Linked by Thom Holwerda on Sat 17th Jun 2006 22:22 UTC
IBM A new paper from a group at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, "The Potential of the Cell Processor Scientific Computing" [.pdf], explores the performance of IBM's Cell processor on some specific types of code commonly found in high-performance computing applications. The paper compare Cell's performance on these kernels to the performance of the Cray X1E, AMD Opteron, and Intel's Itanium2. The idea here is that Cell will be a commodity processor (at least that's what the authors and IBM hope), so it'll be a viable HPC alternative for the cost-sensitive academic research market. This paper represents the first formal academic attempt to decide if Cell hardware is something that researchers will want to invest in. So how does Cell stack up in comparison to these three competitors? In a word, it screams.
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RE: Not that impressive
by MediaSex on Sun 18th Jun 2006 11:26 UTC in reply to "Not that impressive"
MediaSex
Member since:
2006-02-08

"One problem with the cell is that it is only single-precision "

Bzzzt!!!

Your competence to comment on the topic is not that impressive.

"Something that you're not likely to spend that much time on in a real world application"

You mean all of us console companies, defense contractors, medical computing, media companies are all wasting our time on Cell based systems???

Oh no!

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