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- <text id=91TT2517>
- <title>
- Nov. 11, 1991: Machines from the Lunatic Fringe
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Nov. 11, 1991 Somebody's Watching
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 74
- Machines from the Lunatic Fringe
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A trillion calculations a second? In a quantum leap for
- supercomputers, a radical new design opens exciting vistas for
- science and industry
- </p>
- <p>By Philip Elmer-Dewitt
- </p>
- <p> When Danny Hillis first appeared on the computer scene in
- the mid-1980s, it was easy to dismiss him--and the
- odd-looking device he called the Connection Machine--as part
- of the industry's lunatic fringe. The chipmunk-faced scientist
- from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology had achieved a
- certain local notoriety from tooling around the streets of
- Cambridge in a secondhand fire engine. As an undergraduate he
- invented a mechanical computer, made entirely out of Tinkertoys,
- that could play tick-tack-toe. And as a graduate student at
- MIT's famed Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, he spent much
- of his time worrying about things like how infants learn to
- recognize their mother's face.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, the concept behind the Connection Machine, a big
- black cube studded with red blinking lights, had the power and
- simplicity of an idea that is too good to be true. Most
- computers built over the previous 50 years had been designed to
- do one thing at a time; they funneled massive quantities of data
- through a single processor (the mathematical engine where the
- bulk of a computer's work takes place). Hillis proposed to break
- this computational logjam by replacing the single high-speed
- processor with large numbers of tiny computer chips that would
- attack the data in concert. The experts scoffed when Hillis
- argued that such "massively parallel" computers would soon move
- into the mainstream of computer science, surpassing in sheer
- speed and processing power even the famous supercomputers built
- by Cray Research.
- </p>
- <p> The experts were wrong. Last week when Hillis introduced
- the Connection Machine's latest incarnation--another sleek
- black box with red blinking lights--most of his predictions
- had come true. Not only can the Connection Machine 5 lay claim
- to being the speediest computer in the world, having bettered
- the most powerful Crays on some problems by a factor of 100,
- but Hillis' company, Thinking Machines Corp., has become the
- leader in one of the industry's fastest-growing markets. The
- first seven customers for the CM-5, who paid from $1.5 million
- to as much as $25 million for models containing anywhere from
- 32 to 1,024 processors, include some of the world's premier
- computer users: the Sandia and Los Alamos National Laboratories;
- the Army High Performance Computing Research Center at the
- University of Minnesota; Syracuse University; the University of
- California, Berkeley; and the University of Wisconsin.
- Schlumberger, an oil-services company, ordered one to help
- interpret seismic data. American Express bought two for
- analyzing customer buying habits.
- </p>
- <p> The success of the Connection Machine marks several
- milestones in computer science. One is the widespread acceptance
- of the parallel-processing approach to computer design. "This
- was a watershed year for massive parallelism," says Gary Smaby,
- a supercomputer analyst at the Smaby Group in Minneapolis.
- There are more than half a dozen start-up companies selling
- parallel-processing computers of one sort or another. Both
- Digital Equipment and IBM, the two largest U.S. computer
- manufacturers, have endorsed the concept (IBM by forming a joint
- venture in September with Thinking Machines), and even Cray
- Research has begun work on a massively parallel supercomputer.
- Japan has selected the technology as the target for one of its
- long-term research undertakings, and at least three Japanese
- manufacturers--NEC, Hitachi and Fujitsu--are busy making
- their own Connection Machine-like computers.
- </p>
- <p> Hillis' achievement also underscores the growing
- importance of supercomput ers--loosely defined as the most
- powerful number crunchers available at any given time. For years
- super computers were applied almost exclusively to
- national-security tasks, such as breaking codes or designing
- ever deadlier nuclear bombs. But the same computers that can
- locate a missile in outer space can also be used to find oil
- deposits in Prudhoe Bay, Alaska, and over the past decade a
- growing percentage of super computer sales have been to
- industry. Today super computers are used for everything from
- crash-testing cars to designing fuel-efficient aircraft.
- </p>
- <p> The most eager consumers of supercomputer time, however,
- are scientists. Over the past five years, the number of
- researchers with access to supercomputers has grown almost a
- hundredfold, to more than 30,000, thanks to a network of
- supercomputer centers established by the National Science
- Foundation, the national laboratories and various state
- governments. In a wide variety of fields from astronomy to
- theoretical physics, computer simulation has replaced laboratory
- experimentation as a basic tool of scientific research. It is
- much easier to study the behavior of ionized gases in a computer
- simulation, for example, than it is to build a full-scale
- nuclear-fusion reactor. "We've whetted an awful lot of
- scientific appetites," says Larry Smarr, director of the
- National Center for Super computing Applications at the
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
- </p>
- <p> But no sooner had scientists and engineers discovered the
- intellectual benefits of supercomputing than they found
- themselves bumping into the computational limits of the current
- machines. Everything they wanted to do, it seemed, required
- 1,000 times more computer power than the fastest machines could
- provide. Today's models, for example, are not able to determine
- the structure of a protein from a sequence of genes. They can
- map the earth's atmosphere or its ocean currents but not the
- interactions between the two. They can predict hurricanes, but
- not such smaller meteorological events as thunderstorms and
- tornadoes.
- </p>
- <p> Last year President Bush's science adviser, D. Allan
- Bromley, compiled a list of 10 of these scientific problems,
- which he called "grand challenges," and asked Congress for more
- than $3 billion over the next five years to develop the
- computers and high-speed networks necessary to solve them. (The
- $638 million budgeted for 1992 is expected to be approved by
- Congress before Thanksgiving.) The centerpiece of Bromley's
- program is a research plan to build by 1996 a so-called teraflop
- machine, a computer capable of performing 1 trillion scientific
- calculations a second.
- </p>
- <p> That goal may be reached sooner than anyone expected. The
- Connection Machine unveiled last week has a modular design that
- can be configured with anywhere from 32 to 16,000 processors.
- "We could build a teraflop machine today," boasts Hillis. In
- fact, a 16,000-processor CM-5 could deliver a peak speed of two
- teraflops--if anyone could afford it. Using today's components
- at current prices, such a machine would fill a room the size of
- a small gymnasium and cost $200 million. Most analysts believe
- that the first teraflop machines will be purchased when their
- price drops below $50 million, sometime in the mid-1990s.
- </p>
- <p> By then customers will have more than Thinking Machines to
- choose from. Intel, maker of the chips that run most
- IBM-compatible personal computers, is expected to announce its
- own teraflop initiative next month at a supercomputer convention
- in Albuquerque. Intel introduced a line of aggressively priced
- parallel supercomputers a year and a half ago and has nearly
- caught up to its Cambridge-based rival. One of its models, an
- experimental system called the Touchstone Delta, surpassed the
- top speed of the previous version of the Connection Machine last
- spring. Meanwhile, new massively parallel machines are expected
- over the next couple of years from Minneapolis-based Cray and
- such smaller companies as Kendall Square Research in Waltham,
- Mass., and Tera Computer in Seattle. By 1995, NEC, Fujitsu and
- Hitachi could be marketing their own teraflop machines.
- </p>
- <p> Who actually sells the first teraflop computer is probably
- less important than who buys it. The big payoff from
- high-performance supercomputing--both in profits and in
- international competitiveness--will come when someone uses a
- Connection Machine, or a competing model, to design a wonder
- drug, a more efficient car or a cleaner-burning fuel. The new
- supercomputers are ready for delivery. It remains to be seen who
- will make the best use of them when they arrive.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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