Cray has been commissioned by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory to create a supercomputer head and shoulders above all the rest, with the contract valued at some $600 million. Disappointingly, El ...
While processors and now GPUs tend to get all of the glory when it comes to high performance computing, for the past three decades as distributed computing architectures became the norm in ...
High-performance computing offerings from HPE plus Cray could enable things like AI, ML, high-speed financial trading, creation digital twins for entire enterprise networks. HPE has agreed to buy ...
The Cray XC series is a distributed memory system capable of sustained performance in the petaflop range. Creating a large server farm with fast CPUs doesn’t map well to applications that require ...
Why should UNIX nerds (God love ’em) have all the fun? Cray and Microsoft announced today a partnership to produce the CX1, a $60,000 (on the top end) supercomputer that runs the forthcoming Windows ...
Cray is not likely to garner much attention when it reports first-quarter earnings on April 28. Like its much larger competitors, Cray is in the computer business but at $155 million in sales, it's ...
Supercomputer-maker Cray has launched the ClusterStor E1000, a storage offering designed to serve the entire triumvirate of HPC workloads: simulations, artificial intelligence, and analytics. Although ...
Cray, the company that built the world’s fastest supercomputer, is bringing its next generation of supercomputer technology to regular ol’ business customers with systems starting at just $500,000.
Global supercomputer leader Cray is turning to AMD's EPYC 7000 series processors to power the new Cray CS500 cluster high-performance computing (HPC) systems. The Cray CS500 cluster systems with AMD ...
Microsoft will add Cray supercomputers to its Azure cloud computing service to handle the needs of those with high performance computing (HPC) workloads. Cloud computing systems like Azure can be used ...
The Cray-1, released in 1976, was one of the most successful supercomputers of all time. The Freon-cooled computer was clocked at a heady 80MHz and capable of up to 250 megaflops -- much more than any ...
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