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Jeff's Blog: Day 3
I managed to find a Starbucks, but I swear it's following me everywhere
I go!! To be honest, I don't like Starbucks because I think their coffee
tastes like someone burned the beans. However I do like Seattle's Best
and I managed to find one in Seattle - just across from Pike's Place
Market. I also managed to reacquaint myself with the great Microbrewries
that Seattle has. I also like the small glasses you can get so you can
try all of the various offerings and still remain upright.
Anyway, on to the technical part of our show. I managed to run around
the show floor a bit more on this last day! I stopped by the AMD booth
which is a great way to see what people are doing because AMD's booth
consists of a whole bunch of other companies showing their AMD specific
stuff in the booth. Lots of fun!! I also stopped by the Verari and
Penguin booths which I'll summarize more below.
AMD Booth
AMD had a number of companies in their booth. They had a neat pillar with
a bunch of motherboards from various companies. Some of the boards had
HTX slots (Hyper Transport eXtension) and some had dual sockets and
quad sockets. One also had lots of DIMMs slots per socket (up to 8 in
one case) which screams lots of memory.
PSSC Labs was showing a liquid
cooled 1U server node that was very quiet. The key is that they are using small fans
that run at about 6,000 rpm (the usual 1U fans run at about 12,000 to
13,000 rpm). Very sweet. Should be out later in 2006.
Penguin Computing was
showing THE BEST bar none, desktop cluster I've seen. They have
taken their Blade Runner
4U rack mount and turned it
vertical and slightly repackaged it. In the AMD booth they had a 12
node, dual socket, dual core machine with GigE running Fluent. That makes,
48 cores in a single box that can fit underneath your desk. I'm not sure
of the power or cooling requirements of the box, but this machine is
simply amazing!!! I'll write more about in an SC05 wrapup article and
I hope to have some picture if Penguin will let me publish them. :)
Verari had one of their blades on
display in the AMD booth as well. It's a very nice blade that takes a
COTS motherboard and turns it vertically along with a hard drive and
power supply. Their rack then takes the blades and connects them to
power and communication. Very nice setup I must say.
It's a quick blog I know, but I want to save more of the details for
the SC05 wrapup. :)
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