
An American military supercomputer has broken the quadrillion calculations a second petaflop barrier, becoming twice as fast as the previous front runner, IBM's Bluegene/L. The machine uses 12,960 Cell processors - originally developed for the Sony Playstation 3 - together with a handful of AMD Opterons, giving a grand total of 116,640 processor cores.
Roadrunner was built as a joint venture by IBM and Los Alamos Laboratories and can do in a day what it would take the entire population of the planet 46 years to accomplish, working 24 hours a day, seven days a week, we are assured.
Los Alamos National Laboratory, based in New Mexico, will use Roadrunner on secret military projects such as simulating nuclear explosions, which is a lot safer than letting real ones off. But before it starts working on big bangs, the computer will be let loose on research into climate change.
Roadrunner has a pretty large impact on global warming itself, consuming three megawatts of power.
After breaking the petaflop barrier, engineers are now scratching their heads and looking wistfully at the exaflop, the zettaflop, the yottaflop and the xeraflop


Nyinahin Catholic SHS teacher seen fighting female student in viral video arrest...
Beijing condemns US move to blacklist Chinese companies
Trump gets a cold reception at NBA Finals game as Spurs beat Knicks
One dead, fire officer hospitalised after bee attack at Quarry Site in Sokode Gb...
Israel and Iran step back from further strikes after renewed clashes
Patients stranded as doctors, nurses refuse to see new patients over KATH CEO su...
Avenor Rural Bank CEO’s house destroyed by fire
Here are areas to be affected by ECG's planned maintenance on Tuesday
SHS teacher allegedly beats female student over unpaid hostel fees
Blow to EU defence cooperation as France, Germany abandon joint fighter jet prog...
