Image: Intel
At the start of Intel ON, Intel CEO Gelsinger highlighted the supercomputer Aurora, which is supposed to become even faster, almost exuberantly. It should deliver two ExaFLOPS instead of one. After years of delay, Intel wants to find a conciliatory conclusion to the project. At the same time, however, there is a new megalomania.
Only the name “Aurora” has remained
ComputerBase recently reported repeatedly about the problem child Aurora. Announced in 2015, Intel should deliver CPUs and Knights Hill accelerators in 10 nm for the supercomputer to be launched in 2018. The big swan song followed: Knights Hill and the whole family were hired, Aurora didn’t come.
But Intel wanted to keep the prestigious contract, in 2019 a completely redesigned Aurora system with Xe GPUs was promised for 2021/2022. But that struggled with delays, even contractual penalties are now due: In the quarterly report Q2 / 2021, Intel told analysts that it would have to set aside 300 million US dollars for this at the end of the year.
Over 2 ExaFLOPS performance (Image: Intel)
But now Intel suddenly speaks of “Over-fulfillment“Of the contract -“yet again“, Gelsinger also claims. But how does it come about?
Ponte Vecchio does more than expected
When it announced the new Xe GPUs in 2019, Intel designed the supercomputer so that it would definitely reach the mark of an ExaFLOP, and therefore provided many additional nodes and space for more CPUs and GPUs. Because three years ago, the manufacturer didn’t know how good or bad the Ponte Vecchio really would be in the end – and the GPUs in Auroa do most of the work.
It seems that the HPC accelerator chip is now running better than expected, Intel speaks of “well ahead of those performance objectives“, So that the reserve space is not used to reach the 1-ExaFLOPS mark, but to implement a system with over 2 ExaFLOPS peak performance.
The installation of the supercomputer has finally started. The shell of the hall is almost finished, now the system is to follow – in any case this year, as Intel wants to prove with the first pictures. The system should be ready for use in 2022. In the end, Aurora could be the fastest supercomputer for a short time.
Preparations for Aurora (Image: Intel)
The first ExaScale supercomputer comes from China
The first ExaScale supercomputer will most likely not even be the Aurora in the US, it will be AMD’s Frontier. In the global competition, other computers may even have already achieved the goal. As The Next Platform executes China has apparently already had two ExaScale systems in operation since the spring, this just not hung on the big bell.
ZettaScale already in 2027 !?
Recently, Intel’s new head of the supercomputing department claimed that Intel no longer wanted to be so in the limelight when it came to supercomputers. At Intel ON, the U-turn came just days later: After the first hint less than two weeks ago that Intel was aiming for ZettaScale in this decade, the year 2027 was already firmly in place – and Intel of course wants to be first (and be in the spotlight) .
It’s a moonshot with a few roof-top leaps in between..new physics, new system architecture, new… and yes 1000x sounds ridiculous and scary and… exciting #IntelON https://t.co/YYTVsUMcHd pic.twitter.com/Go9EOLiXFQ
– Raja Koduri (@Rajaontheedge) October 27, 2021
Currently and especially after the problems recently, it sounds anything but realistic and almost like megalomania, as even Raja Koduri admits on Twitter. In order to achieve the goal, further massive innovations would be necessary if the system is not simply to be scaled a hundredfold further and thus to consume gigawatts of electricity, as well The Next Platform executes.
To zetta and beyond – With our chief buzz light year@PGelsinger pic.twitter.com/hwK2Sfpx1S
– Raja Koduri (@Rajaontheedge) October 28, 2021
It can be eagerly awaited to see what performance Intel will ultimately produce in 2027, at what price and with what consumption.
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