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Old 2011-12-26, 04:01   #12
axn
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Dubslow View Post
I think 36 of these is closer to two i7's. On a straight clock comparison (I know, that's what nucleon's hesitant about) you'd need around 5 of these to match Intel's quads. I don't think it'll match clock per clock, but even if each ARM clock is 1/3rd of an Intel clock, that's still 15 of these to an i7 (not E series).
On a straight clock comparison you'd need around 5 of these to match one core of Intel's quads. So that's roughly 20 of these. But with a reasonable per-clock expectation of 1/3rd IPC that of i7 (on FLOPs, at least), it'll be more like 60 of them = 1 i7.
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Old 2011-12-26, 19:50   #13
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Whoops. 60=15*4, so at least we agree otherwise. Thanks.
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Old 2011-12-27, 06:32   #14
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another link , this time, done by nvidia
http://www.tomshardware.com/news/nvi...rma,14335.html
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Old 2011-12-27, 07:06   #15
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Originally Posted by science_man_88 View Post
($900/i7 before monitor?) /($25/this) = 1(i7)/36(this) could 36 of this keep up with one i7, my guess is someone's interested.
It's not that simple either. As you have way more machines - networking becomes non-trivial.

To use entry level switches (8 ports). You'd need 6x switches for 36 nodes. In a 5 + 1 arrangement. The price I'm looking at here - 24port 10/100/1000 for $165* - you could get by with 2 of those - $330. That's almost $10 per node.

That's still without power supplies and and multi-socket power boards.

It would till be an interesting exercise to do a full TCO. It's borderline whether you'll save on upfront costs - but it sounds like ongoing cost savings is a possibility.

-- Craig
*That's AU pricing.
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Old 2011-12-27, 11:34   #16
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Quote:
Originally Posted by nucleon View Post
It's not that simple either. As you have way more machines - networking becomes non-trivial.

To use entry level switches (8 ports). You'd need 6x switches for 36 nodes. In a 5 + 1 arrangement. The price I'm looking at here - 24port 10/100/1000 for $165* - you could get by with 2 of those - $330. That's almost $10 per node.

That's still without power supplies and and multi-socket power boards.

It would till be an interesting exercise to do a full TCO. It's borderline whether you'll save on upfront costs - but it sounds like ongoing cost savings is a possibility.

-- Craig
*That's AU pricing.
Shame they don't have wifi. That would solve this problem.
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Old 2011-12-28, 00:09   #17
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Quote:
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Shame they don't have wifi. That would solve this problem.
That would create other problems. 30+ radio sources in a small area, that has to have it's own set of problems.

-- Craig
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Old 2011-12-29, 20:05   #18
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I want BBC Basic on RISC OS.
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