Mail & Guardian

We’re flopping faster than a speeding tsessebe

- Sipho Kings

‘That’s one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind.” Neil Armstrong could say this in part because a primitive guidance computer allowed Apollo 11 to drop a landing craft on the moon.

That computer had 64 kilobytes of memory and 0.043 megahertz of computing capacity.

Instead of running software, its instructio­ns were physically written on the computer’s memory by stitching ones and zeros with magnetic strands. It was revolution­ary.

Now, your toaster uses more capacity when you press the magic button to turn stale bread into crispy happiness. The free USB sticks stacked in a jar on your shelfof-all-things have more memory. Your Xbox has eight separate cores, each running at 1.75 gigahertz.

This is because computing power increases at a constant rate. Moore’s Law, the overlord of computing theory, says the number of transistor­s in a circuit will double every two years. That has meant a processor race between Intel and AMD to conquer domestic computing by selling the fastest processors.

But the real race plays out in icycold laboratori­es across the globe.

The holy grail is to claim the title of fastest computer on earth for a few months.

South Africa is no different, with the Centre for High Performanc­e Computing at the Council for Scientific and Industrial Research running three models that have each been the fastest in Africa.

Each iteration has been named after a speedy animal: in 2007 iQudu (isiXhosa for kudu) took the mantle, followed by Tsessebe, an antelope.

The latest, Lengau (cheetah in Setswana) makes its predecesso­rs look as slow as the dozing dots that Pac-Man gobbles up in the early stages of that arcade game.

It runs 40 000 cores at a speed of one petaflop — one thousand trillion floating point operations per second.

This is so fast that it cannot be compared to a convention­al computer with its gigahertz speed. But it means it can do a quadrillio­n calculatio­ns per second.

The speedy animal-themed computers are here to help implement the National Developmen­t Plan, according to the science and technology department.

Thomas Auf der Heyde, the deputy director general for research developmen­t in the department, said at Lengau’s launch: “For our country to grow at the required rate, it needs to change gear by building capacity in the production and disseminat­ion of knowledge.”

That translates to speeding up lots of research, such as work at the Square Kilometre Array, a radio telescope to be built in South Africa and Australia that will enable astronomer­s to probe the universe.

Lengau might not be the fastest computer on earth — that accolade goes to the 33 petaflop Tianhe-2 at China’s National University of Defence Technology — but it is a heck of a lot faster than Apollo 11’s guidance computer that took humanity to the moon.

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