Zipping
along at 33.86 petaflops (quadrillions of calculations per second),
China's Tianhe-2 is the world's fastest computer for the third year in a
row, according to Top500, a twice yearly compilation of the fastest
computers on Earth.
The results were announced on Monday at the International Supercomputing Conference in Leipzig, Germany.
The
Tianhe-2 was developed by China's National University of Defense
Technology. Its predecessor, the Tianhe-1A, held the top spot on the
supercomputer list in 2010. Top500 organizers note that the top 10
supercomputers are mostly unchanged from the last list, with the
exception of a Cray XC30 computer, which is "installed at an undisclosed
U.S. government site," according to a release on the Top500.org site.
Overall,
the United States has by far the most supercomputers out of the top 500
systems, with China in a distant second; the UK, France and Germany lag
far behind.
Supercomputers
are not like the computers you use at home or in the office; they're
not even much like the servers you’ll find in the office basement.
They’re comprised of thousands of nodes and designed for crunching data
and solving very difficult problems — in other words, research and
development. That's why you'll find them hidden away at military
facilities and laboratories.
Top500
notes that the rate of performance growth for the entire list is
slowing down. Performance at the low end of the list typically grew at
90% year-over-year, but has now dropped to a 55% growth rate. Part of
this deceleration is attributed to the dearth of new systems at the top.
Despite that lack of change, these supercomputers will get more super.
Tianhe-2 is projected to reach 100 petaflops by 2018.
Of
the 500 systems on the list, 37 offer performance above the 1 petaflops
range, nearly all of them use multicore processors, and 85% of them are
running Intel processors. As for the systems themselves, 36% are built
by HP and 33% by IBM. Cray builds 10%.
This is the 21st year that organizers in Germany and the United States have compiled the list.
The
computer scientists measure system performance with the Linpack
Benchmark, which is used in each system to solve "a dense set of
equations." The benchmark is not a measure of the system's overall
performance, but rather its performance on that task. Top500 organizers
insist that no single benchmark can effectively measure the overall
performance of a given system.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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