Re: Re: xstation
Originally posted by bryanc
But I do have to reign in your speculation that many life scientists get 'fat grants' to blow on hardware. Every lab I've ever worked in has been constrained primarily by cash, and one of the first places people try to save money is in the computers they buy.
I actually wasn't refering specifically to _life_ scientists in this regard. Just to researchers at institutions with some name recognition.
I support machines at a fairly prestigious University and we have some researchers who pretty much get every NSF grant they ask for. Others just don't have the touch and they are still using Powermac 7200/75s. On one hand, some researchers intentionally buy desktop systems over $5000 to avoid paying a support overhead on them (too complicated to explain), while others can't replace 6 year old computers.
This was an unfair generalization as all generalizations tend to be
😀
I should have said that enough of them get those big fat grants to provide a market.
A quad-G5 probably would be beyond 6000,- (the dual G5 costs 3200+ in the German store). You could get one Linux cluster node for about 500.
you do pay a premium for Apple stuff in Europe and you could build a cluster node for cheap in europe for cheap... but you'll end up with a cheap node if you only spent 500 eur. I could build a system for roughly $500 usd, but it would be a biege box that wouldn't come close to comparing with a dual 2GHz G5 in performance. Your $500 node certainly wouldn't be a dual processor box.
One thing to remember is, the dual G5 uses less total power (at the plug) than the previous G4s. quite a bit less. A quad processor G5 would likely use less than a typical dual proc x86 computer.
There are several advantages to a 4 way 970 box over other solutions (and absolute low price isn't one of them).
* high bandwidth between 4 fast cpus and their associated sub-systems. You skirt the latency issues present in clusters, especially budget ones with 4 single processor boxes on a 100Mbit network
* relatively low enviornmental load. Run one, or many without upgrading your power and cooling. In my office, I keep the air running for the computers. If we go through with rehabing our server room for the proposed clusters, we need to pull new 220v lines in and we need to add a new 8-12 ton cooler to the room (with all PPC hardware, requirements would be quite a bit smaller and cheaper)
Sure, you might get more power out of a dozen $500 barebones athlon rigs in a cluster (for some tasks) but your maintenance (physical), administration, setup, and environmental costs will be significantly higher.
In other tasks, the ultra low latency and ultra high bandwidth of a quad processor G5 system could outweigh the potential benefits of a dozen fairly descrete computational nodes.
I was trying to stress these points earlier but I didn't do a good job.