Amazon Web Services Takes Advantage of GPUs in the Cloud

| November 17, 2010 | Comments (0)

Amazon Web Services (AWS) now allows users of its cloud computing platform to take advantage of the extra power graphics processing units (GPUs) can give. The company hopes the move will attract high-performance computing applications to its service.

AWS has added a new Cluster GPU instance to the Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) platform, which provides resizable computing capacity in the cloud.

Besides high-performance computing applications, the new instance is well suited to the demands of rendering and media processing applications, according to AWS. It also has the advantages of other cloud services: it eliminates the cost and complexity of buying, configuring and operating in-house compute clusters, Amazon said.

The “Cluster GPU Quadruple Extra Large Instance” comes with a pair of Nvidia Tesla M2050 “Fermi” GPUs, which each have 448 cores and 3 GB of RAM, and can together deliver over a trillion floating point operations per second. The instance specification also includes a pair of Intel Xeon X5570 quad-core processors, 22 GB of RAM and 1690 GB of local storage, according to an AWS blog post.

Each Amazon Web Services account can use up to eight GPU instances in a cluster, where the nodes communicate using 10 Gigabit Ethernet. Today, users that want even larger clusters have to ask for Amazon’s permission. The default setting exists to help AWS better understand customer needs for the technology early on, and is not a technology limitation, the company said. A similar default setting on its standard cluster instances has now been removed, the blog post said.

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About Onuora Amobi: Onuora Amobi is the founder and CEO of Nnigma, a leading online marketing firm headquartered in Pasadena, California. A Microsoft MVP with close to two decades of IT experience, he is also the co-author of the Windows 7 Deployment Guide for small businesses and IT Professionals(http://www.windows7deploymentguide.com). View author profile.