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LOS ANGELES, Nov.15 (Xinhuanet) -- Microsoft chairman
Bill Gates forecasted on Tuesday the merging of the world's most powerful super
computer with the Windows operating system.
Addressing the Super-Computing 2005 Conference in
Seattle, Gates said he believes that as chips reach gigahertz speed limits, the
need for "parallelism" becomes more important.
"Its exciting to think that we can get the best
brains from super-computing and from mass computing and bring those together and
make great progress in the decade ahead," he said.
He also sketched out an environment in which desktop
supercomputers are linked to more powerful clusters, and a super-computing
system will cost less than 10,000 US dollars.
"Microsoft wants to play a role here, to be a
participant and work with partners to see how our software fits in these
solutions," he said.
"These solutions will often be extremely
heterogeneous," he said, adding that making certain all these systems work
together "is just one element on how software can do a better job."
The Microsoft chairman also said his company is
reaching out tomore super-computing centers to understand "what should we be
doing with our software, how can it connect up to the other software that they
have in a better way?"
By now, Microsoft's Windows has barely won a stand in
high-endcomputing. It is not mentioned at all on the latest world's
Top500super-computing list released this week.
But experts predicted that clusters of cheap
computers with theWindows operating system are almost inevitable in many
respects.
The notion of "mass computing" is pretty evident
especially as researchers turn to low-cost commodity clusters to solve
problems,according to William Kramer, general chairman of the super-computing
conference.
Kramer, head of high-performance computing at the US
Energy Department's Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, said Gates' appearance is an
indication of the growing awareness of super-computing's importance.
"The output of (high-performance computing)
activities are no longer hidden behind a curtain, if you will," he said. "
Super-computing is being scaled down so more people can make use of these very
complicated tools, and I think that's one of the indications of Microsoft's
interest here." Enditem |