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Australia's most powerful supercomputer, Raijin, unveiled

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Australia’s most powerful supercomputer, Raijin, made its debut today. The launch was timed to coincide with the opening of the National Computational Infrastructure; a high performance computing centre.

 

For those familiar with Japanese mythology, Raijin was the god of thunder, lighting and storms. Such a name needs a worthy computer, and for researchers handling huge amounts of data, it is deserving.

 

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According to Australian press, it can perform the same number of calculations in one hour as seven billion people with calculators could… in twenty years. We’ve come a long way; the first computer to be measured in Floating Operations per Second was CDC-6600, in 1964.

 

It’s capable of running at 1.2 petaflops, meaning it’s not the world’s most powerful supercomputer – that’s Tianhe-2, at 33.86 petaflops. Even so, Raijin’s not your conventional desktop either.

 

The cost to make Raijin a reality isn’t quite clear yet, though the NCI is aided by a number of partner organizations. Among these partners, there’s another $50,000,000 (AUD) for the next four years. So it’s a tiny bit pricier than an i7.

 

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The cabling of that room was a real nightmare... brrrr... But also worthy every effort for the pride to have done it!
I think... :D

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