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

Thursday, November 13th, 2008

Dr. Serkan Toto currently works as the first and only Asia-based writer for the TechCrunch network, mainly covering Japan-related technology and web companies for TechCrunch, CrunchGear and MobileCrunch. Serkan also works full-time as an independent web and mobile industry consultant with a focus on the Japanese market. He is sept-lingual, holds an MBA and is a PhD in economics. Serkan... → 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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