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World's fastest supercomputer belongs to China

The supercomputer was unveiled yesterday at the Annual Meeting of National High Performance Computing.
The supercomputer was unveiled yesterday at the Annual Meeting of National High Performance Computing.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Tianhe-1A unveiled Wednesday at HPC China 2010 in Beijing
  • Supercomputer has a performance record of 2.507 petaflops
  • Tianhe-1A designed by the National University of Defense Technology
  • System cost $88 million and its 103 cabinets weigh 155 tons
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(Mashable) -- The United States no longer owns the world's fastest supercomputer.

A computer called Tianhe-1A, unveiled on Wednesday at a conference in Beijing, China, can run calculations faster than the previous speed leader, a computer at a U.S. lab in Tennessee.

The new computer set a performance record by crunching 2.507 petaflops of data at once. The previous leader, a computer called Cray XT5 Jaguar and located at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory, completed 1.75 petaflop calculations.

Analysts say the new record underscores China's place as a global tech leader.

According to Nvidia, the computer technology company, the world's fastest computer will be operated as an open access system and will be used for large scale scientific computations.

Supercomputers, which essentially are many computers strung and networked together, fill entire rooms and even small warehouses. They are often used to processes huge amounts of scientific data. Climate models, for example, are run using the supercomputing power that's found in U.S. national labs.

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