Friday, November 02, 2007

More details on SGI's new graphics push

[ thank you insideHPC.com - keep it coming! ]

More from insideHPC on the SGI refocus on graphics:

Well, I know a little birdy who’s at IEEE Vis this week. He ran into the SGI engineer in charge of developing their next generation graphics platform. This is what the birdy told me in an email today

I asked him about their CEO’s comments about getting back into the visual supercomputing business. He said that they were developing a new visual supercomputer based on the x86 architecture (no surprise there) using Intel’s Larabee project. The likely target date for us to see this computer is 2009, which corresponds to when Larabee is due. Until then they plan to use ATI/NVidia graphics cards. He says that the CEO believes they can retake the high-end graphics market.



Interesting that SGI is using x86 for this and not Itanium, even with Intel's massively upgraded Itanicapabilities...

AMS-IX tops 350 Gbps

AMS-IX just keeps carrying more and more traffic. Their latest figures top 350 Gbps:

Take note Teraco / JINX!

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Municipality infrastructure

[ [ [ James Carlini ] via MidwestBusiness ] via Casey Lide ] via David Isen
If your municipality isn’t looking at creative ways to develop new strategies that include having a state-of-the-art network infrastructure to support economic growth and development, they will be stagnating your property value and quality of life in your area . . . Simply put, the three most important words in real estate ('location, location, location') have turned into 'location, location, connectivity.

Friday, October 26, 2007

Some basic stats on Net Theory's popularity

Using Google's Webmaster Tools, I've discovered some interesting information on how the Net Theory blog is ranking on various [semi-]strange search queries:





ranksearch term
#3nets wikipedia
#4emotional cruelty
#6cell c number / cell c number portability
Roll on the crushing of the competition!

It's interesting to compare these results with the Daily Fail vs dailyfail issues experienced recently.

Dailyfail vs Daily Fail

It's interesting to compare the search results for The Daily Fail using two different search phrases:
dailyfail, which currently yields 2nd place.
daily fail, in which The Daily Fail blog doesn't rank at all!

Obviously the breaking space is significant. I've updated some content with both versions and we'll see how it plays.