145k PPD bigadv.

McRat

Diesel Hotrodder
Aug 2, 2006
11,249
26
38
64
Norco CA
www.mcratracing.com
:eek:

I just turned CrayZ3 back on after a little tune-up, and it's folding a 6900 WU in 12:10 average TPF. This supposedly is 145k ppd according to HFM. The tune up was an improvement in RAM settings, and turning off NUMA. NUMA is a technology where one CPU on a multi-CPU system can use the RAM from other CPU banks. It slows down FAH because it FAH is not a "NUMA-aware" program.

CrayZ3:

Evga SR-2 motherboard
Li Lian PC V2120 case
Silverstone 1000w powersupply
2x X5650 6-core 3.96ghz Xeon CPU's at 22x multiplier and 180 baseclock, with 1.30 volts.
6x 1GB Kingston ValueRam DDR3-1333 running at DDR1066 with 1.65 volts.
2x Hitachi 1TB HDD's in RAID 0
2x Noctua 120mm CPU coolers. Keeps these CPU's down to 70°C
ATI 5770 graphics
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0290[1].jpg
    IMG_0290[1].jpg
    314.9 KB · Views: 21
  • IMG_0292[1].jpg
    IMG_0292[1].jpg
    407.1 KB · Views: 19
  • IMG_0291[1].jpg
    IMG_0291[1].jpg
    309.7 KB · Views: 18
  • IMG_0296[1].jpg
    IMG_0296[1].jpg
    261.1 KB · Views: 19
  • IMG_0295[1].jpg
    IMG_0295[1].jpg
    245.9 KB · Views: 17
  • IMG_0294[1].jpg
    IMG_0294[1].jpg
    457.1 KB · Views: 15
  • IMG_0293[1].jpg
    IMG_0293[1].jpg
    245 KB · Views: 16

McRat

Diesel Hotrodder
Aug 2, 2006
11,249
26
38
64
Norco CA
www.mcratracing.com
PS - My nickname for it is Miss Piggy. I had to bring it work yesterday to test a 3D engineering scanner, and DAMN!! :eek: Even though it's an aluminum case, this monster weighs 70 lbs and has no handles. Hauling it up and down stairs ain't a lot of fun ...
 

McRat

Diesel Hotrodder
Aug 2, 2006
11,249
26
38
64
Norco CA
www.mcratracing.com
If it remains stable (it was completely stable at this speed for New Year's Thrash), we should see results by the morning. This thing folds bigadv in under 24 hrs.

If anyone is contempting such insanity, be aware that both Intel and AMD are releasing the next gen server technology this year. This machine will be "old school" by the end of the year, and cheaper systems will crush it. Cost on this is about $3500. It is pointless unless you have a need for a mass video editing, 3D modeling, or other special applications that can fully use a dual CPU computer or more than 64GB of RAM.

I only rarely need this kind of power for work, hence why it's at home. Residential electricity is cheaper than work rates, and this eats 530w.
 

RKTMech

Idiot with a wrench
Aug 18, 2008
936
0
16
The Norco's
PS - My nickname for it is Miss Piggy. I had to bring it work yesterday to test a 3D engineering scanner, and DAMN!! :eek: Even though it's an aluminum case, this monster weighs 70 lbs and has no handles. Hauling it up and down stairs ain't a lot of fun ...

So its a form of geek pilates hauling miss piggy around :hug:
 

McRat

Diesel Hotrodder
Aug 2, 2006
11,249
26
38
64
Norco CA
www.mcratracing.com
I NEEDED it!

I heard the next version of EFILive will actually be able to change your pistons out, beef up the crank, and open up the injector holes. But you'll need a computer like Miss Piggy to run it...
 

McRat

Diesel Hotrodder
Aug 2, 2006
11,249
26
38
64
Norco CA
www.mcratracing.com
I'm a little worried though.

The points difference at this performance level is insane. I don't think this is good for the project.

Miss Piggy uses 530 watts yet makes the same PPD as either:

140 PS3's
30 normal SMP machines
10 GPU cards
100 OS/X notebooks.

And very small changes in performance at the 100K+ level make big changes in PPD.

Miss Piggy only makes a small fraction of the gigaflops of any of those other choices.

With the new generation of chips coming out, it will make matters worse.

I can easily see people turning off their machines as being "futile" when a single machine can make so many points. But nobody knows which program is going to do the most good for mankind. It could even be one of the Classic WU's that finds a cure.
 

DAVe3283

Heavy & Slow
Sep 3, 2009
3,727
296
83
Boise, ID, USA
Just think, there will be this much computing power in a $500 notebook in 10 years if history teaches us anything.
That's more my style. Desktop replacement notebook FTW! I already built my server for the next 4 years or so, but my XPS laptop is pretty old now, it's about time for something better. If only you could cram the machine you built into a laptop case, I'd be in heaven. That's a sweet rig!
 

C.C.Reed

New member
May 1, 2008
91
0
0
So with the new technology I don't need to waste my money ($17000) on this because it will be obsolete?

80K PPD just on the GPUs plus the dual 6 core X5680 overclocked at 4.3GHz in -bigadv ought to kick out some serious PPD.

It's ri-damn-diculous. . . in a good way.

This configuration has a built in liquid cooled XBOX360 but you will soon be able to get a PS3 so you can have the extra 1000 ppd to push you over the top.

:spit:

bigO_features_main.jpg


Origin PC - The Big O

Code:
   *Case / Tower
              o Custom DD tower 29 Case

    *CPU/ Chipset / Memory
              o CPU
                    + Dual Intel Xeon X5680 Overclocked to 4.3GHz - Liquid Cooled
              o Chipset
                    + EVGA SR2 Motherboard - Liquid Cooled
              o Memory
                    + 12GB Corsair GT 2000Mhz

    *Cooling
              o Liquid
                    + ORIGIN High-Performance Dual CPU & GPU Liquid Cooling
                    + Chipset Liquid Cooling

    *Graphics
              o Quad SLI EVGA GTX 580 FTW - Liquid Cooled

    *Storage
              o Primary
                    + Quad OCZ 50GB Vertex2 in RAID 0
              o Secondary
                    + Dual 2TB WD Caviar Black
              o Secondary
                    + LSI Megaraid SAS 9260-4i

    *PSU
              o 2x Enermax 1050 watt PSU

    *Optical Drives
              o 12x Pioneer Blu-ray burner

    *Connectivity
              o Dual Integrated Gigabit Ethernet NIC
              o External 802.11 a/b/g/Draft-n Wireless LAN (Optional)
              o Rosewill Media-card reader

    *Audio
              o On board Audio

    *Operating System
              o Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit

    *Rear I/O Ports
              o (1) PS/2
              o (8) USB 2.0
              o (1) IEEE 1394a
              o (1) eSATA 3GB/s
              o (1) S/PDIF Out (TOSLINK)
              o (1) S/PDIF Out (Coax)
              o (6) Audio Ports

    *Controllers
              o FC3 fan controller
              o LED Strip lighting with Remote Control

    *Consoles
              o Liquid Cooled Xbox 360
              o 5 port switch

    * Personalization / Warranty
              o Personalized Plaque
              o Free Lifetime Phone and Online Support
              o 3 Year Free Shipping and Free Part Replacement Warranty

    *Shipping
              o ORIGIN Wooden Crate Armor

    *Price
          MSRP: $16,999.00
 

Mike

hmmm....
Feb 17, 2007
2,184
0
36
San Angelo, TX
I'm a little worried though.

The points difference at this performance level is insane. I don't think this is good for the project.

Miss Piggy uses 530 watts yet makes the same PPD as either:

140 PS3's
30 normal SMP machines
10 GPU cards
100 OS/X notebooks.

And very small changes in performance at the 100K+ level make big changes in PPD.

Miss Piggy only makes a small fraction of the gigaflops of any of those other choices.

With the new generation of chips coming out, it will make matters worse.

I can easily see people turning off their machines as being "futile" when a single machine can make so many points. But nobody knows which program is going to do the most good for mankind. It could even be one of the Classic WU's that finds a cure.

As a " team effort " we contribute what we can and when we can. I like keeping up with the points as a benchmark to changes I make but in no way do I worry over personal rank or production. Hell, I'm having fun giving what I can.
 

seth999

Wheeewwwww!!!
Jul 1, 2009
439
0
0
Corbin,KY
I found my new notebook:happy2:

Description
Unit Price
Price


EON-17 High Performance Laptop
$2,625.00 $2,625.00

Customizations:

Laptop Exterior: Laptop Exterior: Design True Fire


The ORIGIN Difference: Truly Custom PCs. Want a component that is not on our site? Call or email us and we will include it in your system.
Included

Chassis and Primary Display: EON17 platform with Intel Core i7 and 1920 x 1080 Full HD 17.3" LED Backlit Glossy Screen
Included

Graphics Card: Dual 2GB GDDR5 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 480M (4GB of Total GFX)
$1,360.00

Processor: Intel Xeon X5680 3.33GHz LGA 1366 Hex-Core Processor (12MB L3 Cache)
$1,351.00

Memory: 24GB Triple-Channel DDR3 SDRAM at 1333MHz - 3 X 8GB - Extended lead time
$2,911.00

RAID Configuration: RAID 0: For better speed and performance (2 or more identical drives needed) - ORIGIN Recommended


Hard Drive One: 512GB Kingston V+ Series - Solid State Drive
$1,332.00

Hard Drive Two: 512GB Kingston V+ Series - Solid State Drive
$1,375.00

Hard Drive Three: 512GB Kingston V+ Series - Solid State Drive
$1,375.00

Optical Drive: 6X BD-R Blu-ray Burner/8X DVD+/-R/2.4X +DL Super-Multi Drive w/Power DVD 10 Ultra - 3D Blu Ray
$265.00

Audio: Integrated High-Definition Audio with 4 Channel support
Included

Networking: Intel Centrino Ultimate-N 6300 Wireless dual-band module - Up to 450 Mbps
$49.00

Bluetooth: Internal Bluetooth Module
Included

SuperSpeed USB 3.0: Two SuperSpeed USB 3.0 Ports
Included

Media Card Reader: 9-in-1 Media Card Reader
Included

Finger Print Reader: Integrated Biometric Fingerprint Reader
Included

Web Camera: Built-in 3.0 Megapixel Video Camera
Included

Operating System: Genuine MS Windows 7 Ultimate 64-Bit Edition
$100.00

Warranty: 1 Year Part Replacement and Free Shipping Warranty with DVD image and Lifetime Support
Included

No Dead Pixel Guarantee: No Dead Pixel Guarantee
Included

ORIGIN Maximum Protection Shipping Process: ORIGIN Wooden Crate Armor
$39.00


Additional Charges:

Free ORIGIN T-shirt: ORIGIN T-shirt XLarge



Product Subtotal: $12,782.00

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 

McRat

Diesel Hotrodder
Aug 2, 2006
11,249
26
38
64
Norco CA
www.mcratracing.com
First "portable" computer I used was a Kaypro? It weighed 35lb and had a 9"? screen. It was about the size of a small microwave.

The joke was calling them Lugables.