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The Tianhe-1A has set a new performance record of 2.507 petaflops or thousand trillion floating point operations per second.
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The latest generation TI OMAP 4470 processor and Imagination SGX544 graphics engine capable of over 12 billion floating point operations per second.
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When put inside powerful computer servers, the Cell consortium expects it to be capable of handling 16 trillion floating point operations, or calculations, every second.
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The result: a virtual supercomputer capable of crunching 6 trillion floating point operations per second, or 6 teraflops, equivalent to one of the ten most powerful computers in the world.
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Clocking in at 16.32 sustained petaflops (quadrillion floating point operations per second), Sequoia earned the number one ranking on the industry standard Top500 list of the world's fastest supercomputers released Monday, June 18, at the International Supercomputing Conference (ISC12) in Hamburg, Germany.
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Last October the company unveiled a model that runs at 3.8 trillion floating-point operations a second.
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This half-build system achieved the world's best LINPACK(2) benchmark performance of 8.162 petaflops (quadrillion floating-point operations per second), to place it at the head of the TOP500 list.
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It already has some experience of going public, floating its Hong Kong operations on the territory's stock exchange over a year ago.
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Jonathan Heiliger, vice president of technical operations quashed the rumor with a comment posted to a story floating the notion (Facebook has confirmed the comment is authentic).
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