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June 20, 2011 1:00 AM PDT

Japanese supercomputer is fastest in the world

The Fujitsu-built K Computer in Kobe, Japan is the fastest supercomputer in the world, according to the Top500 List of Supercomputers, to be announced today.

The Fujitsu-built K Computer in Kobe, Japan, is the fastest supercomputer in the world, according to the Top500 List of Supercomputers, to be announced today.

(Credit: Fujitsu)

For the first time since 2004, a supercomputer built in Japan can claim to be the fastest on earth.

That's according to the Top500 Supercomputing List, which is expected to be released today at the conference in Hamburg, Germany. The new leader, Japan's K Computer, makes its home in Kobe's RIKEN Advanced Institute for Computational Science. K Computer sped to the front of the class by achieving more than 8 quadrillion calculations per second (petaflop/s), which pushed it ahead of last November's winner, the Tianhe-1A at the National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin, China, which in the latest round achieved 2.6 petaflop/s.

K Computer was built by Fujitsu, and contains more than 80,000 CPUs with eight cores each. The last time Japan sat at the top of the supercomputing world was with NEC's Earth Simulator, which was dethroned in November 2004, after two years as fastest supercomputer.

In the top five, following Tianhe-1A, in ranked order, is the Department of Energy's Jaguar, housed at Oak Ridge National Laboratory, with 1.75 petaflop/s; China's Nebulae at the National Supercomputing Center in Shenzen, with 1.27 petaflop/s; and Tsubame 2.0 at the Tokyo Institute of Technology, with 1.19 petaflop/s.

The benchmark used to rank supercomputers is called the Linpack. It tests the performance of a system for solving a dense system of linear equations and is measured in calculations or floating point operations per second, hence flop/s. Not everyone in this field agrees it's the best possible way to compare machines, but it is one way.

This is a list that reorders itself fairly quickly, evidenced by Los Alamos National Laboratory's Roadrunner, the first system to break the petaflop barrier in June 2008, having fallen down to No. 10 on the list. The new Top500 list has 10 systems that have surpassed the petaflop barrier.

The most common application area of the 500 supercomputers on the list is research, with which 75, or 15 percent, of the systems are tasked. That's followed by 36 of the systems working on finance, 33 on service, 23 on the World Wide Web, and 20 on defense.

IBM has the most systems on the list, with 42 percent of them, followed by Hewlett-Packard with 31 percent, and Cray with 6 percent. The U.S. leads as the country that's home to the most supercomputers on the list with 256, China is next with 62, Germany has 30, the U.K. 27, Japan 26, and France 25.

For many more details about the 500 systems on the list, see Top500.org.

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by MF878 (78 comments ) June 20, 2011 1:24 AM PDT
I know this is unrelated but found this for any Nintendo lovers or haters out there to share a laugh about...

http://uncyclopedia.wikia.com/wiki/Nintendo_White_Plastic_Drowning
Reply to this comment
by Police_States_of_America (423 comments ) June 20, 2011 1:24 AM PDT
and which os does it run?
Reply to this comment
by Amusal (627 comments ) June 20, 2011 1:59 AM PDT
Almost always Linux,
7 people like this comment
by Amusal (627 comments ) June 20, 2011 2:00 AM PDT
Almost always Linux, Can you imagine paying a per core licence for Windows Server?
10 people like this comment
by RedSubmarine (123 comments ) June 20, 2011 2:05 AM PDT
Some reliable system without too much economical ovearhead and with actual support, like, say, Linux.
Or, possibly, Linux.
6 people like this comment
by Xtreame96 (75 comments ) June 20, 2011 2:15 AM PDT
Probably Unix over Linux.
3 people like this comment
by noireve (176 comments ) June 20, 2011 2:31 AM PDT
Not apple OS X
5 people like this comment
by TheUnfound (2 comments ) June 20, 2011 5:56 AM PDT
@noireve

Apple OS X is based on Unix
1 person likes this comment
by gerrywastaken (1 comment ) June 20, 2011 8:45 AM PDT
>Probably Unix over Linux.

Probably wrong... http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0d/Operating_systems_used_on_top_500_supercomputers.svg

See the bright yellow part that's at 93%?
3 people like this comment
by Laitings (2 comments ) June 21, 2011 11:52 PM PDT
It's running Android 2.2. But that's only because the Android 3.0 Honeycomb isn't supported yet on the K Computer. No worries though, Fujitsu promises the update will be ready sometime around august. And best of all, if you made the initial downpayment on your K Computer, you get the upgrade for only 19.95! Shipping and handling not included.

Man, I can't wait to get the full 2.6 petaflops working for my bathroom surfing!
by Techraan (8 comments ) June 20, 2011 2:26 AM PDT
So Japan has dethroned China as having the fastest super computer to use massively parallel American CPUs. Tell me again how China or Japan can possibly claim having the fastest computer, when they aren't using Chinese or Japanese born CPUs? The Chinese used Xeons, and I'm betting the Japanese probably are too. It would be like the United States claiming Chrysler has the fastest 4 cylinder, street legal vehicle, but it has a Mitsubishi engine.
Japan dethroned China with the fastest supercomputer, because they waited for Intel or IBM to deliver the next fastest server CPUs. Both countries make incredible strides with faster, more efficient versions of the architecture of the motherboard. They both improve the efficiency of how one server talks to all the others, but at the very heart of a computer is the Central Processing Unit. Japan and China might manufacture them for American companies, but that doesn't mean the chips are Japanese or Chinese technology.
Reply to this comment
by Steven N (319 comments ) June 20, 2011 2:58 AM PDT
It's not that I am the most technical person on the subject, but a quick scan on supercomputers on Wikipedia learned me that the CPU is not the main issue with these kind of machines...
240000 cores with no data to process are pretty are as useless as CPUs laying on a shelf...
by sarmady (27 comments ) June 20, 2011 4:09 AM PDT
By your logic no one can claim that. Because computer parts are now made in different countries.

Xeon itself is also produced in different factories in world.
2 people like this comment
by mohiuddinqadri (1 comment ) June 20, 2011 4:32 AM PDT
The Japanese have used SPARC64 VIIIfx CPUs which is a microprocessor developed by HAL Computer Systems (44% stake owned by Fujitsu) and fabricated by Fujitsu.

Read more on specifications and architecture in this Fujitsu presentation:
http://www.hotchips.org/archives/hc21/3_tues/HC21.25.500.ComputingAccelerators-Epub/HC21.25.51A.Maruyama-Fujitsu-Octo-Core-VIIIfx.pdf
5 people like this comment
by sameole (9 comments ) June 20, 2011 5:05 AM PDT
its easy Japanese company are in the possession of this faster computer and they can use it to benefit. As far pride goes, the fastest chip are made any where, intel or ibm with engineers from many countries.
4 people like this comment
by ittesi259 (645 comments ) June 20, 2011 7:14 AM PDT
Bad example since those "American" Chryslers are now pretty much owned by the Italian Fiat.
1 person likes this comment
by Ericwvb (113 comments ) June 20, 2011 9:20 AM PDT
These computer systems are designed and put together in their home countries. There's a decent chance the "American" CPU isn't even manufactured in America, so it's possible that exactly 0% of these systems were manufactured in America since so many computer parts are now manufactured and assembled in China. So if it mattered where things are *designed* then why does it count that the CPU was designed in America but not that the system itself was designed in Japan or China?
by cnel90 (3 comments ) June 20, 2011 1:10 PM PDT
Fujitsu redesigned the K with its own technology, creating a new processor, the eight-core "Venus" Sparc64-VIIIfx chip, specifically for it. Each processor runs at 2GHz, and the K currently has 548,352 cores (or 68,544 chips).

Sorry but your post is a bunch of hypoerbole.
1 person likes this comment
by cnel90 (3 comments ) June 20, 2011 1:10 PM PDT
Fujitsu redesigned the K with its own technology, creating a new processor, the eight-core "Venus" Sparc64-VIIIfx chip, specifically for it. Each processor runs at 2GHz, and the K currently has 548,352 cores (or 68,544 chips).

Sorry but your post is a bunch of hypoerbole.
1 person likes this comment
by vAequitas (76 comments ) June 20, 2011 6:17 AM PDT
Can it play Crysis?
Reply to this comment 6 people like this comment
by FloatingKirby (209 comments ) June 20, 2011 10:08 AM PDT
It's so powerful it might be able run Crysis and Ultima IX at the same time!
1 person likes this comment
by FstrthnU (87 comments ) June 20, 2011 5:04 PM PDT
But can it play Battlefield 3 AND Crysis at the same time?
by wirelesscaller (810 comments ) June 20, 2011 9:28 PM PDT
Only if you lower the settings to medium.
by newsiron (4 comments ) June 20, 2011 6:54 AM PDT
I put my laptop in the back seat and drove 80 mph down I-95. Does that enter me in the competition?
Reply to this comment 2 people like this comment
by YiuKorochko (1 comment ) June 20, 2011 8:52 AM PDT
Get up to 88, and we'll talk...
4 people like this comment
by H00L1GAN (1084 comments ) June 20, 2011 10:47 AM PDT
If you didn't put a cape on it then it's not super.
4 people like this comment
by nauj_solrac (1096 comments ) June 20, 2011 10:39 AM PDT
....and then when you do hit 88 mph, you're gonna see some serious $hit!
Reply to this comment 1 person likes this comment
by Yelonde (2137 comments ) June 20, 2011 12:05 PM PDT
Reply button.
by Mergatroid Mania (3795 comments ) June 20, 2011 12:35 PM PDT
Anyone know if it's also the most radioactive super computer in the world?
Reply to this comment 1 person likes this comment
by app_addict_89 (15 comments ) June 20, 2011 9:30 PM PDT
My macbook is faster.
Nah, I'm just hating.
But seriously, I cannot wait until this supercomputer becomes the size of my
laptop.
Reply to this comment
by cooldogtwo (5 comments ) June 21, 2011 3:33 AM PDT
When that happens it will be considered slow. Lol
by Rozencrantz14 (28 comments ) June 21, 2011 9:35 AM PDT
Better Japan than China.
Reply to this comment
by anon23bf (3 comments ) June 21, 2011 6:55 PM PDT
That's great. The faster the computer, the faster malware will run.
Reply to this comment 1 person likes this comment
by A. N. Alias (3 comments ) June 22, 2011 1:25 AM PDT
It's no longer really the world's fastest supercomputer, but the biggest clump of processors with the fastest interconnect.
Reply to this comment
(34 Comments)
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