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  • Cerebras Introduces the CS-1 System, Home to World's First Trillion Transistor Processor
2019/11/19 09:32:48
rjohnson11
https://spectrum.ieee.org/tech-talk/computing/hardware/cerebras-unveils-ai-supercomputer-argonne-national-lab-first-installation
 
Cerebras has introduced the world to its CS-1 system, which will house the company's (and simultaneously, the industry's) most powerful monolithic accelerator. The CS-1 is an integrated solution the size of 15 industry-standard rack units, and packs everything from the Wafer Scale Engine to cooling systems. The SC-1 consumes 20 kW of power, with a full 4 kW dedicated solely to the cooling subsystem, like fans, pumps, and the heat exchanger, 15 kW dedicated to the chip, and 1 kW is totally lost to power supply inefficiencies. Obviously, power supply modules and other cooling subsystems are redundant, and hot-swappable if need be - you can imagine the computational value lost with each millisecond of downtime that were to occur in such a system.
 
At 67 centimeters tall, the Cerebras Systems CS-1 offers three times the performance of a Google TPU2 system that takes up 29 times as much space
 
The SC-1 system houses 12x 100GbE connections for pairing with other traditional compute systems, and the SC-1 is also scalable - multiple systems can be made to work in tandem, multiplying processing power by as many units as are integrated, and the entire system being addressable as a single homogeneous system. Power delivery is made directly into core clusters (remember there are 400,000 of those). Already deployed in the Argonne National laboratory, crunch time on the SC-1 is being used to power through cancer research (what an amazing addition to WCG this would be, right?) and black hole research.
 
What an incredible engineering feat in my personal opinion. 
 
 
 

2019/11/19 11:13:11
Cool GTX
Incredible computational power

Powered by a 400,000-core, 1-trillion-transistor wafer-scale processor chip



(excerpt)
The CS-1’s first application is in predicting cancer drug response as part of a U.S. Department of Energy and National Cancer Institute collaboration.
2019/11/19 11:26:32
aka_STEVE_b
Can it play Crysis though ?
 

2019/11/19 16:23:40
Nereus
 
Quantum computing will make this look like a pocket calculator, apparently.
 
 
2019/11/19 19:55:01
GTXJackBauer

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