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Military supercomputer reaches new milestone
Sean Ridgeley - Monday, June 9th, 2008 | 9:39AM (PT)


Uses PS3 technology

Military supercomputer reaches new milestone Image 1

A newly constructed American military supercomputer has surpassed the computing speed record at more than 1.026 quadrillion calculations per second, reaching the long-sought petaflop measurement, and sooner than expected. At this point, it doubly exceeds the speed of the previously fastest machine, I.B.M's BlueGene/L, who also made this, the aptly named 'Roadrunner.'

Part of the design includes 12,960 chips which function as an improved version of the company's Cell microprocessor, the parallel processing chip originally made for the PlayStation 3. The chips are used as 'accelerators' for portions of calculations.

Thomas P. D’Agostino, administrator of the National Nuclear Security Administration, says if all six billion people in the world used hand calculators 24 hours a day, seven days a week, it would take them more than half a lifetime (46 years) to do what the Roadrunner is capable of in one day. I'm betting the Roadrunner itself performed that calculation.

The supercomputer cost $133 million (that's it?) and will be used "principally to solve classified military problems to ensure that the nation’s stockpile of nuclear weapons will continue to work correctly as they age." Here's the part I love, though: it will also be used to study scientific problems like climate change. I'm having trouble comprehending that proposition meeting.

Peter J. Ungaro, chief executive of Cray, a maker of supercomputers says “it’s a sign that we are maintaining our position," though pointing out “the real competitiveness is based on the discoveries that are based on the machines.”

Of course, there's always something left to achieve, and the next goals in mind are the exaflop, (one quintillion calculations per second), then the zettaflop, yottaflop and xeraflop. Many flops.

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Comments:

June 9th, 2008 9:54AM(PT)
DeathMonkey
Teehee, flop. Funny word.
June 9th, 2008 11:10AM(PT)
bigjdubb
But will it run Crysis???
June 9th, 2008 11:11AM(PT)
chautemoc
Hahahaha. Well-played, sir.
June 9th, 2008 12:48PM(PT)
kspiess
I wonder what they'll really be using this computational power for. Studying the nuclear weapons arsenal? Hmm.. don't think so.
June 9th, 2008 12:51PM(PT)
chautemoc
Ah right, must've forgot my conspiracy theory.
June 10th, 2008 11:17AM(PT)
OmegaFury
God.. I wonder if that kind of processing power will one day be compressed into one PC...
The past gives us insight that it may be possible- ex. the Einiac.
June 10th, 2008 1:23PM(PT)
iamjoe56
hahaha. One word. [Acronym really] "NSA".
June 10th, 2008 4:47PM(PT)
lloyd
Wow... isn't a xeraflop 1 trillion petaflops?

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