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| IBM continues its Top Ranking with world’s fastest computer |
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| Written by Staff Writer | |
| Thursday, 25 June 2009 | |
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The Cheetah is one of the world’s fastest animals and the Elephant is one of its strongest. Watching a cheetah start with its amazing burst of energy and reach speeds of close to 60mph is amazing. An elephant is equally impressive with its size and strength. In the animal kingdom there is no competition for what the cheetah and elephant can do. In the computer world speed and power is just as important and IBM continues to hold the top ranking of owning the world’s fastest and powerful computer called “Roadrunner”.
For a record-setting tenth consecutive time, an IBM system holds the number one position in the ranking of the world's most powerful supercomputers. The IBM computer built for the "roadrunner project" at Los Alamos National Lab – the first in the world to operate at speeds faster than one quadrillion calculations per second (petaflop) -- remains the world speed champion. IBM also declared its intent to break the exaflop barrier, and has created a Research ‘collaboratory’ in Dublin, in partnership with the Industrial Development Agency (IDA) of Ireland, which is focused on achieving exascale computing and making it useful for businesses. An exaflop is a million trillion calculations per second, which is 1000 times faster than today’s petaflop-class systems. The latest semi-annual ranking of the World's TOP500 Supercomputer Sites was released during the International Supercomputing Conference in Hamburg, Germany. Results show the IBM system at Los Alamos National lab, which clocked in at 1.105 petaflops, is nearly three times as energy-efficient as the number 2 computer to maintain similar levels of petascale computing power. IBM’s number one system performs 444.9 megaflops per watt of energy compared only 154.2 megaflops per watt for the number 2 system.
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