News on China's scientific and technological development.

AndrewS

Brigadier
Registered Member
Article from time.com. But the SCMP link has a video of the actual dental implant procedure.

A Chinese Robot Has Performed the World's First Automated Dental Implant

Robots could soon be operating on you by themselves at the dentist clinic.

In China, a robot dentist installed two dental implants for a woman last Saturday, in what could be the world's first fully automated dental implant surgery,
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
the South China Morning Post. Human doctors supervised the whole procedure but did not actively intervene. The surgery, which took place in the city of Xi'an, was first reported by the state-run Science and Technology Daily.

Read more
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Last edited:

Equation

Lieutenant General
Article from time.com. But the SCMP link has a video of the actual dental implant procedure.

I don't know if I could trust this guy to be my dentist. I mean he's got a good smile and does precision work like no one else.;):p:D


14997552775_da64dbb386_k.jpg
 

Hendrik_2000

Lieutenant General
via gxrx Tianhe just double its computing power after upgrade
with domestic processor thanks to Obama embargo
"
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
"

One of China’s supercomputers, Tianhe-2, just received a major upgrade, nearly doubling its power. An announcement from the head of Matsuoka Lab, Satoshi Matsuoka, was made during the International HPC Forum (IHPCF) via a series of tweets. The upgraded computer now performs at a staggering 94.97 petaflops, or 949.7 trillion calculations per second, compared to its previous peak performance of 54.9 petaflops.
The upgrade came from replacing coprocessor chips installed in 2013 and replacing them with domestic chips. The 2013 installation used chips developed by Intel, called Knights Corner Xeon Phi coprocessors, and the original plan was to upgrade the system with upgraded Intel chips. However, the United States issued an embargo blocking the export of these chips to specific supercomputing sites, including the home of the Tianhe-2. In response, China was forced to begin building their own chips. They succeeded in matching the power of the Intel chips with the Matrix-2000 GPDSP accelerators.
 

Figaro

Senior Member
Registered Member
Chinese universities on the rise ...
Chinese universities climb world rankings as University of Tokyo slips to lowest position ever
(KYODO)
LONDON – Three Asian universities made the top 30 for the first time in an influential ranking of the world’s top 1,000 institutions released Tuesday.

The National University of Singapore moved up two places from last year to tie at No. 22 — its best ranking to date — while China’s Peking University climbed two spots to tie at No. 27 and Tsinghua University jumped five spots to reach No. 30, according to the Times Higher Education World University Rankings.

Britain’s Oxford University once again topped the list, now in its 14th year, with the University of Cambridge at No. 2 for the first time. The California Institute of Technology and Stanford University tied at No. 3.

The University of Tokyo, Japan’s top institution, fell seven places to No. 46, its worst-ever performance, with researchers attributing the results to a lower proportion of Ph.D.s, a worsening student-staff ratio and falling research productivity due to a decline in funding.

Next in line for Japan was Kyoto University, which tied at No. 74, up 17 places over last year. A total of 71 Japanese institutions were on this year’s list, 14 of which were new entrants.

“The rise of China in this year’s table is remarkable and demonstrates the way the global higher education landscape is changing,” Phil Baty, editorial director for global rankings at Times Higher Education, said in a statement. He noted that two Chinese schools were listed in the top 30 for the first time.

He added that East Asian nations will need to work hard to stay competitive as China “soars to join the global elite.”

Baty said the University of Tokyo’s continued decline is “a worrying trend” and called on the institution to “diversify its funding streams to remain a key global player in higher education.”

More than half of Japanese universities’ annual revenue comes from government expenditures, but national funding for higher education declined by 12 percent between 2004 and 2015, researchers said.

The comprehensive global rankings assess institutions on several factors including teaching, research, citations, international outlook and industry income.
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 

antiterror13

Brigadier
via gxrx Tianhe just double its computing power after upgrade
with domestic processor thanks to Obama embargo
"
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
"

One of China’s supercomputers, Tianhe-2, just received a major upgrade, nearly doubling its power. An announcement from the head of Matsuoka Lab, Satoshi Matsuoka, was made during the International HPC Forum (IHPCF) via a series of tweets. The upgraded computer now performs at a staggering 94.97 petaflops, or 949.7 trillion calculations per second, compared to its previous peak performance of 54.9 petaflops.
The upgrade came from replacing coprocessor chips installed in 2013 and replacing them with domestic chips. The 2013 installation used chips developed by Intel, called Knights Corner Xeon Phi coprocessors, and the original plan was to upgrade the system with upgraded Intel chips. However, the United States issued an embargo blocking the export of these chips to specific supercomputing sites, including the home of the Tianhe-2. In response, China was forced to begin building their own chips. They succeeded in matching the power of the Intel chips with the Matrix-2000 GPDSP accelerators.

Changing the CPU to Matrix-2000 is very interesting, does it mean the High Performance O/S and most of HP software need to be re-compiled or written?
 

Lethe

Captain
via gxrx Tianhe just double its computing power after upgrade
with domestic processor thanks to Obama embargo
"
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
"

One of China’s supercomputers, Tianhe-2, just received a major upgrade, nearly doubling its power. An announcement from the head of Matsuoka Lab, Satoshi Matsuoka, was made during the International HPC Forum (IHPCF) via a series of tweets. The upgraded computer now performs at a staggering 94.97 petaflops, or 949.7 trillion calculations per second, compared to its previous peak performance of 54.9 petaflops.

The question is if the figure of 94.97 petaflops refers to rMax or rPeak. The description of "almost doubling" previous performance implies the latter, but it is not clearly stated.

The distinction is significant because if the figure is rMax it places it just ahead of world #1 TaihuLight, while if it is rPeak then the system remains in the #2 position.

EDIT: Ok it seems rPeak is a strictly theoretical figure while rMax reflects performance obtained using the Linpack benchmark used to create the Top 500 site/list.

EDIT2: Here is a more detailed article on the upgrade from the Top 500 site. Note that the upgrade is said to be underway, not yet completed:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


It’s unlikely Tianhe-2A will come in at better than 70 or 80 petaflops on HPL.

If the upgrade has added 40 petaflops of rPeak performance, the performance increase alone is greater than the world's #3 machine (rPeak of 25 petaflops).

See:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Last edited:

antiterror13

Brigadier
The question is if the figure of 94.97 petaflops refers to rMax or rPeak. The description of "almost doubling" previous performance implies the latter, but it is not clearly stated.

The distinction is significant because if the figure is rMax it places it just ahead of world #1 TaihuLight, while if it is rPeak then the system remains in the #2 position.

EDIT: Ok it seems rPeak is a strictly theoretical figure while rMax reflects performance obtained using the Linpack benchmark used to create the Top 500 site/list.

EDIT2: Here is a more detailed article on the upgrade from the Top 500 site. Note that the upgrade is said to be underway, not yet completed:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


If the upgrade has added 40 petaflops of rPeak performance, the performance increase alone is greater than the world's #3 machine (rPeak of 25 petaflops).

See:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!

Most likely Rpeak. The interesting question is the power consumption with new indigenous CPUs ... I'd expect even less than 17 MW, so 2x efficiency
 

sanblvd

Junior Member
Registered Member
Also they keep saying that the competitor for exascale supercomputer is on between China, US and Japan.

I did some calculation and don't know if I'm right, if I'm wrong please correct me, judge by the peak performance, the current number one is at 125,435.9 (TFlop/s), or 125.44 petaFLOPS. And 1 exaFLOPS for exascale supercomputer is suppose to be 1,000 petaFLOPS, 1000/125.44 = 800% times more powerful.

And its widely reported that such computer will come online around the year 2020. But looking at the Top 500 performance change, at most it increase by like 50 exaFLOPS per year. I just don't see how in 3-8 years they can go from 20-50% increase year on year to ending up somewhere to 800% increase in just a few year from now.

Did I do my math wrong?
 

antiterror13

Brigadier
Also they keep saying that the competitor for exascale supercomputer is on between China, US and Japan.

I did some calculation and don't know if I'm right, if I'm wrong please correct me, judge by the peak performance, the current number one is at 125,435.9 (TFlop/s), or 125.44 petaFLOPS. And 1 exaFLOPS for exascale supercomputer is suppose to be 1,000 petaFLOPS, 1000/125.44 = 800% times more powerful.

And its widely reported that such computer will come online around the year 2020. But looking at the Top 500 performance change, at most it increase by like 50 exaFLOPS per year. I just don't see how in 3-8 years they can go from 20-50% increase year on year to ending up somewhere to 800% increase in just a few year from now.

Did I do my math wrong?

yes ... it's not entirely correct. You should see it as double performance for 1.5 years, not absolute 50 PFlops

125 PFlops in 2017 ... double in 2018 (250) and then double again in 2019 to 500 PFlops and then by then end of 2020 double it again to 1,000 PFlops or 1 ExaFlops

I don't think Japan would be in the game to race to ExaFlops supercomputer .. it is most likely between China and the US ... and it seems China is more and more likely to win :)
 

Quickie

Colonel
Most likely Rpeak. The interesting question is the power consumption with new indigenous CPUs ... I'd expect even less than 17 MW, so 2x efficiency

The table in the above link says 18 MW, only slightly more than before the upgrade of 17.8 MW. That is more than 2X improvement in energy efficiency in terms of their peak FLOPS performance.
 
Top