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http://www.techtv.com/screensavers/supergeek/story/0,24330,3474732,00.htmlPS2 Supercomputer
Everything you need to know to understand our discussion with Craig Steffen, one of the scientists working on a supercomputer made of Sony PlayStation 2 consoles.
Watch today at 7 p.m. and tomorrow at 8 a.m. and 12 p.m. Eastern.
By Tom Merritt
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Deep in the heart of Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, some very smart people have linked together a room full of Sony PlayStation 2 game consoles. They use the cluster as a tool for scientific computing and high-resolution visualization, harnessing the unique properties of the PS2\'s main computer chip. Machine rooms are staffed 24 hours a day.
Yes, HAL, the insane computer of "2001: A Space Odyssey," originated in Champaign-Urbana. Coincidence? I think so.
Does today\'s guest, Craig Steffen, actually work with a PS2 supercomputer? Yes. He explores new technologies for making clusters of computers. Here are a few more dirty details to help you get the most out of our interview with him.
What is a cluster?
The PlayStation 2 consoles are linked in a computer cluster, often called a Beowulf cluster, where several computers are linked together to harness their combined computing power as one machine. You can learn more about computer clusters at Beowulf.org.
Why a cluster of PS2s?
The group plans to use the PS2\'s 3-year-old design as a test bed and learning tool until Sony releases the PlayStation 3.
"[We want] to provide a test platform for multimachine programs that use lots of resources that people might be interested in running on PS2s," Steffen says.
There are two parts to the investigation:
Make PS2s into a cluster (70 machines) as a platform.
Develop the capability to use Vector Units properly on that platform.
I still don\'t get it. Why PS2s?
Two things make PS2s unique:
Graphics processor and main CPU on same chip
According to Steffen, the PlayStation 2 differs from PCs by having a general-purpose processor and its specialized graphics processor on the same die (computer chip).
"The CPU core can use the graphics hardware [Vector Units] to do numerical calculations," Steffen explains. "This allows you to write general-purpose programs that use the computational power of the Vector Units."
Linux for the PS2
Sony makes a Linux kit for the PS2. The Linux kit includes hardware that turns the PS2 into a general-purpose computer. Steffen says the Linux distribution provides them with the access and tools they need to harness the CPU.
Linux hobbyists can buy the kit for around $200. You need to dedicate a memory card to it.
Just tests so far
The group has run a few scientific applications on the cluster. The tests simulated interactions of quarks and gluons in subnuclear particles.
Who are these people anyway?
The National Science Foundation funds the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) and awards groups computing time. Since it\'s centralized, the NCSA can staff machine rooms 24 hours a day.
The NCSA built the 70-node PS2 cluster. A group of three or four people in the University of Illinois computer science department work on the application end of things.
Get more details about the project at the Scientific Computing on the Sony PlayStation 2 webpage set up by Craig Steffen and the NCSA folks.
Joshua Brentano contributed to this article.
Posted July 10, 2003
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More details at:
http://arrakis.ncsa.uiuc.edu/ps2/