Why demonstrate 3 million TPC-C?
Jul. 21st, 2006 01:38 pmThere's a transaction-processing benchmark, results listed at www.tpc.org, for which major computer manufacturers are prepared to spend millions of dollars of engineering time and use tens of millions of dollars worth of hardware.
The current top entries are offering rates of a couple of million transactions per minute, which translates to between one and two trillion transactions a year since there are almost exactly half a million minutes in a year.
I've just looked at ebay's financial statements, which indicate that 2.5 billion items are sold through ebay annually; if we assume that each bid is a transaction and that each item gets twenty bids, that's a hundred thousand transactions a minute.
Tesco's sales are on the order of £40 billion a year; even if we assume that each item on a bill is a transaction, the average Tesco item cost more than 50p, so that's less than 80 billion transactions a year, 160,000 a minute. Wal-Mart has about five times the sales of Tesco, which brings you to half a trillion; a million a minute.
What exactly is the point to IBM or to HP of demonstrating a single machine capable of handling all the transactions at every supermarket in the European Union? This seems the kind of machine of which they can sell one.
The current top entries are offering rates of a couple of million transactions per minute, which translates to between one and two trillion transactions a year since there are almost exactly half a million minutes in a year.
I've just looked at ebay's financial statements, which indicate that 2.5 billion items are sold through ebay annually; if we assume that each bid is a transaction and that each item gets twenty bids, that's a hundred thousand transactions a minute.
Tesco's sales are on the order of £40 billion a year; even if we assume that each item on a bill is a transaction, the average Tesco item cost more than 50p, so that's less than 80 billion transactions a year, 160,000 a minute. Wal-Mart has about five times the sales of Tesco, which brings you to half a trillion; a million a minute.
What exactly is the point to IBM or to HP of demonstrating a single machine capable of handling all the transactions at every supermarket in the European Union? This seems the kind of machine of which they can sell one.