Building The Most Advanced DAW On The Planet
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- KVRer
- 14 posts since 27 Jan, 2007
What would you want from it?
Time to dream bigger.
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HPC Advisory Council Names University Award Winner
SUNNYVALE, Calif., Nov. 28 - The HPC Advisory Council, a leading worldwide organization for high-performance computing research, development, outreach and education, today announced that Antonis Karalis has received the prestigious HPC Advisory Council University Award 2012 for advanced research in the subject area of music in high-performance computing. One of the HPC Advisory Council's main activities is community and education outreach. The University Award program is an outgrowth of this, and is intended to enhance students' computing knowledge-base.
"The council award program was designed to enrich world-wide university research activities by utilizing and maximizing the high-performance computing capabilities and the council's expertise"
"With the goal to develop and create HPC clustering solutions that further enable the future of music production, Mr. Karalis's submission 'Music Production using HPC' stood out amongst all of the submissions," said Gilad Shainer, Chairman of the HPC Advisory Council. "We congratulate Mr. Karalis and look forward to providing him the tools and cluster resources necessary to complete his research. We look forward to reviewing proposals for 2013, and working with the winners to highlight their research and further advances in HPC technology and education."
[url]http://www.hpcwire.com/hpcwire/2012-11- ... inner.html[/url]
Time to dream bigger.
-------------------------
HPC Advisory Council Names University Award Winner
SUNNYVALE, Calif., Nov. 28 - The HPC Advisory Council, a leading worldwide organization for high-performance computing research, development, outreach and education, today announced that Antonis Karalis has received the prestigious HPC Advisory Council University Award 2012 for advanced research in the subject area of music in high-performance computing. One of the HPC Advisory Council's main activities is community and education outreach. The University Award program is an outgrowth of this, and is intended to enhance students' computing knowledge-base.
"The council award program was designed to enrich world-wide university research activities by utilizing and maximizing the high-performance computing capabilities and the council's expertise"
"With the goal to develop and create HPC clustering solutions that further enable the future of music production, Mr. Karalis's submission 'Music Production using HPC' stood out amongst all of the submissions," said Gilad Shainer, Chairman of the HPC Advisory Council. "We congratulate Mr. Karalis and look forward to providing him the tools and cluster resources necessary to complete his research. We look forward to reviewing proposals for 2013, and working with the winners to highlight their research and further advances in HPC technology and education."
[url]http://www.hpcwire.com/hpcwire/2012-11- ... inner.html[/url]
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Winstontaneous Winstontaneous https://www.kvraudio.com/forum/memberlist.php?mode=viewprofile&u=98336
- KVRAF
- 2598 posts since 15 Feb, 2006 from Another Green World
Ha, just a few weeks ago I was browsing the Cray website and wondering if anybody's harnessing that kind of power for music software.
Imagine the track/latency/plugin count on something like this.
Imagine the track/latency/plugin count on something like this.
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- KVRian
- 787 posts since 19 Feb, 2004 from QLD, Australia
Yeah you could have a lot of plugins... still, it's single threaded performance would be less than an overclocked cpu from a couple years ago.
I play guitar
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- KVRian
- 580 posts since 6 Jun, 2009
Its single threaded performance is going to be better than an overclocked CPU from a few years ago, its running current Xeon CPUs.
Seriously, a system like that, your main problem is going to be latency.
Seriously, a system like that, your main problem is going to be latency.
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- KVRian
- 787 posts since 19 Feb, 2004 from QLD, Australia
Sandy bridge was demoed in 2009, @ 5ghz it is better single/multithreaded than a current Xeon(with same core count). Ivy is better still but has overclocking issues due to Intel changing IHS installation process.
Overall having 50000000000 CPUs running slowly isn't going to make AUDIO related tasks any better and a musician would be better served by a consumer part that they tweaked.
People that use intensive multithreaded plugins would obviously benefit but for consumers, porting of these plugins to GPU's is a better step.
Don't forget that you can't just install windows on a Cray and kickarse from the start, super computers are good at what they do because of custom solutions and custom code.
What I am trying to say is that the ideal DAW scenario isn't clustering of many CPUs, it's having 8-12 threads running at higher clocks in a manageable environment.
Now, having that many cores for rendering aftereffects compositions would be awesome.. but the Cray would still be in the shed to handle offline stuff and not running the personal workstation.
Overall having 50000000000 CPUs running slowly isn't going to make AUDIO related tasks any better and a musician would be better served by a consumer part that they tweaked.
People that use intensive multithreaded plugins would obviously benefit but for consumers, porting of these plugins to GPU's is a better step.
Don't forget that you can't just install windows on a Cray and kickarse from the start, super computers are good at what they do because of custom solutions and custom code.
What I am trying to say is that the ideal DAW scenario isn't clustering of many CPUs, it's having 8-12 threads running at higher clocks in a manageable environment.
Now, having that many cores for rendering aftereffects compositions would be awesome.. but the Cray would still be in the shed to handle offline stuff and not running the personal workstation.
I play guitar
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- KVRAF
- 7579 posts since 17 Feb, 2005
Series calculations will always be held up by a single thread, but in parallel many series calculation threads can be done. So, if one were looking to synthesize every instrument in a song, they could make a LOT of them, but the complexity of each one is limited by the single threading performance.
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- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 14 posts since 27 Jan, 2007
Hello, here are some quick updates.
Creating the most advanced music production system on the planet
www.hpcmusic.com
- Thousands of +Intel CPU cores
- Analogue Sound Quality
- Advanced Oversampling
- Highly Advanced Mathematical Techniques
- Completely artifact-free band-limited interpolation
- InfiniBand (high performance computing) +Mellanox Technologies
- Industrial graded circuit simulators in realtime
- 8 FS (384 KHz) today and ready for up to 768kHz
- Mission-critical reliability
- +NVIDIA CUDA enabled
- +Windows 8 and Mac OS X Compatible

https://plus.google.com/u/0/10736350326 ... qQCHQbb36U
Creating the most advanced music production system on the planet
www.hpcmusic.com
- Thousands of +Intel CPU cores
- Analogue Sound Quality
- Advanced Oversampling
- Highly Advanced Mathematical Techniques
- Completely artifact-free band-limited interpolation
- InfiniBand (high performance computing) +Mellanox Technologies
- Industrial graded circuit simulators in realtime
- 8 FS (384 KHz) today and ready for up to 768kHz
- Mission-critical reliability
- +NVIDIA CUDA enabled
- +Windows 8 and Mac OS X Compatible

https://plus.google.com/u/0/10736350326 ... qQCHQbb36U
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- KVRer
- Topic Starter
- 14 posts since 27 Jan, 2007
Let's explore using some NVIDIA HPC juice !
Realism & Quality drive up computational complexity while
emulating non-linear characteristics in digital audio
Acustica Audio Engine is CUDA-Enabled and designed to access to the tremendous processing power of NVIDIA GPUs.
Realism & Quality drive up computational complexity while
emulating non-linear characteristics in digital audio
Acustica Audio Engine is CUDA-Enabled and designed to access to the tremendous processing power of NVIDIA GPUs.

- addled muppet weed
- 111327 posts since 26 Jan, 2003 from through the looking glass
might even be possible, given the amount of heat that baby would be putting out!lotus2035 wrote:I want it to produce toasted ham and cheese sandwiches from the loading tray.
and...
ooh! lights