IBM today powered up what it claims is the world's most powerful
privately-owned supercomputer, the Watson Blue Gene system, nicknamed BGW,
installed at the IBM Thomas J Watson Research Center in Yorktown Heights, NY.
With a processing speed of 91.29 teraflops, the system is expected to join
its sister machine, the Blue Gene/L supercomputer installed at Lawrence
Livermore National Labs (currently the world's fastest), as one of the top three
supercomputers.
BGW comprises 20 fridge-sized racks but is still less than half the size of
conventional systems that boast comparable computing power, according to Big
Blue.
IBM plans to use the system to explore a range of fields from business
applications to life sciences, hydrodynamics, materials sciences, quantum
chemistry, molecular dynamics and fluid dynamics.
"IBM researchers will use BGW to accelerate discovery in a variety of
disciplines," said Tilak Agerwala, vice president for systems at IBM Research.
"Researchers, scientists, engineers and inventors can now ask more questions,
test more theories, try more designs, and simulate more conditions than was ever
possible before."
One of the first applications to be deployed will be Blue Matter, the
software framework developed as part of the science effort within the Blue Gene
project at IBM Research, which is used to run protein dynamics simulations for
drug development.
IBM said it also intends to provide access to BGW computing resources to
academic and industrial researchers undertaking computationally intensive,
large-scale research projects.
The machine will also be used by IBM's Center for Business Optimization, a
newly launched consulting and software unit, which will develop and run advanced
mathematical algorithms for a variety of client problems.
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