What do you think of this?...


http://www.geek.com/chips/a-99-linux-supercomputer-has-been-built-will-ship-this-summer-1552343/

Geek.com
April 17, 2013

A $99 Linux supercomputer has been built, will ship this summer

By James Plafke

Graphic:
http://www.geek.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/Screen-Shot-2013-04-17-at-5.20.44-PM-590x376.jpg

Cheap, tiny, underpowered computers are becoming a hot new trend in the 
computing world ever since the $25 and $35 Raspberry Pi models broke onto 
the scene. For the most part, the Raspberry Pi gets all the buzz, as it 
both kicked off the trend, and is the cheapest of the cheap, tiny, 
underpowered computers you can get. Now, though, Adapteva is attempting to 
make a splash on the scene with its $99 parallel-processing board for 
Linux. The board may not seem cheap by comparison, but considering 
Adapteva is attempt to bring supercomputer to the everyman for under one 
hundred dollars, it probably deserves a pass for not matching the Pi's $25 
price tag.

For the uninitiated, parallel computing is the process by which various 
calculations are performed at the same time, breaking up a larger problem 
into separate, smaller bits so those bits can be calculated 
simultaneously. Massively powerful supercomputers, such as IBM's Blue 
Gene/P, employ parallel computing.

Dubbed Parallela, Adapteva's board is roughly the size of a credit card, 
similar to the Raspberry Pi, but packs a significantly more powerful 
punch. Parallela comes with 1GB of RAM, 2 USB 2.0 ports, a microSD slot, 
an HDMI connection, and a 10/100/1000 Ethernet port. All of those specs 
are fairly standard for a little $99 computer nowadays, except along with 
the Parallela's ARM A9 processor, it comes with a 64-core Epiphany 
Multicore Accelerator, which helps the board achieve around 90 gigaflops. 
For comparison, that amount of GFLOPS is equivalent to a 45GHz processor. 
Like a majority of supercomputers, Parallela will use a Linux 
distribution; in this case, Ubuntu 12.04.

Video: http://www.youtube.com/embed/CYhaL8hY-0Y

Though Adapteva's Kickstarter campaign was successfully funded back in 
October, the company announced this week that it built the first 
Parallela. For the average consumer, the boards won't suddenly replace 
standard desktops or gaming rigs, but will act as more of a powerful -- 
but cheap and energy efficient -- dedicated box.

The Parallela boards will be shipping this summer, not only to Kickstarter 
backers, but to other customers as well.

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Now read: Use your Raspberry Pi as brain for a terrifying spider robot
http://www.geek.com/news/use-your-raspberry-pi-as-brain-for-a-terrifying-spider-robot-1544636/