[Beowulf] FW: $2500 cluster. What it's good for?
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Alex Vrenios alex at DSRLab.comSat Dec 18 09:04:26 PST 2004
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Hi, The SETI at home group could use some extra cycles, and I understand that the AIDS research people have a similar approach. The question now becomes: "How do I run a Win screen saver on my cluster? Speaking of "value clusters" my 8-node Compaq DeskPro 386 cluster cost me just under $2000 back in 1995. It runs Linux Red Hat 4.2 because nothing more recent would fit on a 30 MB hard drive! I am looking into a project for it. Running MOSIX might be fun and I would love to parallelize the SETI code - any thoughts? The only math reference I could find is Papagiannis, "The Search for Extraterrestrial Life: Recent Developments," Int'l Astro Union, Symp #112. Dr. Alex in Phoenix > -----Original Message----- > From: beowulf-bounces at beowulf.org > [mailto:beowulf-bounces at beowulf.org] On Behalf Of Jim Lux > Sent: Saturday, December 18, 2004 8:53 AM > To: beowulf at beowulf.org > Subject: [SPAM] [Beowulf] $2500 cluster. What it's good for? > > I think it would be interesting to contemplate potential uses > of a $2500 cluster. Once you've had the thrill of putting it > together and rendering something with POVray, what next? > > You want to avoid the "gosh, I can run 8 times as many > Seti at Home units as I could before" or "Look, I can calculate > Pi" kind of not-particularly-value-laden-to-the-casual-observer tasks. > > Sure, there's some value in learning how to build and manage > a cluster, but I think the real value is in doing something > useful with that $2500. So, what sort of "useful" could one > do? Say you were to negotiate with your spouse to get $2500 > to play with (or you were able to get a "mini-grant" at a > high school). Is there something that is useful to the > "general consumer public" that could be done better with a > cluster than with a $2500 desktop machine? > > One computationally intensive task that might be applicable > is making panoramas from multiple digital photos. It's > incredibly tedious and time consuming to stitch together 30 > or 40 digital photos into one seamless panorama (google for > PanoTools and PTGui for ideas). > > What about kids in school? Is there some simulation that, if > clusterized, would be more interactive and useful? > > What about interactive rendering from one of NASA's world > view databases: > layering the terrain models and imagery to do "fly bys"? > > Are there consumer type iterative optimization problems that > could profit from a cluster? In my own fooling around, I do > lots of antenna simulations, which are essentially > embarassingly parallel. The ham radio community likes > "scrounged and homebuilt" solutions to problems, so the $2500 > cluster is a potential winner there. > > What about outreach to poverty stricken branches of academe > who don't use computers much? literary analysis searching > texts for common phrases? > figuring out how to fit potsherds together? > > Jim Lux > > > > _______________________________________________ > Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf at beowulf.org To change your > subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit > http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf > >
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