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  2. TOP500 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TOP500

    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 GFLOPS. [9]

  3. List of fastest computers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fastest_computers

    This is a historical list of fastest computers and includes computers and supercomputers which were considered the fastest in the world at the time they were built. Year Country of site

  4. Comparison of Intel processors - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_Intel_processors

    Some Xeon Phi processors support four-way hyper-threading, effectively quadrupling the number of threads. [1] Before the Coffee Lake architecture, most Xeon and all desktop and mobile Core i3 and i7 supported hyper-threading while only dual-core mobile i5's supported it.

  5. LINPACK benchmarks - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LINPACK_benchmarks

    The latest version of these benchmarks is used to build the TOP500 list, ranking the world's most powerful supercomputers. [1] The aim is to approximate how fast a computer will perform when solving real problems. It is a simplification, since no single computational task can reflect the overall performance of a computer system.

  6. Computer performance by orders of magnitude - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer_performance_by...

    2.15×10 12: iPhone 15 Pro September 2023 A17 Pro processor; 4.64×10 12: Radeon HD 5970 in 2009 from AMD (under ATI branding) at its peak performance; 5.152×10 12: S2050/S2070 1U GPU Computing System from Nvidia; 11.3×10 12: GeForce GTX 1080 Ti in 2017; 13.7×10 12: Radeon RX Vega 64 in 2017; 15.0×10 12: Nvidia Titan V in 2017; 80×10 12 ...

  7. Floating point operations per second - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Floating_point_operations...

    On November 12, 2012, the TOP500 list certified Titan as the world's fastest supercomputer per the LINPACK benchmark, at 17.59 petaFLOPS. [59] [60] It was developed by Cray Inc. at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory and combines AMD Opteron processors with "Kepler" NVIDIA Tesla graphics processing unit (GPU) technologies. [61] [62]