ksuWildcat
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- Mar 23, 2005
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Originally posted by: n0cmonkey
Originally posted by: ksuWildcat
Originally posted by: Eug
Well, if you can afford a 4-way Opteron then great, but those are $$$$$. Two-way machines are sufficient for a lot of people, and much less costly.Originally posted by: ksuWildcat
Very true. If you're into gaming, the A64 is for you. For encoding, possibly a G5 or P4. But I think that most scientific number crunching is left to 4-way+ Opteron systems or SPARCS.
True, but serious scientific simulations are not done on Macs, that's for sure. And a high-end Mac is roughly $4,000. If I were doing simulations all day, I'd put that money toward an Opteron system instead.
SPARCs don't typically do calculations. That isn't even close to their strong point. The 8-way processors might help, but it's still not their specialty.
Alphas were the proc to do with, but they're dead. Thanks Intel!
Opterons and POWER processors are the way to go for crunching server. Macs are also popular choices for workstations. Virginia Tech has some neat ideas though...
Actually, SPARCs are wonderful for massive multithreaded simulations, they offer far better performance than other similar machines. Nearly all complex engineering and physics simulations are run on SPARCs. Of course, try running a single threaded app on a SPARC, and it would be slower than molasses in January.
SPARC Comp Link
As for Macs, the only people who need them are those who either can't operate a PC or have special software needs.
For $3.5k, I can build one heck of a dual Opteron system that would beat any Mac hands down, even running apps that used to favor Macs, e.g. Photoshop. So why spend $3-4k for Mac when there is clearly a better alternative.