In short, if your software does not exploit parallel processing techniques, then your code is limited to less than 2% of the potential performance of the processor. And this is just for a single processor - it is even more critical if the code has to run on a cluster or a supercomputer.
Personal website of Andrew Jones "hpcnotes" - supercomputing, AI infrastructure, supercomputers, HPC, high performance computing, cloud, scientific computing, hyperscale, exascale, zettascale, GPU, HPC events, opinion, ...
All software needs to be parallel
In short, if your software does not exploit parallel processing techniques, then your code is limited to less than 2% of the potential performance of the processor. And this is just for a single processor - it is even more critical if the code has to run on a cluster or a supercomputer.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)