Just another WordPress site

IBM & Department of Energy Unveil Petaflop Supercomputer

IBM and the US Department of Energy today announced an historic milestone in computing, which has enormous implications for a variety of issues critical to society, such as climate change, alternative energy, and financial services. IBM’s “Roadrunner” supercomputer, installed at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico to protect the US’s national security, hit one-thousand trillion calculations per second, or a “petalfop,” in sustained performance. To put the mind-boggling performance in context, it would take the entire population of the earth — about six billion people — each working a handheld calculator at the rate of one second per calculation, more than 456 years to do what Roadrunner can do in one day. The performance, which is two-times today’s number one supercomputer (from IBM) and three-times the closest competitive system, is driven by the world’s first “hybrid” supercomputer — one that uses Cell processors (the same chips that power today’s most popular video games on the Sony Playstation 3), off-the-shelf x86 processors running on standard IBM blade servers, and Linux.. The concept of hybrid systems is an important breakthrough — it paves the way with sotware that allows a diversity of commercial and consumer technologies to be linked together for any purpose from a large, shared website to a supercomputer working on a single problem. The Cell processor is dramatically faster at certain calculations allowing the RoadRunner system to be a small