Sujet : Re: 44GB SRAM on a single chip
De : mitchalsup (at) *nospam* aol.com (MitchAlsup1)
Groupes : comp.archDate : 14. Mar 2024, 01:28:41
Autres entêtes
Organisation : Rocksolid Light
Message-ID : <f5e3cfd546121e550d4fd2f2170a8939@www.novabbs.org>
References : 1 2 3
User-Agent : Rocksolid Light
Scott Lurndal wrote:
mitchalsup@aol.com (MitchAlsup1) writes:
Scott Lurndal wrote:
>
Viz. earlier discussions related to memory speeds,
here's a single chip (wafer-sized) with just under
a million cores and 44GB of SRAM. Four trillion
transistors. 21PB/s memory bandwidth. 23kW.
>
https://www.theregister.com/2024/03/13/cerebras_claims_to_have_revived/
>
CPUs were limited to 100 W thermal dissipation,
GPUs got up to 300 W thermal dissipation,
Now you are looking at the thermal dissipation of 10% of an ECL CRAY-1
>
As to making racks of these things. The reason CRAYs were limited to 300 KVA is because that is the largest load a non-governmental electrical
consumer can turn on or off without calling the power company to coordinate
changing the grid (so the power company can prepare to ramp (up or down)
their generating capacity.) It generally takes them 15-30 minutes to prepare for such a change in load.
Modern datacenters dissipate 16 to 20kW per rack, with hundreds
or thousands of racks. Basically a megawatt-hour per square meter
with cooling factored in.
Yes, but racks (or motherboards with the racks) are power cycled individually.