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Report Finds IBM Supercomputers Most Energy Efficient in the World
IBM Dominates Green500; Top 20 Energy Efficient Supercomputers Made by IBM, Also Accounts for 78 Percent of Top 50

A new report, announced today, found that IBM
(NYSE: IBM) supercomputers already deemed the most powerful in the world
are also the most energy efficient according to the findings of the latest
Supercomputing 'Green 500 List' announced by The Green500.org.
The report found that the top 20 most energy efficient supercomputers in
the world are built on IBM high performance computing technology. The list
includes supercomputers from across the globe being used for a variety of
applications such as astronomy, climate prediction and pharmaceutical
research. IBM also holds 39 of the top 50 positions on this list.
The number one most energy efficient system in the world -- an IBM
supercomputer based on QS22 Blade servers at the Interdisciplinary Centre
for Mathematical and Computational Modelling, University of Warsaw
-- produces more than 536 Mflops (millions of floating point operations per
second) per watt of energy.
By comparison, the first non IBM entry on the list offers about half the
performance -- 240 Mflops per watt
-- than IBM's number one system. The most energy efficient system from HP
offer's less than half the performance
-- 217 Mflops per watt
-- than the top IBM system.
The recently announced world's fastest supercomputer in the world, the IBM
petaflop supercomputer at Los Alamos National Laboratories, is ranked at
number nine in energy efficiency, while the second most powerful
supercomputer in the world manufactured by Cray is ranked 80th on the list,
producing only 153 Mflops per watts.
"Modern supercomputers can no long focus only on raw performance," said
David Turek, vice president, deep computing, IBM. "To be commercially
viable these systems most also be energy efficient. IBM has a rich history
of innovation that has significantly increased microprocessor energy
efficiency. We have also driven advances that include our Cool Blue
technology portfolio and added to our Project Big Green solutions that are
designed to simultaneously reduce data center costs and energy use."
The average energy efficiency of all IBM systems on the Green500 list is
135.58 Mflops per watt, significantly higher than the 76.34 megaflops per
watt average of non-IBM systems and more than double that of HP, with a
total system energy efficiency average of 57.22 megaflops per watt.
The Green 500 list is published by The Green500.org. It provides a ranking
of the most energy-efficient supercomputers in the world and serves as a
complementary view to the TOP500 list of worldwide supercomputers announced
earlier this week by Top500.org.
More information about the Green500 List available at:
http://www.green500.org/lists/2008/11/list.php
More information about IBM and HPC Solutions: www.ibm.com/deepcomputing
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