IBM to join in Linux supercomputing effort

The computer, called LosLobos, will connect 256 two-processor IBM Intel-based servers with high-speed Myrinet network cards, said John Patrick, vice president of IBM Internet technology. The machine will be able to perform 375 billion calculations per second, UNM said. Though UNM and its partners in the National Computational Science Alliance intend to use LosLobos for scientific purposes, IBM has its own, more commercial agenda. It believes LosLobos will help researchers adapt this "cluster" approach to running IBM software for business tasks such as email, database hosting, instant messaging or e-commerce, he said. Linux, a clone of the Unix operating system, has displayed remarkable versatility in its spread across the computing landscape. In addition to its most common use in low-end servers, it also is making inroads into sub-PC gadgets and supercomputers. Of the major hardware companies, Compaq has been the strongest backer of so-called "Beowulf" computers, which share a computing task across many interconnected computers, most often running Linux and special software to pass messages among the different nodes. But Compaq, with its high-performance Alpha chip, has been aiming mostly at number-crunchers. Beowulf systems have been popular with scientists who need inexpensive systems to run simulations and other mathematically intense operations. Business use has been limited to number-crunchers such as Amerada Hess, which built a 32-computer Beowulf system from Dell computers. The Beowulf technique may be a great way to gang together lots of cheap computers, but the catch is that software must be extensively rewritten to use the system--and not all computing operations are amenable to being spread across a lot of independent machines. Linux companies see clustering as big business. TurboLinux, for example, offers enFuzion software that lets all sorts of computer--even the Windows boxes in the accounting department that sit around idly all night long--be harnessed to crunch numbers. EnFuzion is in use at JP Morgan and Rockefeller University.