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Researchers recycle old phones and cluster them into ‘computing platforms’ that operate as a low-cost data center

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Image accompanies the article at Tom's Hardware. No description was extracted from the source.

Researchers from the University of California San Diego (UCSD) collaborated with Google to recycle “old” Pixel smartphones and give them a second life as a low-cost data center.

Key facts

Summary

The study revealed that smartphones from three years ago still deliver a higher single-core performance compared to servers like the Asus RS720A-E11, which can be equipped with Nvidia H200 or Nvidia RTX Pro 6000 GPUs and two AMD EPYC server processors, that you frequently find in the most powerful data centers. The first thing they did was to strip these gadgets of non-essential components, displays, batteries, cameras, speakers, chassis, etc. Only the motherboard remains, as it plays host to the SoC needed for running compute. UCSD determined that a 20-phone cluster can support one application that a 75+ student class requires.

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