Entries tagged as: Just Plain Cool

How Do You Measure the Growth of the Cloud?

Posted by Tony DeYoung on June 24, 2010

I just read an AMD blog on the growth of cloud computing and just how fast the explosion in digital data really is.  This revolution dramatically change the demands on servers.  They need to balance:
- cost
- performance
- I/O capabilities
- low energy consumption
- hardware-assisted virtualization

From the blog: “The explosion of digital data is fundamentally changing the dynamics of how servers are built, bought and deployed. The days of just throwing “raw” performance at the problem are long gone and the era of efficient computing with servers that balance price, performance and power is officially upon us. AMD’s answer to this challenge – the AMD Opteron 4000 and 6000 Series platforms.”

AMD has also created a little video which details out just how fast cloud growth is and how you measure it. It is actually pretty interesting and worth a watch.

Top 11 YouTube Videos About Printing 3D Objects

Posted by Tony DeYoung on May 27, 2010

3D printers are primarily intended for rapid prototyping, bypassing the traditional workflow of sending a CAD model to a machinist and waiting for a product to materialize. Instead you get direct printing of a 3D part.

ReadWriteWeb has posted a listing of the top ten videos about 3D printing. These videos are from FormZ, ProtoPulsion, Z Corp, Print2 3D, and Thing Labs.  There is also a clip of the Star Trek Replicator thrown in for fun.  While there are certainly more 3D printers out there like the HP 3D Designjet, this set of videos gives a nice overview of the technology.

I’m also including an 11th video of the new ZBuilder Ultra, which uses a DLP projector to “project”  UV light onto each layers of UV-light curable polymers. The result is a smooth-finished prototype part that can be used immediately and withstand high-end functional testing. Develop3D has a good overview article on the Zbuilder Ultra.

AMD launches contest giving away an $8,100 Magny Cours 48 core setup

Posted by Tony DeYoung on March 05, 2010

The AMD “What would you do with 48 cores?” contest asks you to write an essay/blog or video describing what you would do with a 48 core system to make the world a better place. The winner receives an $8,100 setup including a TYAN 4S board and four 12-core Opteron Magny Cours processors.

Hopefully, there will be some interesting entries and the winner will be someone who can really take advantage of what is essentially a supercomputer setup.  In particular I was thinking that some OpenCL-savvy developer would describe a compelling new solution since OpenCL can take advantage of all 48 CPU cores (as well as the more traditional GPU cores).

The actual prize is:

  • Four new AMD Opteron processors Model 6174, 12-core (2.2 GHz)
  • TYAN S8812 motherboard: the motherboard is a Tyan S8812 that features 4 processor sockets with the capacity for you to install up to 8 DIMMs per socket
  • one copy of Windows Server 2008

 

Electrolux Global Design competition for industrial design students - green, compact, individual

Posted by Tony DeYoung on February 12, 2010

Electrolux Design Lab is hosting a design challenge for industrial design students that struck me as pretty cool. 

Industrial design students are invited to create home appliances that take into consideration, the shrinking domestic spaces. Your ideas will shape how people prepare and store food, wash clothes, and do dishes in the homes of 2050 when 74%* of the world’s population are predicted to live in an urban environment.  Growing populations living in concentrated areas dictate a need for greater space efficiency. This year, special consideration will be given to designers that submit a design within the context of a range or suite of solutions/appliances. The design ideas should address key consumer requirements; being green, adaptive to time and space, and allowing for individualization.

Deadline: 1 May, 2010

Prizes:
1st prize: €5,000 + 6 months’ paid internship at an Electrolux global design center.
2nd prize: €3,000
3rd prize: €2,000

The video below gives more details. So industrial design students, use your FirePro (or other) cards and win the challenge!

Winners of FirePro cards at SolidWorks World 2010

Posted by Tony DeYoung on February 04, 2010

I go to presentations to learn about what the speaker has to say, but it never hurts that there are random drawings for cool prizes at the end .  At SolidWorks World 2010, the AMD crew were giving out FirePro cards at several of the presentations.  In the pics below the winners from the talks on “Creating Great Images Easily With RealView and PhotoView 360”, “SolidWorks Graphics Performance Analysis & Tuning”, and a winner just for showing up at the AMD booth at the right time of day!

image

How to install a graphics card - So easy, a monkey can do it!

Posted by Tony DeYoung on January 14, 2010

The video says it all (but by way of credibility, the wooly monkey I used to care-take in college could actually work the vending machines!)
FYI:  AMD said they always have tech experts claiming how difficult it is to install a graphics card. So to prove them wrong AMD decided to show that it’s so easy, even a monkey can do it. To create this video ATI actually trained a monkey (Louie)  to install a video card. It certainly does prove the point.

Autodesk Clean Tech Partner Program - free software for early stage green startups

Posted by Tony DeYoung on December 07, 2009

Just in time for the climate summit in Copenhagen, the Autodesk Clean Tech Partner Program grants free design and engineering software to early-stage clean technology companies in North America who are working to solve some of the world’s most pressing environmental challenges. The grant gives you up to five licenses each of Inventor, Revit, Vault, Showcase, NavisWorks and Alias Design.  Kudos to Autodesk! Would like to see more companies put their money where there mouth is.

Total nerd humor:  ATI Evergreen

Posted by Tony DeYoung on September 18, 2009

Update 9/22 - OK - although I thought the YouTube video I had up was a great example of nerd humor, it seems it riled up a few folks and I was asked to pull it off of Fireuser.  So I pulled it.  I want to emphasize that no harm was intended.  I found this video when doing a search for “ATI Evergreen” shortly after the AMD event on Sept 20.  The new DX11 cards from AMD are a big thing, and I was looking for footage form the event, but this video caught my attention and appealed to nerdish humor side.  By the way, if anyone was able to get some footage of the DX11 cards in action for professional applications, drop me a line!

AMDs next generation GPU architecture featuring 2.5 teraFLOPs

Posted by Tony DeYoung on September 11, 2009

imageI can’t believe I was out of town for AMD’s big Sept 10 event.  They announce their Eyefinity multi-display technology (driving up to six monitors simultaneously at resolutions up to 2,560x1,600 pixels each), and they demod Crysis, the standard gaming benchmark for high-end 3D hardware, running on an iPhone.  Huh?

At the event, AMD unveiled its next-generation GPU architecture with 2.5 teraFLOPS of floating-point power (over twice current high-end cards!). To show off how this could translate to applications, they showed OTOY’s software, running on AMD servers and new GPUs,  delivering 3D games in real-time over the Internet to the iPhone. The report from Ars Technica is impressive and worth the read. 

ZDNet also gives some details in the discussion about “cloud computing vs game consoles”

VentureBeat also has a good description of the Eyefinity and how it applies to different markets.

An educated guess as to what will be shown at Monday’s Siggraph Production Talk with OTOY and AMD

Posted by Tony DeYoung on July 30, 2009

I’m generally not a consumer products follower however I recently saw an ATIFirePro twitter post about the Siggraph Production Session Talk Eye-Definition Computing and the Future of Digital Actors, this coming Monday at 3:45PM. So I went to do some research on the presenters and how they all might relate to each other - Jules Urbach from OTOY, Hollywood director Peter Berg (the upcoming remake of “Dune”), and top AMD executive Rick Bergman.

The official blurb reads:  Hear these collaborators discuss some of the ground-breaking advances in hardware and software that enables sophisticated real-time rendering techniques and new delivery models, and forthcoming client and server hardware that has the potential to put the equivalent of a Hollywood render farm in a home set-top box.

But with a little research I came up with this post on TechCrunch referring to high-powered server-side rendering for real-time visualization and gaming delivered to ordinary mortals using any client device through the browser - such as your set top box, your iPhone, your laptop or desktop - at 60 FPS.

No clue if this is what will be shown, but if it is, this is a session not to be missed (also if Rick Bergan is showing up this is probably pretty significant to attend). The video below is not a marketing demo, but from a skeptical Tech Crunch writer playing Grand Theft Auto on his computer, through his browser.

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