- was the most
powerful supercomputer on TOP500,
reaching 1102 peta
Flops (1.102
exaFlops) on the
LINPACK benchmarks. [circular reference] In
November 2024...
- is the
successor to
Summit (OLCF-4).
Frontier achieved an Rmax of 1.102
exaFLOPS,
which is 1.102
quintillion floating-point
operations per second, using...
-
Precision (64-bit)
operations (multiplications and/or additions) per
second (
exaFLOPS)"; it is a
measure of
supercomputer performance.
Exascale computing is...
- architecture-based
computer to
achieve this. At this time it also
achieved 1.42
exaFLOPS using the
mixed fp16/fp64
precision HPL-AI benchmark. It
started regular...
- (1015) (1000 trillion)
FLOPS.
Exascale is
computing performance in the
exaFLOPS (EFLOPS) range. An
EFLOPS is one
quintillion (1018)
FLOPS (one
million TFLOPS)...
- the most
powerful supercomputer in the TOP500,
reaching 1742 peta
Flops (1.742
exaFlops) on the
LINPACK benchmarks. As of 2018, the
United States has by...
-
boasts 4
exaFLOPs of FP16
performance and 54
million cores. In
November 2023, the
Condor Galaxy 2 (CG-2) was announced, also
containing 4
exaFLOPs and 54...
-
operational and
verified as the world's
fastest supercomputer,
achieving 1.742
exaFLOPs. In
February 2025, it
officially launched at the
Lawrence Livermore National...
- the Top500 list: El Capitan: this HPE Cray EX255a
system reaches 1.742
exaFLOPS with 1,051,392 CPU
cores and 9,988,224
accelerator cores,
totaling 11,039...
- US. In late
October 2021
Intel announced that
Aurora would now
exceed 2
exaFLOPS in peak double-precision
compute – That
claim however never was realized...