Tuesday, February 13, 2007

[Latest CPU] - - OpenMacGrid - Spare Some CPU, in The Name of Science Category


OpenMacGrid - Spare Some CPU, in The Name of Science Category
Softpedia - or later to donate their spare CPU cycles to help researchers with their intensive scientific calculations. This project is similar to the SETI@Home project. SETI is an acronym for the Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence. SETI@home was released

Brave pioneer or mad, reckless fool?
IT-Analysis.com - This is a Sony Vaio VGN-SZ1XP/C not the latest of machines, but with a 1.83Gz dual core CPU, 2Gb of memory, and decent NVIDIA graphics card, was well over the minimum Vista spec. So what happened? Well, it was quite an adventure that is still, in

Rayman Raving Rabbids Cheats and Bugs (Wii and PC) Category: SOFTPEDIA
Softpedia - I could really say that the CPU is cheating, specially in the dancing games, as it subtracts points from your even if you complete it perfectly. Cheat out the unlockables below and the biggest bug in the PC version: Unlock Bonuses To unlock bonuses

OpenMacGrid: spare CPU for science research
MacNN - Leveraging Apple's Xgrid technology, MacResearch.org today announced the first wide-scale, publicly-accessible computing grid: OpenMacGrid allows anyone running Mac OS X 10.4 or later to donate their Mac's spare CPU cycles to help researchers perform

Blade server shootout: Dell vs. HP vs. Sun
Computerworld Australia - We chose the SPEChpc tests not only because we're interested in the blades' HPC performance, but also because they would give each solution a thorough workout, extending to CPU, memory, and interconnect performance. We allowed vendors their choice of

Oracle ships Fusion tools that tie Web 2.0 into business processes
Computerworld - to the WebCenter development environment and services to programmer using Oracle's JDeveloper integrated development environment. The suite can be licensed as an option on top of the Oracle Applications Server Enterprise Edition for $50,000 per CPU.

Intel's 80-core musclechip (and TRUE/FALSE/MAYBE)
Computerworld - Faster than a speeding IT Blogwatch: in which Intel crows about its new 80-core CPU prototype. Not to mention a new Boolean constant Ben Ames reports : Following their march from standard processors to dual-core and quad-core designs in 2006

Oracle debuts first homegrown TimesTen release
Infoworld - with hundreds of TimesTen caches accessing multiple Oracle 10g databases are keen to be able to manage the whole entity as a single integrated unit, he added. Pricing for TimesTen 7 begins from $12,000 per CPU

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