• NEC's SX-9 supercomputer boasts "fastest standing" in HPC challenge benchmark

    Thursday, November 13th, 2008

    Dr. Serkan Toto is an independent consultant and advisor focusing on Japan’s web, mobile and social gaming industries. Based in Tokyo, he works together with financial institutions and startups worldwide. Serkan has been the Japan contributor for TechCrunch.com since 2008. He is sept-lingual, holds an MBA and is a PhD in economics. → Learn More

    NEC announced yesterday that its SX-9 supercomputer has achieved the world’s fastest standing in the high performance computing (HPC) field [JP] by getting top scores in 19 of 28 sections in the HPC Challenge Benchmark test.

    The HPC Benchmark is generally accepted as a method of measuring and ranking the world’s supercomputers and consists of seven different tests encompassing 28 different areas. NEC’s SX-9 scored particularly well in memory bandwith for single CPUs and in parallel environments (8 areas) and in 5 areas of inter-process data transfer rate.

    The computer (16 nodes) is currently in use at Tohoku University‘s Cyber Science Center in Northern Japan. It features the world’s first CPU capable of a peak vector performance of 100 GFLOPS+.

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