The machine ranked 14 on the supercomputer Top 500 list, higher than many used by government agencies. Barry Bolding, chief strategy officer at Cray, told Computing that this market growth is due ...
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A History of Supercomputers
The CDC 6600, introduced by the Control Data Corporation, usually gets the nod as the first supercomputer. Chiefly designed ...
Meanwhile, AMD notched its first victories in the top 500 list for its EPYC server ... HPE is expanding its Apollo server lineup to include Cray's supercomputers, which are based on the ...
[Chris Fenton] spent a year and a half constructing a 1/10th scale Cray-1 reproduction. The famous supercomputer was meticulously modelled in a field programmable gate array for a “nearly ...
the Frontier supercomputer at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory continues to set new standards for its computing speed and performance. The HPE Cray EX supercomputing system ...
Oil and gas giant ExxonMobil has unveiled its Discovery 6 supercomputer, set to be installed in the first ... for extraction “with unprecedented accuracy.” Built by HPE, the Cray Supercomputing EX4000 ...
The Fugaku supercomputer, operated by the RIKEN Center for Computational Science in Japan, was named to the No. 1 slot in an updated list of the world's top 500 supercomputers, which was published ...
The name for this project is inspired by Seymore Cray. Our Father of the Supercomputer biography tells his story including why the Cray-1 Supercomputer was referred to as “the world’s most ...
According to Top500 research, 122 of the 500 supercomputers tracked by the market watcher are ... followed by fellow Chinese manufacturers Inspur, Sugon and US-based Cray. Top500, which compiles data ...
the supercomputer will be built by American supercomputer manufacturer Cray, which announced the contract with the Department of Energy (DoE) and National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA ...
program and the lucky researchers will be able to use two of the fastest supercomputers in existence, the IBM Blue Gene/P ("Intrepid") at DOE's Argonne National Laboratory and the Cray XT5 ...