Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
National Supercomputing Center of Tianjin: National University of Defense Technology: Tianhe-1A: 2.57 PFLOPS* [32] 2011 Japan: RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science: Fujitsu: K computer: 10.51 PFLOPS* [33] 2012 United States: Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory: IBM: Sequoia (Blue Gene/Q) 16.32 PFLOPS* [34] Oak Ridge National ...
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 ...
Hewlett Packard Enterprise Frontier, or OLCF-5, is the world's first exascale supercomputer. It is hosted at the Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility (OLCF) in Tennessee, United States and became operational in 2022. As of November 2024, Frontier is the second fastest supercomputer in the world.
The El Capitan supercomputer, housed at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), powered by AMD Instinct™ MI300A APUs and built by Hewlett Packard Enterprise (HPE), is now the fastest supercomputer in the world with a High-Performance Linpack (HPL) score of 1.742 exaflops based on the latest Top500 list. Both El Capitan and the Frontier ...
El Capitan, a new supercomputer at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in California, became the world's fastest with more than 1.7 quintillion calculations per second.
Moore's law – observation (not actually a law) that, over the history of computing hardware, the number of transistors on integrated circuits doubles approximately every two years. The law is named after Intel co-founder Gordon Moore, who described the trend in his 1965 paper. [22] Supercomputer. History of supercomputing; Superintelligence
"Supercomputers" were most commonly found in research settings. Naturally, there's an official list ranking supercomputers. Until recently the world's most powerful supercomputer was named El Capitan.
Hewlett Packard Enterprise El Capitan, is an exascale supercomputer, hosted at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory in Livermore, United States and becoming operational in 2024. It is based on the Cray EX Shasta architecture. El Capitan displaced Frontier as the world's fastest supercomputer in the 64th edition of the Top500 (Nov 2024).