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M FLOPS [11] 1964 United States: Lawrence Livermore and Los Alamos: CDC: 6600: 3.00 MFLOPS [12] 1969 Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: 7600: 36.00 MFLOPS [13] 1974 STAR-100: 100.00 MFLOPS [14] 1976 Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory: Cray: Cray-1: 160.00 MFLOPS [15] 1980 United Kingdom: Meteorological Office, Bracknell: CDC: Cyber 205: 400 ...
1.2×10 6: IBM 7030 "Stretch" transistorized supercomputer, 1961; 5×10 6: CDC 6600, first commercially successful supercomputer, 1964 [2] 11×10 6: Intel i386 microprocessor at 33 MHz, 1985; 14×10 6: CDC 7600 supercomputer, 1967 [2] 40×10 6: i486 microprocessor at 50 MHz, 1989; 86×10 6: Cray 1 supercomputer, 1978 [2] 100×10 6: Pentium ...
In June 2012 was ranked as the 18th fastest supercomputer in the 39th TOP500 list of the fastest supercomputers, with a LINPACK benchmark performance of 1.043 PFLOPS. [5] [6] [7] In June 2012, Fujitsu received an order from the Republic of China's Central Weather Bureau, the first PRIMEHPC FX10 sale outside of Japan. This system, which was ...
XC40 cabinet (front) with 48 blades in groups of 16, each blade containing 4 nodes. The Cray XC40 is a massively parallel multiprocessor supercomputer manufactured by Cray.It consists of Intel Haswell Xeon processors, with optional Nvidia Tesla or Intel Xeon Phi accelerators, connected together by Cray's proprietary "Aries" interconnect, stored in air-cooled or liquid-cooled cabinets. [1]
As of June and November 2020, the Fugaku is the fastest supercomputer in the world by TOP500 rankings. [9] Fujitsu intends to sell smaller machines with A64FX processors. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Anandtech reported in June 2020 that the cost of a PRIMEHPC FX700 server, with two A64FX nodes, was ¥ 4,155,330 (c. US$ 39,000 ).
As of November 2024, Frontier is the second fastest supercomputer in the world. It is based on the Cray EX and is the successor to Summit (OLCF-4). Frontier achieved an Rmax of 1.102 exaFLOPS , which is 1.102 quintillion floating-point operations per second, using AMD CPUs and GPUs .
Founded only in July of last year, his latest artificial intelligence startup, xAI, just brought a new supercomputer dubbed Colossus online during the Labor Day weekend designed to train its large ...
In June 2018, Summit was fastest with an Rpeak [8] of 187.6593 PFLOPS. For comparison, this is over 1,432,513 times faster than the Connection Machine CM-5/1024 (1,024 cores), which was the fastest system in November 1993 (twenty-five years prior) with an Rpeak of 131.0 G FLOPS .