A "Made in China" supercomputer that can perform 33.9 petaflops, or 33 quadrillion calculations per second, retains its top spot in the list of the world's 500 most powerful machines.
Tianhe-2, or Milky Way-2, is still No. 1, where it debuted in the list issued in June. In fact, the top 5 slots are all unchanged:
- Tianhe-2 (China, National Super Computer Center in Guangzhou): 33.86 petaflops
- Titan (U.S., Cray): 17.59 petaflops
- Sequoia (U.S., IBM): 17.17 petaflops
- K computer (Japan, Fujitsu): 10.51 petaflops
- Mira (U.S., IBM): 8.59 petaflops
A year ago, we reported that Titan was on top. We've also reported on what it is that makes supercomputers so fast.
The machines are measured using something called the Linpack benchmark, which is a "dense system of linear equations."
But critics have said Linpack is too limiting and doesn't reflect real-world performance.Alessandro Curioni, head of the computational sciences department at IBM's Zurich research lab, tells the BBC, "we need a more practical measurement that reflects the real use of these supercomputers based on their most important applications."
It's not immediately clear how the change in the benchmark will affect the rankings, but we should know in about six months when the new list comes out.
Comments
Post a Comment