SDA India is an online resource for Software, Development,IT, Architecture, Open Source, Mobile, Security, Databases, Delphi, C, OS, Asp, .Net, Php, Xml, Java

Enterprise solutions Enterprise IT Architecture Information Security Wireless And Mobility Hardware & Networking Data & Storage
Average Rating Rate this article Poor Below Average Average Good Excellent
1 2 3 4 5
IBM Roadrunner Wins The World's Fastest Computer Title



In an attempt to overcome it’s own challenge, IBM’s Roadrunner is the winner in the new supercomputer TOP500 hit parade, followed by IBM’s BlueGene/L (478.2 teraflop/s) at the US Department of Energy’s Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory.

The new Top500 List, which is issued twice a year, was unveiled at the International Supercomputing Conference in Dresden, Germany.

The list shows IBM’s Roadrunner, which broke the petaflop barrier last month, as the top-performing supercomputer. It also shows Intel Corp. dominating other chipmakers.

After a long time Sun has been ranked prominently with a new entry at number four position, the University of Texas’s Ranger (326 teraflop/s) system. What is perhaps most surprising to the authors of the list is the fact that 301 of the 500 supercomputers on last November’s list are nowhere to be seen. After seven months, they’re simply not powerful enough to make the list.

According to Jack Dongarra, a co-creator of the Top 500 list, “we attribute it to the many multicore systems on the list. Look at the incredible amount of change. We haven’t ever seen this amount of turnover,” he further added.

According to a press release, the Roadrunner, which is based on IBM QS22 blade servers, is more than twice as powerful as the Blue Gene/L system, which held the top spot in the last list, released in November. That machine clocked in at 478 teraflops, or 478 trillion calculations per second. The No. 3 Team Blue Gene reaches 450-teraflop performance.

Rounding out the top five systems was the new Sun Microsystems Sun Blade x6420 Ranger system, at 326 teraflops, and the upgraded Cray XT4 Jaguar, at 205 teraflops. The Sun system is at the Texas Advanced Computing Center at the University of Texas, and the Cray machine is at the Department of Energy's Oak Ridge National Laboratory in Tennessee.

The remaining top 10 systems, respectively, were the IBM Blue Gene/P system at Forschungszentrum Juelich in Germany, the SGI Altix ICE 8200 at the New Mexico Computing Applications Center, the Hewlett-Packard Cluster Platform 3000 BL460c at the Computational Research Laboratories in India, the IBM Blue Gene/P at IDRIS in France, and the SGI Altix ICE 8200EX at Total Exploration Production in France.


Post a Comment
Name
Title
Comment
From the News Desk
The Mozilla Foundation has released a very early prototype of mash-up …
Excellon Software, a company that specializes in software for managing chain …
According to the high-tech market research firm, In-Stat, cable telephony subscriber …
Analyst firm Gartner has positioned Wipro Technologies as ‘strong positive’ in …
Internet giant Google recently announced the launch of Google Map Maker …
Codima, a global provider of best practice software tools for VoIP …
US based mobile phones chipmaker Broadcom and Advanced Micro Devices have …
Articles

Coping with a sea of data Enterprise backup policies haven’t evolved all that much in recent years. Backup data is still, for the most part, written to magnetic tape each night, duplicated and then sent off-site to meet disaster recovery needs. Of course, disk already plays a role in …

Mashups comes into picture when there is a demand in today’s global environment, a web site that should have the power of drawing upon content and functionality retrieved from external data sources with no organizational boundaries. Mashups are of-course a new bread of web based integrating data from the applications that …

As “Green IT” continues to hold centre stage, the data centre, with its escalating demand for power, cooling, and space is increasingly seen as one of the major culprits generating an estimated 170 tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions, or 0.3% of the global total.As corporations continue to grapple with escalating storage …
Interviews

We are currently in the process of developing an Enterprise Information Management suite that would enable efficient management of both the structured and unstructured data of large organizations and provide a personalized digital dashboard to all the stakeholders to view critical reports and important documents. SDA-India.com in conversation with Mr Shastri, Chairman and Managing …

Microsoft Tech Day is an event of technology & only for technologists! Events like these add new dimensions to Sapient Technology Practice and solidify Sapient delivery capabilities in Microsoft Technology. SDA-India.com sits with Mr. Sandeep Dhar, Managing Director, Sapient, to know more about MS Tech days and how significant is the relationship between Sapient and Microsoft. …

Imagine data intensive enterprises like BFSI, IT and Telecom where huge amounts of data are churned everyday. In these enterprises, data changes often and the amount of stored data is large. In the event of lost data, damaged files, or extended downtime, this could lead to business getting affected. Mr. Basant Rajan, CTO India, Symantec Corporation, talks to SDA-India.com, enlightening our readership on the benefits of Back …
RSS
more »                                   
Menu
News Desk
Feature Stories
Articles
Interviews
Case Studies
White Paper
Analyst Corner
Planet SDA-India
SDA Events
INDIA IT Event Calender
IT Jobs
Advertise