WorldWide Tech & Science. Francisco De Jes�s.
Chinese Super computer helps to create a DreamWorks animated film.
Two staff members collect data in a computer room containing Tianhe-1A, China's fastest supercomputer, in Tianjin, on Aug 28, 2012.
If a Chinese supercomputer pops up in the credits at the end of a  Hollywood film, don't be surprised, for China's Tianhe-1A, one of the  world fastest supercomputers, is being used by a company in Tianjin to  help create an animated film for DreamWorks.
"With the supercomputer's help, we've improved the rendering  capability of DreamWorks," said Hu Yong, chairman of Cool Cartoon in  Tianjin.
Hu said his company is now developing a data transmission system that  will allow it to send rendered animations to its clients in North  America faster in the future.
Tianhe-1A was developed to boost China's economic development and  improve its scientific research capabilities, said Meng Xiangfei, head  of the application department with the National Supercomputer Center in  Tianjin, where Tianhe-1A is installed.
With the support of Tianhe-1A, a Chinese geographic information  provider started the country's first official 3D map Tianditu - a  Chinese version of Google Earth - which required an enormous number of  calculations and data storage to create.
Compared with traditional two-dimensional maps, three-dimensional  maps are more true to life, which offers users a more direct  understanding of a real location, said Wang Jian, whose company provides  a 3D map Tianditu of Tianjin.
"For example, if a house located in a block with interlaced streets  catches fire, it is easier for firefighters to pinpoint the house's  location and determine the quickest route to the fire using a 3D map."
In this way, the map not only makes firefighters' jobs easier, it can also help save people's lives, Wang added.
Wang said his team is now busy developing software to run on supercomputers that will improve the quality of the 3D map.
"The 3D map is really useful to me, because I find it difficult to  relate ordinary maps to real streets. But the 3D map makes it easy,"  said Li Jing, who previously avoided driving in unfamiliar streets as  she found it difficult to follow maps.
"I always thought the supercomputer was doing high-end scientific  research. I never dreamed it would be part of my daily life," she added.
Thanks to its high performance, Tianhe-1A has also been boosting  China's independent research and development capability in various  industries and bringing more benefits to Chinese enterprises.
With Tianhe-1A's help, BGP, a geophysical service company affiliated  to China National Petroleum Corp, China's largest oil and gas supplier,  managed to eliminate China's dependency on overseas oil exploration  technology.
"We now run independently developed software, which we used to have  to buy from foreign companies, in Tianhe-1A to simulate underground  geology," said Wu Wei, a manager from BGP.
"Using Tianhe-1A, we can conduct the simulation over a wider area and  to a greater depth, which makes the exploration more accurate", he  said, adding that the greater accuracy has increased the company's  efficiency and saved it money.
"If we dig an oil well in the wrong place on land, we will lose tens  of millions of yuan, and digging a well in the wrong place at sea can  waste hundreds of millions of yuan," Wu said.
Like BGP, Tianjin Motor Dies Co Ltd will also save money, at least 3  percent of its production costs, thanks to Tianhe-1A's simulations.
"It's a large saving," said Chen Huibin, one of the company's experts  in computer-aided engineering, "because our profit margins are only  about 20 percent".
Meanwhile, the supercomputer is giving the company, which designs and  manufactures car body panels and large stamping parts, a greater  competitive edge.
After employing Tianhe-1A to simulate its stamping process, the  company expects to increase its market share and "make the transition  from offering low-end to high-end products", explained Chen.
Individuals can also use the supercomputer, according to Meng.
The level of supercomputer development in a country indicates its  scientific research capabilities, so China's unexpected progress in  developing supercomputers, Tianhe-1A beat supercomputers from the United  States to be the world's fastest in 2010, caused an outbreak of anxiety  in the US, which had long been the undisputed leader in supercomputers.
The US government responded by attaching more importance to the  development of supercomputers, and the country reclaimed the world  supercomputer crown in June this year using the Sequoia from the US  Department of Energy's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in  California.
The latest US supercomputer will be used to carry out simulations to  help extend the durability of the US' aging nuclear weapons, avoiding  the need for real-world underground tests.
Although Tianhe-1A had dropped to fifth place in the list of the  world's fastest supercomputers published in June, it is still one of the  fastest supercomputers in the world. However, related services,  including software and data transmission systems, need to be further  developed and improved in order to make the most of its formidable  computing power.











 
 
 
 
 

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