Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

A Jeopardy Supercomputer … running Linux


I guess when I first heard IBM had a supercomputer (called “Watson”) that was going to compete against humans at an open ended game like Jeopardy, I assumed it was running some very sophisticated, finely tuned, and powerful OS tailored to an IBM hardware platform. Turns out I was right – it’s running Linux.

It may also be accessing Web data stores like Wikipedia (which runs on Linux – Ubuntu I hear) over a router (possibly running Linux), protected by a firewall (likely running Linux). Starting to see a theme?

A great quote from Bob Sutor:

I’ve given several talks in the last two months about the relationship of Linux to the Smarter Planet initiatives. The key elements to that are the three “I”s: being instrumented, interconnected, and intelligent. This Jeopardy! project is definitely related to the last. To borrow from a slide I use: “How can we take advantage of the wealth of information available in real time from a multitude of sources to make more intelligent choices?”

I won’t belabor the point but you get the idea. More and more Linux is being used as the foundation on which innovative applications are being built. We don’t always know it, we can’t always measure it, but it’s there. And someday it just might help beat you at Jeopardy!.

Posted by md on April 28th, 2009 | Filed in IBM, Linux, Planet-LTC, Technology | 1 Comment »


One Response to “A Jeopardy Supercomputer … running Linux”

  1. April 29th, 2009 at 1:30 pm

    Bryan Jacobson said:

    LOL nice post, nice quote from Bob Sutor. I found your note via Google (also running on top of Linux . . .)



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