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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 ...
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 .
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]
The Blue Gene/P supercomputer "Intrepid" at Argonne National Laboratory (pictured 2007) runs 164,000 processor cores using normal data center air conditioning, grouped in 40 racks/cabinets connected by a high-speed 3D torus network. [1] [2] A supercomputer is a type of computer with a high level of performance as compared to a general-purpose ...
Share of processor families in TOP500 supercomputers by year [needs update]. As of June 2022, all supercomputers on TOP500 are 64-bit supercomputers, mostly based on CPUs with the x86-64 instruction set architecture, 384 of which are Intel EMT64-based and 101 of which are AMD AMD64-based, with the latter including the top eight supercomputers. 15 other supercomputers are all based on RISC ...
The PC maker and the agency today unveiled Summit, which is the newest supercomputer from the DoE. IBM says that Summit is currently the world’s “most powerful and smartest scientific ...
The U.S. government is aiming to build the fastest supercomputer in the world by 2025. Currently the record is held by China, which has been exploring extreme processing speed technology for years.
The Cray X-MP was a supercomputer designed, built and sold by Cray Research. It was announced in 1982 as the "cleaned up" successor to the 1975 Cray-1, and was the world's fastest computer from 1983 to 1985 with a quad-processor system performance of 800 MFLOPS. [4] The principal designer was Steve Chen.