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SGI Unveils "Personal Supercomputer" Octane III

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If you've ever dreamed about owning a supercomputer, SGI has your back. During the Intel Developer Forum (IDF) that kicked off today and runs until Thursday, SGI introduced what it describes as a "personal supercomputer" called the Octane III. More than just marketing hype, the Octane III comes ready to accommodate up to 80 high-performance cores and just shy of 1TB of memory.

"This new product takes high-performance computing to a new level by combining the immense power and performance capabilities of a high-performance deskside cluster with the portability and usability of a workstation," SGI said in a statement. "The Octane III is uniquely suited for workplace environments and supports a vast range of distributed technical computing applications."

The Octane III will ship with a pre-installed platform with support for several HPC applications, including fluid dynamics, quantum mechanics, molecular dynamics, CAD, and a bunch of other geeky stuff that has nothing to do with running Crysis or gaming in general.

Cost of entry will start at around $8,000.

Image Credit: SGI

COMMENTS
avatarSilicon Graphics is still

Silicon Graphics is still around?  I thought they went out of business last year.

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avataragreed

I could have sworn sgi bit the dust last year also.

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avatar yes but can it render

 yes but can it render Crysis in Daz 3d?

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avatarForget gaming, put this

Forget gaming, put this beast to work on F@H :D

"Life is about living, not stressing" - a very smart girl :)

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avatar"nothing to do with running

"nothing to do with running Crysis or gaming in general."

Damn...I was going to ask.

In all seriousness, this looks awesome...it may be the image but where would an output device (monitor) go?

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avatarnot sure but...

Not sure where the monitor would plug in.  It looks like their might be a dvi port under the power supply though.  It's not like you would ever need anything but integrated graphics on something like this anyway, as I doubt you would be running a traditional desktop OS on something that is mostly for modeling and calculations...
I'm guessing probably linux or unix would be the most likely candidate, and there are probably more headless *nix installs out there than ones with monitors...
### I'm an idiot, and I approve this message ###

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