- Flash mob computing
A flash mob computing (also flash mob computer) is a temporary ad-hoc
computer cluster running specificsoftware to coordinate the individualcomputer s into one singlesupercomputer . A flash mob computer is distinct from other types of computer clusters in that it is set up and broken down on the same day or during a similar brief amount of time and involves many independent owners of computers coming together at a central physical location to work on a specific problem and/or social event.Flash mob computer derives its name from the more general term
flash mob which can mean any activity involving many people co-ordinated through virtual communities coming together for brief periods of time for a specific task or event. Flash mob computing is a more specific type of flash mob for the purpose of bringing people and their computers together to work on a single task or event.The first flash mob computer was created on
April 3 ,2004 at theUniversity of San Francisco using software written at USF called FlashMob (not to be confused with the more general termflash mob ). The event, called FlashMob I, was a fantastic success. There was a call for computers on the computer news websiteSlashdot and more than 700 computers came to the gym at the University of San Francisco and were wired to a network donated byFoundry Networks . At FlashMob I they were able to run a benchmark on 256 of the computers and achieved a peak rate of 180 Gflops (billions of calculations per second), although this computation stopped three quarters of the way through due to a node failure. The best, complete run used 150 computers and resulted in 77 Gflops. FlashMob I was run off a bootable CD-ROM that ran a copy ofMorphix Linux and was only available for thex86 platform.Despite these efforts, the project was unable to achieve its original goal of running a cluster momentarily fast enough to enter the (November 2003)
Top 500 list of supercomputers. The system would have had to provide at least 402.5 Gflops to match a Chinese cluster of 256 Intel Xeon nodes. For comparison, the fastest super computer at the time,Earth Simulator , provided 35860 Gflops.Creators of flash mob computing
Pat Miller was a research scientist at a national lab and adjunct professor at USF. His class on Do-It-Yourself Supercomputers evolved into FlashMob I from the original idea of every student bringing a commodity CPU or an Xbox to class to make an evanescent cluster at each meeting. Pat worked on all aspects of the FlashMob software.
Greg Benson, USF Associate Professor of Computer Science, invented the name "flash mob computing", and proposed the first idea of wireless flash mob computers. Greg worked on the core infrastructure of the FlashMob run time environment.
John Witchel was a USF graduate student in Computer Science during the Spring of 2004. After talking to Greg about the issues of networking a stadium of wireless computers and listening to Pat lecture on what it takes to break theTop 500 , John asked the simple question: "Couldn't we just invite people off the street and get enough power to break the Top 500?" And flash mob supercomputing was born. FlashMob I and the FlashMob software was John's master's thesis.ee also
*
Flash mob
*Supercomputer
*Wifipicning Notes
External links
* [http://it.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=04/04/04/1340230&tid=137 "San Francisco Flashmob Attempts Supercomputer"] Original Slashdot article
* [http://www.flashmobcomputing.org/ FlashMobComputing.org]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.