|
|
|
|
|
by vidarh
4392 days ago
|
|
My point is that the "super computer" term in itself is quite meaningless. It's pretty much just saying "we thought this thing was fast when it came out". And while this thing doesn't really meet that label at its present scale, it is conceptually far closer to those early supercomputers than what an iPad is, both in how it's structured, the parallel nature of it (16 ARM cores; 128 Epiphany cores), the shared memory (within each Parallella) etc.. So yes, you're being grumpy about a title where it takes about 10 seconds to figure out that this isn't actually about someone building stuff aiming for the Top500. |
|
The Parallella brings distributed-memory programming in, which is a very important development.
You and I strongly disagree on the meaningfulness or definition of the term supercomputer. Here's an easy definition: A supercomputer is any single, unified, computer system that is currently one of the fastest 500 in the world.