Unveiling The UGM: Part 2
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February 3, 2009 The most obvious transition in technology that you see evident in this UGM, is the growth in the importance of GPU hardware. Early UGMs had one GPU, then you would find two gpus, and now with this UGM, three GPUs. I would say that the single most important components for the UGMs mind bending processing power, is its set of triple water cooled BFG GTX 280 graphics cards working in SLI. In the past GPUs were only only used for applications like video games and 3d CAD programs, but now as operating system GUIs require more graphics power, and as companies like NVIDIA allow devlopers to take advantage of the processing power of their chips for new uses with technologies like CUDA, I think we are seeing the GPU rise in importance to the level of the CPU, and maybe then suprassing it.

Also evident in the UGM design, was our search for extremely fast data storage and retreival. We chose to stick two 10,000 rpm Western Digital VelociRaptor hard drives in the machine, and then link them in a RAID 0 array to combine their speeds. If we were to make the product selection at the time of its completion, rather than at the beginning, we would probably use the new Intel SSD drives that are available which provide comperable speed with only one device and no raid array. However, SSDs at this point still make some people uncomfortable about their potential longevity, though that is fading. Because of our discomfort in the fact that SSDs are untested over large periods of time, and that RAID 0 essentially doubles the possibility of loosing all of your data, we decided to pair a Drobo storage device with the UGM to make sure that essential data can be absolutely safe. If we were building a whole network to go with this UGM, we would have probably used a network attached storage device.
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