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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 ...
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 .
1×10 18: Fugaku 2020 Japanese supercomputer in single precision mode [15] 1.1x10 18: Frontier 2022 U.S. supercomputer; 1.88×10 18: U.S. Summit achieves a peak throughput of this many operations per second, whilst analysing genomic data using a mixture of numerical precisions. [16]
Measured at 62.86 gigaflops/watt, the smaller Frontier TDS (test and development system) topped the Green500 list for most efficient supercomputer [6] until it was dethroned in efficiency by the Flatiron Institute's Henri supercomputer in November 2022. [7] Frontier was superseded as the fastest supercomputer in the world by El Capitan in ...
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 ).
Tianhe-IA was ranked as the world's fastest supercomputer in the TOP500 list [27] [28] until July 2011 when the K computer overtook it. In June 2011, scientists at the Institute of Process Engineering (IPE) at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) announced a record-breaking scientific simulation on the Tianhe-1A supercomputer that furthers ...
"We delivered the world's largest and fastest AI supercomputer, scaling up to 65,000 Nvidia H200 GPUs," Oracle CEO Safra Catz and Chairman, CTO, echoed by Founder Larry Ellison on the company's ...
The Cray-2 is a supercomputer with four vector processors made by Cray Research starting in 1985. At 1.9 GFLOPS peak performance, it was the fastest machine in the world when it was released, replacing the Cray X-MP in that spot. It was, in turn, replaced in that spot by the Cray Y-MP in 1988.