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Old 2004-01-04, 04:16   #12
GP2
 
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Quote:
Originally posted by PrimeCruncher
I think it IS a record. I've rarely seen it above 10 until now, never mind 11.
I believe it is a record:
http://opteron.mersenneforum.org/png/LLspeed.png

This is in P90 CPU-years rather than Teraflops, but the graph is the same.
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Old 2004-01-04, 04:38   #13
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Hmm, the peak could be over now:

The virtual machine's sustained throughput* is currently 10511 billion floating point operations per second (gigaflops), or 873.2 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. For the testing of Mersenne numbers, this is equivalent to 375 Cray T916 supercomputers, or 187.5 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.)
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Old 2004-01-04, 05:20   #14
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Quote:
Originally posted by jinydu
Hmm, the peak could be over now:
Fluctuations are normal. Don't worry about them, just look at the general trend. The next couple of months will be interesting.
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Old 2004-01-04, 15:15   #15
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The virtual machine's sustained throughput* is currently 11015 billion floating point operations per second (gigaflops), or 915.1 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. For the testing of Mersenne numbers, this is equivalent to 393 Cray T916 supercomputers, or 196.5 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.)

It is back above 11 teraflops.
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Old 2004-01-04, 18:02   #16
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It's like watching the DOW market figure, goes up, goes down, up, then down, but overall seems to be going up right now.
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Old 2004-01-05, 12:33   #17
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Even higher now

The virtual machine's sustained throughput* is currently 11246 billion floating point operations per second (gigaflops), or 934.3 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. For the testing of Mersenne numbers, this is equivalent to 401 Cray T916 supercomputers, or 200.5 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.)

Not only is it at 11.246 Teraflops, but it broke 200 T932 supercomputers.
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Old 2004-01-07, 12:08   #18
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Default 12 TFLOPS HOW SWEET

The virtual machine's sustained throughput* is currently 12005 billion floating point operations per second (gigaflops), or 997.3 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. For the testing of Mersenne numbers, this is equivalent to 428 Cray T916 supercomputers, or 214 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.)

For more information, please see the GIMPS home page, the PrimeNet Statistics or the PrimeNet Project Credits.

Current PrimeNet Atomic Clock UTC Time is Wednesday 07 January 2004, 12:05:13
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Old 2004-01-07, 12:35   #19
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Quote:
Originally posted by GP2
Based on the log-scale graph
http://opteron.mersenneforum.org/png...d_logscale.png, we should hit 1000 P90 CPU years/day around April 2004.

It will be interesting to see if the post-M40 boost gets us there sooner.
Sooner. I bet. 996 P90CPUYPD right now :)
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Old 2004-01-07, 17:21   #20
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Quote:
Originally posted by TauCeti
Sooner. I bet. 996 P90CPUYPD right now :)
And you are absolutely right:

The virtual machine's sustained throughput* is currently 12052 billion floating point operations per second (gigaflops), or 1001.2 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. (From the 17:00 report).

We´ve done it
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Old 2004-01-08, 09:19   #21
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The virtual machine's sustained throughput* is currently 12270 billion floating point operations per second (gigaflops), or 1019.3 CPU years (Pentium 90Mhz) computing time per day. For the testing of Mersenne numbers, this is equivalent to 438 Cray T916 supercomputers, or 219 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.)

Higher still
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Old 2004-01-10, 01:58   #22
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12498 billion now. I wonder if the stuff about the Crays should be removed. Those models may have been the fastest in 1995 but now their performance isn't too impressive. A fairer comparison might be to the Cray X1, which has a peak performance of 12.8Gflops per processor and could theoretically support 4096 processors in 64 cabinets, or the SGI Origin 3000.
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