Canterbury’s revamped Angus Tait building to house its BlueFern supercomputer team
June 30, 2014
University of Canterbury’s distinctive Butterfly Building has been remediated and will be officially reopened later this
week by Communications and Information Technology Minister Amy Adams.
The building – to be renamed the Angus Tait building - was first opened in May 1966 and following the earthquakes will
be the home of the University’s BlueFern supercomputer team. The BlueFern computer is one of the most powerful in New
Zealand. The building will be officially reopened on Friday, July 4.
New cellphones possess four processors and most laptops or and desktops have two to four processors. Canterbury’s
BlueFern supercomputer has 8192 processors to form a fast network. BlueFern director Professor Tim David says he and his
research team have access to a super computer overseas which has 786,432 processors.
``This is the Blue Gene at the Argonne national labs in Chicago. It is number five in the world list of the fastest
supercomputers. The Chinese have the number one spot. We also have access to one in Melbourne which has 65,536
processors.
``We could not have got access to these supercomputers without having a similar machine here. To gain access to these
machines we have to show that we know what we are doing and that our software can handle all those many processors.
``We have received 2,000,000 core hours access to the Argonne supercomputer in Chicago. It means that we can run
software on the supercomputer on say 100,000 processors for 20 hours. We are researching heart disease progression
through computer modelling which could become a key tool in predicting, treating and preventing coronary heart disease.
``Heart attacks occur because the arteries that carry blood to the heart become narrower and narrower allowing less and
less blood through until in the end they get blocked and the heart tissue is starved of oxygen.
``By computer modelling we connect millions of cells making up a part of a coronary artery. This research could help
doctors understand why coronary arteries get blocked at certain positions in the arterial tree.’’
Professor David and his team have established an international reputation with the computer modelling of cell physiology
and have collaborated with other researches overseas.
Professor David says BlueFern’s value was reflected in two outstanding academics Professor Mike Steel and Brendon
Bradley using the supercomputer for their research.
Dr Bradley is the first New Zealander and the youngest researcher to receive the prestigious internationally-renowned
Shamsher Prakash Foundation Research Award. Professor Steel is one of four principal investigators to win $695,000 for
three-year research project, Terraces, Large Trees and Trait Evolution, funded by the US-based National Science
Foundation.
BlueFern is difficult to compare with the specifications of the first IBM 1620 computer at Canterbury in 1962 which had
a capacity of just 20,000 decimal digits and possessed the equivalent of 20 kilobytes of storage.
This was the first digital computer installed at a New Zealand university and the third installed anywhere in New
Zealand, the first two going to the Reserve Bank of New Zealand.
The IBM 1620 computer weighed 800 kilograms and was two metres high. It cost about as much as 10 average houses. It had
no disks or tapes, all information being stored on punched cards and had no operating system. Word processing wasn't
invented, nor were spreadsheets, email or the internet.
When it arrived only four members of the University staff had had any experience with using a computer. From 1967 to
1973 the University upgraded to a computer 60 times as powerful with an initial memory 64,000 bytes of memory, later
upgraded to 128,000 bytes.
From 1973 until 1980, the University had a Burroughs computer that cost about a million dollars, or the cost at the time
of up to an average 40 houses. Further changes and upgrades have continued over the last 34 years. Key IT people who
have played important parts in growing digital technology at the university were Robin Harrington and Bruce Moon.
ends