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- Commodity_computing abstract "Commodity computing, or commodity cluster computing, is the use of large numbers of already available computing components for parallel computing to get the greatest amount of useful computation at low cost. It is computing done in commodity computers as opposed to high-cost supermicrocomputers or boutique computers. Commodity computers are computer systems manufactured by multiple vendors, incorporating components based on open standards. Such systems are said to be based on commodity components, since the standardization process promotes lower costs and less differentiation among vendors' products. Standardization and decreased differentiation lower the switching or exit cost from any given vendor, increasing purchaser's leverage and preventing lock-in. A governing principle of commodity computing is that it is preferable to have more low-performance, low-cost hardware working in parallel (scalar computing) (e.g. AMD x86 CISC) than to have fewer high-performance, high-cost hardware (e.g. IBM POWER7 or Sun-Oracle's Sparc RISC). At some point, the number of discrete systems in a cluster will be greater than the mean time between failures (MTBF) for any hardware platform, no matter how reliable, so fault tolerance must be built into the controlling software. Purchases should be optimized on cost-per-unit-of-performance, not just absolute performance-per-CPU at any cost.".
- Commodity_computing wikiPageExternalLink google-machine.html.
- Commodity_computing wikiPageExternalLink hadoop.apache.org.
- Commodity_computing wikiPageExternalLink highscalability.com.
- Commodity_computing wikiPageExternalLink google-fellow-sheds-some-light-on-infrastructure-robustness-in-face-of-failure.
- Commodity_computing wikiPageExternalLink index-auto-0021.html.
- Commodity_computing wikiPageID "1470005".
- Commodity_computing wikiPageRevisionID "599504932".
- Commodity_computing hasPhotoCollection Commodity_computing.
- Commodity_computing subject Category:Computing_platforms.
- Commodity_computing subject Category:IBM_PC_compatibles.
- Commodity_computing subject Category:Personal_computers.
- Commodity_computing subject Category:X86_microprocessors.
- Commodity_computing type Artifact100021939.
- Commodity_computing type Chip103020034.
- Commodity_computing type Computer103082979.
- Commodity_computing type ComputingPlatforms.
- Commodity_computing type Conductor103088707.
- Commodity_computing type Device103183080.
- Commodity_computing type DigitalComputer103196324.
- Commodity_computing type HorizontalSurface103536348.
- Commodity_computing type Instrumentality103575240.
- Commodity_computing type Machine103699975.
- Commodity_computing type Microprocessor103760310.
- Commodity_computing type Object100002684.
- Commodity_computing type PersonalComputer103918480.
- Commodity_computing type PersonalComputers.
- Commodity_computing type PhysicalEntity100001930.
- Commodity_computing type Platform103961939.
- Commodity_computing type SemiconductorDevice104171831.
- Commodity_computing type Surface104362025.
- Commodity_computing type Whole100003553.
- Commodity_computing type X86Microprocessors.
- Commodity_computing comment "Commodity computing, or commodity cluster computing, is the use of large numbers of already available computing components for parallel computing to get the greatest amount of useful computation at low cost. It is computing done in commodity computers as opposed to high-cost supermicrocomputers or boutique computers. Commodity computers are computer systems manufactured by multiple vendors, incorporating components based on open standards.".
- Commodity_computing label "Commodity computing".
- Commodity_computing sameAs m.0540v6.
- Commodity_computing sameAs Q5153161.
- Commodity_computing sameAs Q5153161.
- Commodity_computing sameAs Commodity_computing.
- Commodity_computing wasDerivedFrom Commodity_computing?oldid=599504932.
- Commodity_computing isPrimaryTopicOf Commodity_computing.