IBM 6000 vs HP 9000 series 700
Dave Weintraub
dave at visual1.jhuapl.edu
Wed Jun 26 07:41:24 AEST 1991
In article <1991Jun25.160925.53455 at eagle.wesleyan.edu>, hoberoi at eagle.wesleyan.edu writes:
|> Hi,
|> here goes:
|> any comparisons of RS6000 530/540 etc with the HP Apollo 9000 series
|> 700 machines ?
|>
|> HP claims better SPECmarks for all the comparable models
|>
|> SPEC IBM 320 HP 720 IBM 530 HP 730
|> mark 24.6 55.5 32 72.2
|> int 16.3 39.0 20.4 51.0
|> fp 32.4 70.2 43.4 91.0
|>
|>
|> I would be interested in the performance AIX vs HP-UX. How better/worse
|> is the OS.
|>
|> graphics- IBM offers the SGI Personal Iris board for the 500 series
|> machines. HP has the T1/T2 based boards. How do the two compare ?
|>
|> thanks
|> Himanshu hoberoi at beaver.wesleyan.edu
|>
No answer, but a comment:
Beware of HP's claims. Their machine is *hot*, but they tend
to be into hyperboil (?sp). See Dvorak's column in PC Magazine,
where he reports HP's claims of a 720 vs a Cray, and interprets these
with a wise ton of salt.
The HP videotape I saw cited a SAS developer compairing SAS on the
HP versus SAS on a 3090-600E. Only problem is,
SAS/C (in which SAS is now written) does not,
to the best of my knowledge, take advantage of the IBM vector facility,
multitasking, or QSAM chaining; the comparison was a little skewed.
I would also use the caveats suggested by Dvorak, in terms of
scalability of the comparisons.
Mind you, I repeat: the 720 is a *hot* machine! And the PC simulator
beats pcsim by miles.
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