NVIDIA Tesla Personal Supercomputer
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.
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