-----Original Message-----
From: Tim Cutts [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2008 6:52 AM
To: Lux, James P
Cc: Prentice Bisbal; Beowulf
Subject: Re: [Beowulf] MS Cray


On 17 Sep 2008, at 2:22 pm, Lux, James P wrote:

> But how is that any different than having a PC on your desk?
>
> I see the deskside supercomputer as a revisiting of the "workstation"
> class computer.  Used to be that PCs and Apples were what sat on most
> peoples desks, but some had Apollo or Sun or Perq workstations,
> because they had applications that needed the computational horsepower
> (or, more likely, the high res hardware graphics support.. A CGA was
> pretty painful for doing PC board layout).
>
> Same sort of thing for having the old Tektronix 4014  graphics
> terminal, rather than hiking down to the computer center to pick up
> your flatbed plotter output.
>
> Jim

We don't generally allow people here to buy their own PCs and Apples either.  
They get a standard build from us, all centrally managed by LanDESK.  They also 
get a known type of hardware; they can't just buy what the hell they like. I 
have more than 800 Windows desktops to support.  If they were all different and 
purchased ad-hoc by individual users, I would be in even worse hell than I am 
already.

Most people don't build Beowulf clusters out of ad-hoc piles of machines from 
God-knows-where.  Most of us buy consistent hardware, because it's impossible 
to support anything else.

The Tektronix graphics terminal is slightly different, because it was just 
that, a terminal, and consequently doesn't present such a headache.

Tim

----

Indeed, and such is the case in most large organizations.  Two that I have 
direct familiarity with have slightly different models.  One, in a Fortune 500 
company, had, at any time, only 3 possible hardware configurations for the 
desktop (with literally 10s of thousands deployed), with the actual image 
rolled out every day. Essentially, the disk drive in the box served as a local 
cache.  There were other configurations for software developers, but still, 
pretty much locked down.  The server farms are run separately, by a centralized 
organization, as is the mainframe.  A small "departmental server" (e.g. for a 
software development group to use for testing) would be in a server room 
somewhere, managed by the central org.




  The other, here at JPL, has about 10,000 or so computers of various ages and 
configurations that are managed collectively (as opposed to those being 
Sysadmined locally,e.g. in a lab).  At any given time, there's a dozen or so 
kinds of computers (desktop/laptop/PC/Mac) available, but since the 
configurations are changing, and they have a 3 year recycle time, there's 
probably 30 or 40 configurations in the field at a given time.  The software 
configuration is substantially more consistent, in that there's a basic "core 
software" load of OS, tools (Office, Mail, Calendaring), but people, in 
general, have admin access to their own machine, and are free to install 
anything else (as long as it's legal).  OTOH, if something you add causes 
problems, they're not on the hook to support it, and ultimately, their response 
might be to reimage the disk.  They ARE pushing towards a thin client model, at 
least for non-specialized desktop users (e.g. if all you do is email, 
calendaring, do!
 cuments, and web service consuming). Interestingly, the monthly cost for both 
organizations is about the same ( a few hundred bucks a month for hardware 
lease+service).  We also have "servers for rent" (with SA and 24/7 monitoring 
done by others), as well as various and sundry supercomputers.  A deskside 
supercomputer would fit in the model here fairly well, as just another flavor 
of either high performance desktop machine, or as a small server in your lab.


Jim

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