The IBM Roadrunner cluster at Los Alamos Labs has officially become the
fastest supercomputer in the world.
The latest edition of the Top 500 supercomputer ranking places the US
Department of Energy's machine ahead of IBM's BlueGene L and P systems at the
Lawrence Livermore and Argonne National Laboratories.
Roadrunner was
formally
launched earlier this month. The cluster uses a combination of AMD Opteron
and IBM Cell processors to achieve speeds of more than a petaflop, or one
thousand trillion operations per second.
Rounding out the top five was Sun Microsystems' Ranger cluster at the
University of Texas, followed by Cray's Jaguar system in Oak Ridge National Lab
in Tennessee.
Outside the US, the IBM BlueGene/P system at the Forschungszentrum Juelich in
Germany ranked sixth overall.
The top supercomputer in the UK was an IBM PowerPC cluster located at the
European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts in Reading. The system ranked
18th overall.
IBM dominated the list with the top three spots and 207 other spots in the
rankings. The company estimates the total computing power of all its
supercomputers on the list at around 5.6 petaflops.
Also claiming victory was Intel, which had its chips running in 375 of the
500 top systems. The company said that in just 18 months of availability, its
quad-core chips had been installed in more than half of the supercomputers on
the list.
Microsoft also made an appearance on the list. For the first time, the
high-performance version of Windows Server was able to crack the top 25.
The software was running on a Dell PowerEdge system at the National Center
for Supercomputing Applications in Illinois that ranked number 23 overall.
Windows Server HPC was also found on the 39-ranked Akka cluster at Sweden's
Umea University.
"The systems at Umea University and NSCA demonstrate that Windows can scale
to the rarefied atmosphere of the top 25 supercomputing systems in the world,
which up to now have relied on dedicated, specialised hardware and software,"
said Kyril Faenov, general manager of HPC at Microsoft.
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