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#12 | |
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Sep 2003
5·11·47 Posts |
Quote:
However, that had no visible effect on the graph: it maintained the same straight line trajectory for another two years. The change of slope in late 2001 seems to coincide with the arrival of Pentium 4s. See the graph of machine types over time. It might also coincide with the discovery of M39 on Nov 14 2001 (exactly two years ago today). Last fiddled with by GP2 on 2003-11-14 at 19:42 |
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#13 | |
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Sep 2003
5·11·47 Posts |
Quote:
There was no noticeable change in the slope of the curve at those times (although there's a bit of a data gap at that point). Last fiddled with by GP2 on 2003-11-14 at 19:46 |
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#14 |
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"Gang aft agley"
Sep 2002
2·1,877 Posts |
Maybe the bulk of new users taking the default work "that makes the most sense" took a dramatic increase in first time LL testing due to typical machine performance suddenly being above the threshold criteria for that task. Perhaps there would have been a slope increase in trial factoring too otherwise.
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#15 |
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Feb 2003
Norway
23×7 Posts |
Is there any way of estimating whether the 'increased increase' stems mainly from
- more participants (suggesting publicity around the M39 discovery) - more computers (suggesting more dedicated users or easier access to computing resources) - or merely quicker computers (P4 and code improvements)? Or even how much each of these factors have contributed? BTW, thanks for very nice and clarifying graphs!
Last fiddled with by mephisto on 2003-11-14 at 21:37 |
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#16 |
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Sep 2003
A1916 Posts |
See also the GIMPS losing popularity? thread, where Complex33 has posted highly detailed graphs (hourly data) of the LL-testing rate in P90 years (but only since May 2003).
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#17 |
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Dec 2003
Hopefully Near M48
2×3×293 Posts |
As of December 5th, 2003:
The virtual machine's sustained throughput* is currently 9511 billion floating point operations per second (gigaflops), or 790.1 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. For the testing of Mersenne numbers, this is equivalent to 339 Cray T916 supercomputers, or 169.5 of Cray's most powerful T932 supercomputers, at peak power. As such, PrimeNet ranks among the most powerful computers in the world. (*Measured in calibrated P5 90Mhz, 32.98 MFLOP units: 25658999 FPO / 0.778s using 256k FFT.) 9.511 Teraflops! |
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#18 | |
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Mar 2003
Braunschweig, Germany
E216 Posts |
Quote:
Thereafter it's time to go for 1000 P90 CPU-years/day
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