 which wasn't supposed to be possible according to him, oh wait, don't tell me, there are lots of GTX 295's, he wasn't wrong about that as well was he?
Well, there's supposedly only a 480 shader part available, instead of the full-fledged 512 shader part, so where was he wrong?
I'm confused. What exactly do you mean by that? Are you finally admitting that Rollo has a sickness with his completely pro-NV/anti-ATi crusade? That he is 100% biased against ATi and 100% pro NV? That if he ever has anything negative to say about NV, he does it very mildly and throws in a comparison of ATi and how many levels of magnitude more evil they are? That he has a total lack of respect and a total presence of contempt?Good to see we are on the same page.
Broken and unfixable could mean a lot of things. Maybe Nvidia is going to release a chip that can't compete with the Radeon 5XXX series in price and performance, nor availability and will not be able to until the next refresh. If that ends up being true, then his broken and unfixable statement was right on the money.
Broken and unfixable could mean a lot of things. Maybe Nvidia is going to release a chip that can't compete with the Radeon 5XXX series in price and performance, nor availability and will not be able to until the next refresh. If that ends up being true, then his broken and unfixable statement was right on the money.
Broken and unfixable would mean no release at all, not that it has slightly less shaders.
If you want to get picky about the exact number of shaders, then quoting Charlie-who-is-never-wrong from that same article:
"the short answer is that the top bin as it stands now is about 600MHz for the half hot clock, and 1200MHz for the hot clock, and the initial top part will have 448 shaders. On top of that, the fab wafer yields are still in single digit percentages."
So he said 448 shaders not 512 or 480 anyway. Getting picky he says the top clock is only 600, current rumours say 675-700. fab yields in single digits - current rumour is < 50%.
HAHAHAHAHA.
Hold on...
HAHAHAHAH.
Wow.
HAHAHAHAHA.
Hold on...
HAHAHAHAH.
Wow.
But isn't what dguy said exactly what Charlie said to begin with..?
He was overly dramatic and ridiculous with the "broken and unfixable" crap.. but as I remember it he was never claiming that Fermi will never be released.. only that it would be 'impossible' to manufacture at spec for profit. Thus it would likely have a poor price/performance ratio, would be exceedingly rare, would be sold as an undercut version, or simply would be unable to make a profit.
Certainly we have no idea of which of those if any is the case... but to black and white the situation as he meant all or nothing, thus is either right or wrong, seems a tad bit silly.
Perhaps I just don't understand what is so funny...
How do you know? That's your interpretation. Charlie's "source" could have said "the 512-shader part is f***ed, it won't be released" and Charlie spun that as "broken and unfixable." Is it biased, yes, is he wrong, no. We still don't have a 512-shader part. Furthermore, that could have been the case at the time Charlie's source reported in, and maybe NVIDIA's engineers will stumble upon something that allows them.Broken and unfixable would mean no release at all, not that it has slightly less shaders.
That's a very liberal interpretation, but it still might be a possibility.Broken and unfixable could mean a lot of things. Maybe Nvidia is going to release a chip that can't compete with the Radeon 5XXX series in price and performance, nor availability and will not be able to until the next refresh. If that ends up being true, then his broken and unfixable statement was right on the money.
How do you know the engineers weren't able to squeeze out 480 shader chips (one more unit enabled) just before release? Or maybe TSMC pumped out enough chips that they could have enough stock of 480 shader chips for release? There's tons of things that probably change in the weeks leading up to a launch, never mind the months that this particular one has taken. The funny part is you fanboys hate him, yet you put him on such a high pedestal so that you can knock him down any chance you get. Kind of ironic that you hold him in such high regard. He's a reporter, that's it. People feed him information or he gleans it from his sources and then writes bombastic articles about it.If you want to get picky about the exact number of shaders, then quoting Charlie-who-is-never-wrong from that same article:
"the short answer is that the top bin as it stands now is about 600MHz for the half hot clock, and 1200MHz for the hot clock, and the initial top part will have 448 shaders. On top of that, the fab wafer yields are still in single digit percentages."
So he said 448 shaders not 512 or 480 anyway. Getting picky he says the top clock is only 600, current rumours say 675-700. fab yields in single digits - current rumour is < 50%.
Not an accurate comparison. How many 5870's will it take to equal the computing output of fermi for what oakridge is using them for?
You got it wrong.Getting picky he says the top clock is only 600, current rumours say 675-700. fab yields in single digits - current rumour is < 50%.
Perhaps I just don't understand what is so funny...
Not sure how many people here have any ideas about HPC, but 100k per year more or less for energy is peanuts, just imagine what those SGI Altix with hundreds of CPUs and TBs of RAM need..
In HPC, performance/watt is one of the (if not THE) most important factors. And if the power usage is as high as it would seem, fermi had better have the performance to back it up or NV won't see near as large a gain in the HPC market as they have aimed for.
No it's not, if you spend millions of dollars 100k more or less isn't that relevant.Whether 100k is peanuts or not is inconsequential.