Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Legacy Archives

IBM Develops World’s Fastest Supercomputer

Add as a preferred source on Google

There are desktop computers, and then there are supercomputers. And there are supercomputers, and then there is IBM’s Blue Gene/P – which should be able to run three computational laps by the time its closest opponent finishes one. IBM revealed the machine at the International Supercomputing Conference in Dresden on Tuesday.

The Blue Gene/P is the latest in IBM’s Blue Gene line-up of supercomputers. According to IBM, it’s able to perform one petaflops, meaning 1,000,000,000,000,000 floating point calculations every second. That’s one thousand trillion, if it helps. The previous-generation Blue Gene, and current record-holder for speed, was the Blue Gene/L, which could pull off 280 teraflops.

Recommended Videos

To make it possible, the Blue Gene/P uses 294,912 processors – with 450 cores on each circuit board. IBM will later release an 884,736-processor version of the computer which should be able to hit three petaflops.

What good is all this computational horsepower if it isn’t running Halo 2? Most supercomputers are used for enormous tasks like weather forecasting or molecular modeling, which sap a huge amount of processor grunt to produce data.

Nick Mokey
As Digital Trends’ Editor in Chief, Nick Mokey oversees an editorial team covering every gadget under the sun, along with…
A Windows 11 bug may be quietly eating hundreds of gigabytes of your storage
Windows 11’s storage-eating bug now has a fix from Microsoft
Windows 11 suffering from RAM crisis

If your Windows 11 PC suddenly looks low on storage, your downloads folder or game library may not be the problem. According to Windows Latest, a bug tied to a Windows system file can silently consume tens or even hundreds of gigabytes on the system drive.

The file in question is called CapabilityAccessManager.db-wal, and it sits inside Windows’ Capability Access Manager folder. Windows Latest says the issue may appear as unusually high “System files” usage in Windows 11’s storage breakdown, even though the Settings app does not clearly identify the exact file responsible. In some reported cases, users saw it grow to 200GB, and even more.

Read more
Your next Teams meeting could have an AI teammate that answers questions for you
Teams is getting smarter, cleaner, and quieter about it. The AI features are opt-in, the chat cleanup is automatic.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Microsoft Teams is getting a meaningful update that overhauls almost every part of how you use the app, from AI-assisted meetings to a cleaner chat layout. Most of the changes are already in testing, and several are scheduled to roll out before the end of the summer.

Starting with the most interesting addition: an upgraded AI Facilitator that can listen to your meeting, spot when someone seems confused, and generate a response (via Windows Report). 

Read more
A hacker’s arrest just revealed how Microsoft can track your Windows device
Microsoft knew what websites his Windows PC visited.
Windows 11 on a laptop

A teenager allegedly used a VPN to cover his tracks while hacking a US jewelry retailer, but Microsoft knew anyway.

Court documents unsealed in the US case against Peter Stokes, a 19-year-old dual US-Estonian citizen accused of being a member of the notorious Scattered Spider hacking group, reveal that Microsoft provided the FBI with records tied to a tracking mechanism called the Global Device Identifier, or GDID. 

Read more