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IBM Breaks Own Supercomputer Record: 133 Trillion instructions per second.
Betanews ^
| March 24, 2005
| David Worthington,
Posted on 03/24/2005 7:59:11 PM PST by Next_Time_NJ
IBM has one-upped itself. Big Blue has revealed that it has broken through the 100 teraflop mark and developed the world's fastest supercomputer for the United States National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA).
The system is a derivative of IBM's BlueGene/L supercomputer, which won the supercomputing crown back from NEC's Earth Simulator. The NNSA machine is used to simulate nuclear tests as part of an ongoing maintenance program for the U.S. nuclear stockpile.
(Excerpt) Read more at betanews.com ...
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Extended News; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: carrboro; cary; ibm; powerpc; record; tech; teraflops
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To: Nick Danger
You had lava? All I had was formless void! :)
61
posted on
03/24/2005 11:03:25 PM PST
by
TrueKnightGalahad
(It is only with the heart that one can see rightly. What is essential is invisible to the eye. A S-E)
To: Next_Time_NJ
Sounds like just another day at the office to me.
62
posted on
03/24/2005 11:04:55 PM PST
by
BJungNan
To: Next_Time_NJ
Oops! Just read the headline again.
IBM Breaks Own Supercomputer Record: 133 Trillion instructions per secondI thought it said per day. I guess that is a little more than I could handle in a second.
63
posted on
03/24/2005 11:07:03 PM PST
by
BJungNan
To: Next_Time_NJ
Big Blue has revealed that it has broken through the 100 teraflop mark and developed the world's fastest supercomputer for the United States National Nuclear Security Administration I want one to replace my Dell. : )
64
posted on
03/24/2005 11:14:03 PM PST
by
EGPWS
To: TrueKnightGalahad
All I had was formless void!
Void? You had void? All I had was int
.
65
posted on
03/24/2005 11:14:19 PM PST
by
Nick Danger
(You can stick a fork in the Mullahs -- they're done.)
To: Nick Danger
66
posted on
03/24/2005 11:36:48 PM PST
by
TrueKnightGalahad
(It is only with the heart that one can see rightly. What is essential is invisible to the eye. A S-E)
To: EGPWS
You'll need that many billions of MIPS for the next version of Windoze...
67
posted on
03/25/2005 12:29:25 AM PST
by
djf
To: garjog
If we think in a certain way, perhaps our facial muscles move a bit and the computer could read it? Steaming video email? I already get a fair amount of those.
68
posted on
03/25/2005 1:54:13 AM PST
by
Erasmus
(Sled dogs and Englishmen go out in the midnight sun.)
To: Nick Danger; uglybiker
>>Mine's made out of wood and rocks. >Rocks? You had rocks? When I was building my computer, the Earth hadn't even cooled. All we had was lava.
When I started programming, we had to do it with all ones because zeros hadn't been invented yet.
69
posted on
03/25/2005 1:58:14 AM PST
by
Erasmus
(Sled dogs and Englishmen go out in the midnight sun.)
To: Termite_Commander
This is such an inconceivably high number...What is incredible to me is that someone can come up with the need to be able to have that make calculations to solve or answer some real question.
If you just said calculate pi it will crunch away for ever if it has enough decimal places to the right.
To actually have a real world problem that would need 133 trillion calculations.
I know that it is probably calculation many things that are unrelated.
70
posted on
03/25/2005 1:58:25 AM PST
by
PFKEY
To: Next_Time_NJ
The average PC today has more computing power than the fastest computers in the world just 30 years ago. Hence, thirty years from now, the average "PC" (if it is even called that) will have more computing power than this teraflop computer of IBM's.
It is a good bet that the world of 30 years from now will be virtually unrecognizable to us.
71
posted on
03/25/2005 2:15:30 AM PST
by
SamAdams76
(Don't You Think This Outlaw Bit's Done Got Out Of Hand?)
To: ProudVet77
Actually Apple's Macs run chips with the same technology as those in the IBM supercomputers. Obviously they are a simpler design etc but they are from the same design generation.
72
posted on
03/25/2005 3:26:45 AM PST
by
Straight Vermonter
(Liberalism: The irrational fear of self reliance.)
To: timestax
"who cares?!"
Skynet cares. hehehe.....
73
posted on
03/25/2005 3:37:28 AM PST
by
EQAndyBuzz
(60 votes and the world changes.)
To: zarf
"Aw, that's nothing. My computer was born in a hole in the road in a trailer park while starving etc..etc..."
My computer walked back and forth to school, uphill, both ways, with only dual 5 1/4" floppy drives to hold its data.
74
posted on
03/25/2005 3:38:58 AM PST
by
EQAndyBuzz
(60 votes and the world changes.)
To: festus
"My wife can do twice that when she gets to yelling at me ;-)"
I hear you brother!
75
posted on
03/25/2005 3:45:05 AM PST
by
Paulus
To: infidel44
"PC's killed the mainframe business in the late 80's."
Actually the concept of distributed processing killed the mainframes back in the late 80's, early 90's. This is why IBM is now restructured. IBM's e-servers compete in that framework.
76
posted on
03/25/2005 3:45:25 AM PST
by
EQAndyBuzz
(60 votes and the world changes.)
To: EGPWS
I want one to replace my Dell.The IBM salesman will be at your home at 9:00am.
77
posted on
03/25/2005 3:53:57 AM PST
by
reg45
To: Next_Time_NJ
133 TIPS
and, of course, with all of that processing power, the answer it came up with was...
wait for it...
42
78
posted on
03/25/2005 4:00:44 AM PST
by
Phsstpok
("When you don't know where you are, but you don't care, you're not lost, you're exploring.")
To: EQAndyBuzz
On the first IBM PC a floppy drive was an option and it had a cassette interface.
I still have my analog computer (slide rule).
79
posted on
03/25/2005 4:10:34 AM PST
by
HuntsvilleTxVeteran
(When you compromise with evil, evil wins. AYN RAND)
To: reg45
"The IBM salesman will be at your home at 9:00am."
No he won't. Takes time to get here from China.
80
posted on
03/25/2005 5:17:46 AM PST
by
EQAndyBuzz
(60 votes and the world changes.)
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