The Tesla Personal Supercomputer is
a desktop computer that is backed by Nvidia and built by Dell, Lenovo and other
companies. It is meant to be a demonstration of the capabilities of Nvidia's
Tesla GPGPU brand; it utilizes NVIDIA's CUDA parallel computing architecture
and powered by up to 960 parallel processing cores, which allows it to achieve
a performance up to 250 times faster than standard PCs, according to Nvidia. At
the heart of the new Tesla personal supercomputer are three or four Nvidia
Tesla C1060 computing processors,
which appear similar to a high-performance Nvidia graphics
card, but without any video output ports.
At the heart of the new Tesla
personal supercomputer are three or four Nvidia Tesla C1060 computing
processors, which appear similar to a high-performance Nvidia graphics card,
but without any video output ports. Each Tesla C1060 has 240 streaming processor cores
running at 1.296 GHz, 4 GB of 800 MHz 512-bit GDDR3 memory and a PCI
Express x16 system interface. While typically using only 160-watts
of power, each card is capable of 933 GFlops of single precision floating point
performance or 78 GFlops of double precision floating point performance.
Introduction
of NVIDIA Tesla Personal Supercomputer:
NVIDIA (Nasdaq: NVDA) is the world
leader in visual computing technologies and the inventor of the GPU, a
high-performance processor which generates breathtaking, interactive graphics
on workstations, personal computers, game consoles,
and mobile devices. NVIDIA serves the entertainment and consumer market with
its GeForce® products, the professional design and visualization market with
its Quadro® products, and the high-performance computing market with its Tesla™
products. NVIDIA is headquartered in Santa Clara, California, and has offices
throughout Asia, Europe, and the Americas. Certain statements in this press
release including, but not limited to, statements as to: the benefits,
features, impact, and capabilities of the Tesla GPU computing processor and
CUDA architecture; are forward-looking statements that are subject to risks and
uncertainties that could cause results to be materially different than
expectations.
Important factors that could cause
actual results to differ materially include: development of more efficient or
faster technology; adoption of the CPU for parallel processing; design,
manufacturing or software defects; the impact of technological development and
competition; changes in consumer preferences and demands; customer adoption of
different standards or our competitor's products; changes in industry standards
and interfaces; unexpected loss of performance of our products or technologies
when integrated into systems; as well as other factors detailed from time to
time in the reports NVIDIA files with the Securities and Exchange Commission
including its Form 10-K for the fiscal period ended January 25, 2009.
Copies of reports filed with the SEC
are posted on our website and are available from NVIDIA without charge. These
forward-looking statements are not guarantees of future performance and speak
only as of the date hereof, and, except as required by law, NVIDIA disclaims
any obligation to update these forward-looking statements to reflect future
events or circumstances.
Processor
of NVIDIA Tesla:
At the heart of the new Tesla
personal supercomputer are three or four Nvidia Tesla C1060 computing
processors, which appear similar to a high-performance Nvidia graphics card,
but without any video output ports. Each Tesla C1060 has 240 streaming processor
cores running at 1.296 GHz, 4 GB of 800 MHz 512-bit GDDR3 memory and a PCI
Express x16 system interface. While typically using only 160-watts of power,
each card is capable of 933 GFlops of single precision floating point
performance or 78 GFlops of double precision floating point performance.
KEY
FEATURES
GPU
<< Number of processor cores:
240
<< Processor core clock: 1.296
GHz
<< Voltage: 1.1875 V
<< Package size: 45.0 mm ×
45.0 mm 2236-pin flip-chip ball grid array (FCBGA)
Memory
<< 800 MHz
<< 512-bit memory interface
<< 4 GB: Thirty-two pieces 32M
× 32 GDDR3 136-pin BGA, SDRAM
External
Connectors
<< None
Internal
Connectors and Headers
<< One 6-pin PCI Express power
connector
<< One 8-pin PCI Express power
connector
<< 4-pin fan connector
Tesla Architecture
• Massively-parallel many-core
architecture
• 240 scalar processor cores per GPU
• Integer, single-precision and double-precision floating point operations
• Hardware Thread Execution Manager enables thousands of concurrent threads per GPU
• Parallel shared memory enables processor cores to collaborate on shared information at local cache performance
• Ultra-fast GPU memory access with 102 GB/s peak bandwidth per GPU
• IEEE 754 single-precision and double-precision floating point
• Each Tesla C1060 GPU delivers 933 GFlops Single Precision and 78 GFlops Double Precision performance.
• 240 scalar processor cores per GPU
• Integer, single-precision and double-precision floating point operations
• Hardware Thread Execution Manager enables thousands of concurrent threads per GPU
• Parallel shared memory enables processor cores to collaborate on shared information at local cache performance
• Ultra-fast GPU memory access with 102 GB/s peak bandwidth per GPU
• IEEE 754 single-precision and double-precision floating point
• Each Tesla C1060 GPU delivers 933 GFlops Single Precision and 78 GFlops Double Precision performance.
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