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Dated December 17, 2002
www.rediff.com - Online Edition
Indian top scientists
are upbeat about the export potential of the country's
latest advanced supercomputer PARAM
Padma, with a peak computing power of one tera flop
(floating operations per second), which costs $5million
-- half the international price.
With the Pune-based
Center for Development of Advanced Computing setting
up its first next generation scalable computing cluster
in Bangalore, the Department Of Science and Technology
will be showcasing its features and advantages to international
customers at the ensuing 90th Indian Science Congress,
being held in the city from January 3-7, 2003.
In view of the 50 per
cent cost advantage India enjoys over its international
rivals in setting up such clusters, C-DAC will be targeting some of the countries, which have
already bought its earlier PARAM
10000 version with a computing power of 100 giga
flops.
"We have been
able to set up India's most powerful supercomputer at
$5 million, which is half the price of similar computers
being sold in the international market," claimed
C-DAC Executive Director Shri. R.K. Arora in Bangalore.
He said PARAM-Padma
would be launched in the next one month.
C-DAC has already sold
about 7 PARAM 10000 supercomputers with 100 giga flop
memory to eight countries so far, including Russia (four),
and Canada, Singapore, and Germany (one each).
"In India, about
45 leading research and development centers and academic
institutions have also installed a series of PARAM's
high performance scalable computers for conducting R&D
activities in diverse fields such as Bioinformatics,
nanotechnologies, atmospheric and oceanic modeling for
weather forecasting, and fluid dynamics for space applications.
Keeping in view the growing needs of the scientific
and industrial communities the world over, C-DAC will
be targeting both the domestic and international customers
for marketing the Padma supercomputer, which can be
scaled up to 16 tera flops," Arora stated.
According to Union
Science And Technology Department Secretary Shri. V.S.
Ramamurthy, the market for supercomputers will triple
to $1.6 billion by 2006 from $0.5 billion currently
in India alone.
"Such cluster
of supercomputers in 8 centers across the country, including
Pune and all the 6 IITs will be networked to form the
India Information Grid (I-grid) in the run-up to set
up an Asian grid on the lines of the European grid under
construction," Shri. Ramamurthy hinted.
Though the Padma cluster
is ready for operations, it will be formally launched
at the C-DAC Knowledge Park on the outskirts of Bangalore.
C-DAC is pulling out
all stops to get Prime Minister Shri. A.B. Vajpayee
to commission Padma as he is scheduled to be in Bangalore
to inaugurate the Indian Science Congress on January
3.
Alternatively, Union
Minister Communications and Information Technology Shri.
Pramod Mahajan has been invited to click its operations.
Currently, Japan boasts
of using the world's most powerful cluster of supercomputers
with 36 tera flops to study the simulation of earth
and various climatic changes.
The US, which has built
a High Performance Computing facility with 13 tera flops,
follows it.
According to Union
Communications and IT Ministry Secretary Shri. Rajeeva
Ratna Shah, the thrust of India's supercomputing machines
will be extensively used in the emerging frontiers of
science and technology such as bio-computation, nano-computation,
weather forecasting, seismic data processing, and structural
mechanics.
C-DAC officials told
rediff.com that PARAM Padma was powered by the centre's
flexible and scalable High Performance Computing software
environment.
"Padma's storage
system has been designed to provide a primary storage
of 5 terabytes, scalable to 22 tera bytes. The hardware
environment is powered by the compute nodes, based on
the power4 RISC processors in symmetric multi-processor
configurations," an official disclosed.
The nodes are also
connected through the primary high performance system
area network, PARAMNet-II, designed and developed by
C-DAC and a Gigabit Ethernet as a backup network.

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